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Paul English Live Mirror

From paulenglishlive.com

Duration:
3h 1m
Broadcast on:
18 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

[silence] Paul Eilish lives starting momentarily. [silence] Oh, I need to reset the conference, damn. [silence] [music] In South Wales, it seems over two and a half weeks thick. There is still at least 10 miles in tons of coal that made her famous. Enough for another 400 years. [music] The young men of Wales are finding the industry, employees, their fathers and their grandfathers. There is a future, a secure future in much greater difference. [music] Well, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello. Just thought I'd say that a few times, you know, because we kind of do that sort of thing. It is Tuesday the 18th of July, is it? It is. I'm just checking on my buttons and everything. I do that. This is Paul Eilish live. We're here on WBN 324 for the next couple of hours. We're going to be having some chat and all that kind of stuff. This is the Times just gone 8pm here in the UK, just gone 3pm US Eastern. Welcome to the show. [music] We've got summer here in the UK. It lasts for about four days and this is the second one, something like that. So, it's been really rather sweaty and wonderful today. [music] Not much happening in the last week, is there? Few shootings, this, that and the other. We'll probably talk about them a little bit. Why not? Everybody else is. [music] Quick shout out to everybody on Rumble. If you want to pitch in, if you want to grumble with the rumblers and bumble around and pitch in your ideas, head on over to the Rumble stream. You can connect through to it by going to paulingustlive.com and then you can join in and type things in the idea. [music] And when last I checked, we've got a few of the usual reprobates in the studio here. Paul's here with us already with the GVN crew lurking around in the background, high guys and high extended lurkers. And we're also joined by Eric Von Essex for tonight's show, so we're expecting some laughs. [music] And that's that little drum roll, which is my cue to fade the music down as we do. Hi everybody, welcome to the show. As I said, it's Thursday, July the 18th. I suppose I have to do a weather report really. It's really rather good. I got in the car this afternoon. And the little thermometer in the car told me that it was 25 degrees in there. I quite enjoyed being all sort of sweaty and flustered and all that kind of stuff. I don't know what kind of day you've had. Of course, I announced this rightly, of course, because we're going out of a WBN and that apart from going out, obviously at 8pm here in the UK, we're also streaming out at 3pm in New York. And I've been in New York in July and it's like a cauldron of hot, sweatiness. I actually quite liked it really. I wonder if it's still like that. Not that I would now. Not that I know necessarily whether we've got anybody from New York or that. Neck of the Woods in the chat room. But if you are and you want to tell me just how hot and sweaty it is, because I'm assuming that it will be, let us know. And you can tell us that you've got 40 degrees or some unbelievable temperatures over there. Anyway, as I mentioned at the beginning, oh, I think I ought to just say a little shout out about the picture as well for today. It's a cowboy. You may have noticed. And every night again, I'd have bought a cowboy picture up, because why not? You know, interestingly, we'd selected this picture well before the events of the weekend. Not that cowboy is a synonymous with assassination attempts, although, you know, they can be portrayed as rather trigger happy sort of types in certain films, can't they? This lone gunman or this lone rider was already well in place. I think we had this even ready back last week, well before that little incident at the weekend. And we will, of course, be touching upon it. We might sort of touch upon it, run away to another topic and come back to it repeatedly over the course of the next couple of hours. As I said, we're here up until like that. We're here through till 10 p.m. in the UK on WBN and 5 p.m. on WBN, but often, and is likely the case, we will rumble on rumble usually for another hour. So that does kind of happen. We'll just say how the show goes and I kind of make a call on it, depending on where we're at and how everybody's energy is, of course. But yes, there was a there was that little event over the weekend and I've got a little rule of thumb, which I think I've mentioned here before. And they say, advice, why is that doing that? When you stop that, please, hang on, I've just got to it. Oh dear, we don't like that at all. Oh, I think I know what that is. Let me just go. I'm assuming you're hearing one of these irritating ding noises. And I normally have all my notifications is usually turned off, but not today. Go away with that. Thanks very much. Let me just turn that off. There we go. All quite irritating. Right. Oh, it's enough to make you lose your thread, isn't it? What was I saying? Oh, yeah. So when these crazy little events go off and they do seem to be going off all the time as part of the great global distractor thumb, my little rule of thumb is to give it some time. And I was going to say that they say the worst form of vice is advice. So you don't have to take any of mine, but I give you some now. I actually think it really works to keep your powder dry for several days and see what comes up because this incident with Mr Donald Trump, whatever it may ultimately turn out to be. And it's probably all of the things that everybody's saying it is and a few more besides, apart from being a mess, of course. You have to wait and see what everybody is saying about it, sort of get some sense of the lie of the land. And so I'm not professing that we've got any profound, deep, wonderful, amazing insights here about this event. Except the overall context of the great distractor thumb, as I call it, which I'm going to go into again, the revelation of the method stuff, which is really appropriate here. But then I don't think you need to. I don't think we're necessarily looking for super incisive none. This is what it all means. What it actually means is that the mess that we know we live in is carrying on in a very, very messy sort of way. So that's what we're going to kind of roll over today. Later on, maybe in the second half of the show, we'll take calls in if you're up for it. If you're not up for making calls, you don't have to, but the call link can be found at PaulEnglishLive.com as well. There's a bit of link there at the bottom, but I'll read it out to you. In your browser, if you go to PaulEnglishLive.com/call, you will be taken through to a StreamYard studio. You might be familiar with that. You have to kind of plug yourself in, and we'll look in the second hour to take calls and comments as we go through, something like that. We've also had a song suggestion, which I'll be playing a little bit later, and we'll probably rustle up a few more songs as we go. So that's kind of the show for today. I think, of course, it'll be completely about totally different things now that I've said that. Anyway, in the studio with me, if I can just find them, here they are, we've got Eric, everyone Essex. Hi, good evening, Eric. You're on air now. I've unmuted everybody in the studio. And welcome to the show. How's the new microphone? Well, it seems to be working, Oak. Hey, can everybody hear me? Right? We can. You're a little quiet. You're a little quiet. Is there any way you can boost your volume, do you think? You could shout all the way through the show, but that's always a little bit awkward, isn't it? Good night, yes. What about that? Is that better? Fantastic. Much better. Yeah, if you've found that, but I'll let you know, because these other people that are in here with it, they get very noisy and they'll drown you out. I know, but I was also a drowned if I have flatulence or anything like that. People won't be able to hear it, will they? I'm glad we're getting this conversation off on the right footing, Eric. This is really good. Start on a low key and gradually decline from there on, I think, is the way to go, isn't it? It is. And you can give it, by the way, you can give yourself a bit more volume. I'm serious. If you've got the ability to give yourself a bit more volume, give yourself a bit more. Right. If you've been to me, I'm a bit thick. I'll try and work this out. Where are we? That's all right. My... My... My... My... This is called doing on live on air soundchecks. They're really fun, aren't they, Eric? I quite like them, actually. Right. Now, let's have a look here. It says microphone recording volume. No, system recording volume. No, not recording, are we? No, well, we can hear you quite well. I might... I'll tell you what I'll do. Let me just have a look here. You just keep talking. I'm just a big... Oh, wow. That's way massively better. Yeah. You can talk at a normal volume now and we're picking you up. Wonderful. Thanks very much for that. Anyway... Right. Okay. Right. So, I put the microphone down. Is that still the same, was it? No, no, you've gone a bit quieter again now. Right. I'll just hold it. I'll just sit out of the microphone. That'd be all right. That's better. All right. Have you... Right. So, if you've got that new mic, just to let you know everybody, I've been helping... I haven't been much help, have I? But Eric's got a new mic. So, you want to get your mouth, Eric, about three inches from the front of it. I'm serious. Get right upon it and just talk at a normal volume and you'll come through brilliantly. It's a very... It's a different sort of kettle of fish too. It is. Sort of headphone mics and... Yeah, there you go. You sound fantastic when you do that. That's right. Because the thing is, I haven't got the boom set up. Just put, you know, I just had the... Like, a tabletop stage. Right. Oh, I've got the... Next time I'll have the boom set up, but it's okay. It's all right. You'll have a creak neck. You'll get your pulled muscles in your neck from sitting there for the next two hours or whatever, trying to sit with the microphone. So, that'll be fun. So, you can tell us all about that next week. So, I've just spent last week in hospital with a creak neck because of the microphone setting here. There's method in all this madness. There it is. National, I fit it, you know. Yeah, it is. Paul, you wanted to say something. Let me introduce the other members that are lurking in here. So, we've got Paul P. Paul Bina, hi. Paul, welcome to the show. How are you? I'm good. I'm good. One quick question for Eric. Is he using an AT-2005? Does name microphone you suggest today? Yes, he is. Yeah, Eric, you're going to have to be about two to three inches away from it. Okay. I'll get too close. Otherwise, it'll pop and you'll have solvents. But a couple inches away, it should be just fine. I'm about three inches away from it. Yeah, a little close. A little close. A little close. I don't want to buy that sign as well. That's about how far that bullet was from that bloke's head at the weekend, wasn't it, three inches? Yes, it was. Yeah, so. Three millimeters. Maybe. Yeah, maybe three. Well, if it, yeah, whatever it was, but, yeah, no, cool. Paul, welcome to the show. And whilst I'm still knowing the introductions, I didn't know he'd make it right at the start, but he has Patrick, Patrick Chanel. Hi, welcome to the show, Patrick. Hey, Paul. Yeah, hey, a little bit longer, but glad to be here. Oh, yeah, cool. Yeah, you're out in the field somewhere. We can tell from your connection, but lurk away and we'll just, we'll talk away for a little while and bring people in. And I'm checking the comments in the rum bucket. So that's what we're going to do. Cool. All right. All right. So, yeah, you're coming through. Okay, but your signals apart. Yeah, it's really bad. Okay. Got it. Okay. It's like one of those pesky Skype calls where everything's falling out. It's, yeah, it's really bad. Sorry about that, but it is no good at the moment. Oh, Eric, you'd be very keen. There's really important communication here. This is really very serious. Warren sprites, I like Eric's giggling. Okay. So I think, I think that's very important. And we need to get that as a major newspaper, Eric Giggles, man likes it. This is what we need, right? I've threatened the constipated vicar joke, but I won't crack that, you know, unless... We could use that as a threat, couldn't we? You know, if people don't put the most information on the chat, I'll crack the constipated vicar joke. That's all right. That can come up anytime you like. But turning out what's left of our minds, these 15 minutes into the show over to possibly slightly more serious topics. Obviously, there was this event over the weekend with Mr. Donald Trump and a man on the roof and all that kind of stuff. And as I mentioned in the intro there, I always think it's best to leave your powder dry with these things for a few days to see what kind of comes up because there's no end of it. There's no end of things. And what I'm always amazed by is... And I do this because I don't trust my own initial emotional reactions on anything. I don't trust them anymore because when you've sort of been through these things, you go, "Oh, hang on just a minute. You've been hoodwinked." I can't even tell you how I am, but I know that I am. It takes a few days for me personally to just sit back and go, "Ah, there we go." Because the emotional impact of these things is so in your face that your branches are. You can't think properly and that's exactly what they're designed to do. Have you, Eric, come up with any thoughts regarding it so far? Yes, yes. I actually think the bloat that took the pot shop was Japanese origin. That's my theory. You did? Why is that? The reason why I think is Japanese origin. I've seen most of the John Wayne films of World War II and the Japanese were crap shots. They never shot the blokes, and when they shot them, they always shot them in a decent place. Always in the chest, or, you know, the head near the ear or something like that. Never in the, shall we say, twilight zone for that sort of thing. So I think he was probably of Japanese origin. That's why he's such a rotten shot. That's my theory anyway. Well, of course. I think, you know, when he was going, I didn't watch too much. I didn't plunge in on it. And I think one of the interesting things as well over here, I just, I cacked the news on the British television networks on the morning for about 15 minutes, usually from sort of like eight thirty, sometimes between eight thirty and nine. I've been up for a bit. I come back in the house, have a cup of tea, sit down, watch the garbage, see what's pumping out that day. Interestingly today, it seemed that the top story was not some sort of continued inquiry into this, which is a pretty serious sort of event, I think, if genuine, even if not genuine, it's serious. But no, what they were focusing on this morning was that apparently Joe Biden's got COVID. And this was, I can't believe how hilarious he was. I can't stop laughing because they were going on and on about him having COVID. And nobody's to point out that he hasn't got a brain. And this seemed to be of minor importance. What's much more important is that he's got COVID. And there's been the manipulation of what gets featured, what gets put forward is all part of this kind of post-processing of the event. There's a kind of downplaying of it. Now, I don't know if you've heard me say this before. I've read this out maybe once or twice on this show since we started. We're not even a year old, but I'm going to read part of it again. Michael Hoffman, who I reference quite a bit, as I've mentioned before, I don't agree with Mr. Hoffman on everything. And we've never met, and no doubt he wouldn't agree with me on everything, and that's life. But that doesn't mean to say that he's not spot on with certain things. And I think with this psychological processing of people, he wrote a book about 25 years ago. It's really 2000 about psychological warfare and the processing of people. And I've mulled the title, but if you want to look at it, you'll find it. And he talked about a thing called Revelation of the Method. One of the things I wanted to just read out from him is a few things. But on his masthead, he's got this. This has been sitting here for quite a while. And I want to read this out. It's quite interesting. He says, "Why are Americans, and for Americans, read Europeans across northern western Europe as well, and Brits and everybody? Why are Americans inert, indeed almost paralyzed in the midst of so many dramatic revelations lately, concerning the perfidious iniquity of our rulers?" Hang on just a minute. I've got a little bit of an echo here. There's always something, isn't there? So where's that coming from? Maybe it's not coming from anywhere. Oh, cool. It's kind of gone now. Sorry about that. Let me just get back and read this to do it some justice, because I think this is pretty sort of important stuff. I'll start again. He says, "Why are Americans, inert, indeed almost paralyzed in the midst of so many dramatic revelations lately, concerning the perfidious iniquity of our rulers?" Centuries ago, it was deduced that in this time and place, after enough immersion in the alchemical crucible -- that's how we're being psychologically processed -- the people would be in a psychological decay state where we are exhausted by the truth -- one interesting term, but it's true. In past generations, revelations of high crimes would have been revitalizing incentives to concerted action in bringing perpetrators to justice. In the 21st century, in the 21st century society of the spectacle, they are mostly grist for the thrill of the week on the part of a mass of degenerative wires. That's a lot, by the way, everyone. That's you and me. We're degenerative wires, but there's an aspect of that. Spectating at our own demise, which they aspire to obtain a front row seat, this sort of hysterical hullabaloo around it. And one of the things -- I don't know if you've seen this thing -- I think the Republicans in America are having some kind of a gathering after this event. And are they not all wearing bandages on their ear, the same ear that Mr. Trump received a severe nick in from the bullet that flew past at 100 miles an hour? Has anybody seen that? Oh, I'm saying it. No. Well, they're all lining up, Eric, and they're at some meeting and show solidarity, and there's kind of something crazy about all this kind of stuff. It says if nothing's really taken seriously, maybe the week I'll take it seriously, I find it very difficult to take any of it seriously. I mean, you can spend this one both ways. There's probably so many different takes on it at the moment. But what we do know is -- I mean, you know, I've seen the stories that have said, okay, there wasn't really any bullets, and it was just a series of firecrackers. Okay, that's one thought. Another thought is, no, someone is dead. I don't know who is dead, and I would have no way of finding out. I'm going to accept for now that somebody got shot by a bullet and died, and therefore that's then, you know, raised up and said, you know, this was a genuine event. Okay, why will they kill a person? But I think a point to bear in mind is that 20, 20 odd years ago at 9/11, they were quite happy to kill 3,500 people, almost as part of a psychological processing process, as it were. And that didn't seem to care a tinker's cuss about that. So what would the death of one person in a staged event be like? And my other thought, Eric, I don't know if you've had this or Paul, is how would Donald Trump feel a few hours afterwards? I mean, if it were you, let's suppose this has really happened. There's lots of stories to suggest that it's a bit of theatre, but even so, it's mad if it's a piece of theatre. How would you feel about the people who were on that day in charge of your security? Would you consider them competent at all? I mean, I would be unable to. When you see him arrive anywhere, he's got 80 cars or something. There's hundreds of guys all rock up, don't they? They have a long time to prep the space and to set up the security perimeter. And the idea that they let him stand up after the first shot struck me as being instantaneously insane and not the actions of a security team. Because how were they to know that there was only one shooter? How were they to even know that? Yeah, there's no way they couldn't know that. The whole thing was ridiculous, and I'm really quite over it. I mean, he's still breathing, so that's all the information I need to know. I know that the deep state is probably behind it. They've linked the shooter that it's been discovered that he was actually in a black rock commercial less than a year ago. Okay, so I don't know who's behind it. I know that the Secret Service is completely inept and incompetent. It may have been a photo op. I don't know. I haven't seen any evidence that the ear is actually bleeding, could have been a blood back, could have been, don't know. All I know is one spectator that was in the stands died because he stepped in front of his daughters to protect them. So that was in casualty of the day. Yes, it was the casualty of the day. I mean, there's a Hoffman, Michael Hoffman, he has an account on sub-stack for those of you who are interested in following him. He's definitely one of the more deeply thoughtful and incisive commentators, particularly on things like this. I view him right up there in the top of two or three people that I would go to whenever an event like this happens. And he put out an article on sub-stack very quickly and he says, right at the beginning of it, he says, "I write these words less than 48 hours after the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump in the village of Butler in Western Pennsylvania, not wanting to be guilty of what the illustrious Mark Lane once termed a rush to judgment," which is obviously a pitfall that you must avoid. This is a preliminary analysis, right? Subject to revision. So I'm looking forward to his revisions as we go through. Most noticeably, right, is the diabolic nose thumbing of the public, which the events of July the 13th symbolize. It is a bit like nah, nah, nah, nah, that kind of stuff. Here's a couple of points that he mentioned. The shooter was visible on the roof of a building some 120 yards away from Mr. Trump. In news accounts, we learn of repeated demands by witnesses and you may have seen this footage. I've seen some of it for the police to access the roof. The New York Post reported that there would be a assassin was spotted by police twice 26 minutes before he shot Trump or shot at Trump. He says, "This has been followed by alternating tales of a policeman going to the roof, either via a ladder or in account number two. "There was no ladder, and the officer somehow crawled up, and while hanging onto the edge of the roof with both hands, spotted there would be a assassin but could do nothing since both his hands were supporting him precariously on the roof ledge." It's looking like a sort of cartoon, is that? In account number one, he writes, "The ladder indicates that the officer likely had one hand free, and after seeing the armed man could have reached for his weapon, but did not." In both accounts, he goes on, he says, "The policeman did not engage the shooter, and it is allegedly at that point that the shooter turned toward Trump and fired eight bullets." That's a lot, isn't it? But eight bullets from the rifle ruled the test more than all others, the infamous AR-15. So that's point number one. The second point he writes, he said, "The secret service did not include in its perimeter the building in the vicinity of Mr. Trump's podium, where the suspect, Matthew Thomas Crook, if it be him, is said to have fired the shots that hit the former president and three members of the audience, one of whom was killed. They left the crucial responsibility for securing a nearby structure to local law enforcement, and then did not bother to ascertain whether or not the regional police forces had indeed secured it." Point number three, he's got a few more, while we'll go through all of them, point number three, while we're here. Secret service audio, which would normally be kept classified so early in the investigation, was broadcast on CNN yesterday evening, that's July the 14th, a few days back from here. Individual agents could be heard saying that the shooter was down and worked the effect, that there was no further threat, really, writes Hoffman. Less than a minute after the ex-president had been raised by a bullet, the secret service had ascertained, there was no second or third shooter lurking nearby, absolutely. Why would have this information other than parties to the crime, or who would, sorry, who would have this information other than parties to the crime, indeed? How would they know? Oh, there's no other shooters. The 6'3" Trump was allowed to stand and become an easy target again, which is the thing that occurred to me as I was looking at it, after first crouching and being covered by agents. And let's go to point number four, while I'm here, this is the last of the introductory points he makes. The FBI has declared that the shooter was a lone gunman, oh, have we ever heard that one before? A lone gunman and had no accomplices. A statement like that made less than 24 hours after the crime was committed is ludicrous, it is. A criminal investigation truly begins in earnest after a perpetrator has been identified. The search for accomplices is something that takes days or weeks, at least. A declaration like this is equivalent to the mocking jests of the aptly named Hellfire Club of 18th Century Britain. Oh, sorry, everyone, it's always up down to us. The FBI's nearly instantaneous declaration fits a pattern of similar omniscient statements by cops and the media with regard to Lee Oswald, David Berkowitz, and Ted Gacinski, among others. So I think this is a pattern that many of us here are familiar with, almost instantaneously, it's a lone note, here's his name, he's identified, nobody else was involved, and wasn't it jolly lucky that President Trump didn't die, and we're all supposed to, I guess, up first blush, swallow that down and move on to our conflict. What do you think, guys? I think he makes valid points, all of them, valid points. The photo op standing up, shaking his fifth in the air, fight, fight, fight, and all that. Well, the photo op, that building would have been, by my estimation, the very best vantage point for the Secret Service to stop and not on a slanted peaked roof next to that building. Even if it might have been a little higher, you know, it just doesn't make any sense, which is why I'm not going to nuts about it, I'm not getting all excited about all of this stuff. I'm just going to let it freak out and I'm not going to lose any sleep over it. No, you're not up at night worrying about it, good grief. Me neither. And I think it's been downplayed, it's almost like, whoa, get rid of that. It's difficult to know, I mean, there are so many different, I am finding it difficult to know, and that's why I think only time is really going to tell us. Although, I think Hoffman's points are really pretty spot on in terms of looking at how I handle it, you know, the sort of post-production work. This is how it's going to be communicated, and of course, we're all familiar with this pattern of bravado and this, that and the other. The fact that he stood, I mean, the photo that they've got of him immediately concerned me because it did look like a photo op. I thought, what is really going on here? And you kind of figure that if he's shot from, how far away was it, 500 feet? If anybody can graze someone's ear from 500 feet, why on earth can they hit his head? Now, not that I'm after that, although I've heard some ludicrous things said to that effect. There has been video going round of him, actually, literally, not ducking so much, but almost like ricking his neck, which is what Eric's going to be doing after the end of this show from leaning over his microphone. He creaked his neck right at that one point, which if he hadn't done, I believe the bullet would have gone through his head, and he probably wouldn't be here in that form. But to me, I always think, just like with the Kennedy thing, the secret service have to be involved. They have to be either confused in some way or give them bogus orders from someone higher up in their own food chain to stand down or to behave in some kind of an idiotic way. I mean, what does he do about future engagements? I mean, maybe he's already done something. I think he maybe went out. But what's that all about? Is there not somebody internally next to him who says, we've got skunks right next to you? This is a point I've mentioned loads. Whenever we're talking about finding good people, and many of them are here in the rumble chat, I mean that, people with good hearts that would do things correctly, right? How do you protect people in that arena from this sort of murderous mafia type execution system, which they do, of course, in full public view for the psychological processing factors? It's a conundrum, isn't it? I mean, we have to believe that there is the good. I mean, if I look at my picture here on the show, that's actually not the lone gunman. I actually wrote a little thing saying the lone gunman again, not because I don't buy that ever. But maybe that's the sheriff writing into town. We need sheriffs that actually go, boys, you've got to stop killing politicians. It's all over. That's, you're going to jail, that kind of stuff. Okay, there is yet another tidbit of information that came out. Ephesians 611, put on the full armor of God. Okay, he was shot at 611 p.m. And they're saying that this is divine providence, it's divine intervention. And I just don't know. Oh, yeah. That's worrying. I've seen a lot of that. Yeah, that's worrying. Yeah, I don't get it. No, because you see, I don't think any of them, including Trump are going to be good for America. What do you think Paul, being an American and living there, do you think Trump's going to be? It's great. Saviour. I can't see. This is the guy, remember, who accelerated the application of the Jabs onto everybody. There's no guarantee because presidents in the United States can serve two terms. They can be elected for two terms. And usually they mind their peace and cues and they do good things in the first term. And then by the time the second term comes around, they know that they're not running for reelection. So that's when they actually do the dirty work that they would have wished that they could do during the first term. So I really don't know what to expect out of Trump because I think, even though he wasn't a politician before he went to Washington, I think he's probably picked up a few tricks along the way. I have no idea what to expect from his second term. No idea. Well, I just think more control from the puppet masters. Eric, what's your take on? Are you happily looking forward to Mr. Trump talking to Nigel Farage? I saw that one this week. There was a story saying that if he gets in, he's not going to talk to the actual supposed Prime Minister, Kia Dilla's ditchwater Starmer. Who could blame him? I mean, you know, he's going to start talking to Nigel Farage. We're all being mangled. It's just goofy, beyond belief, isn't it? Eric, hello? Yeah, you're here, Eric. Yeah, we can hear you. It's fine. I can't hear him. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. He doesn't have any audio on his do-it-all. Yeah? No, no, no, no, no, no. Did it air? Yeah, I know. My connection to Eric broke. I'm working on it. Just very suspicious of that photograph of Trump with his fist in the air and the stars and stripes behind. It's too perfect. It would be a little bit fuzzy. Why is it so perfect? I just don't get it. Does anybody else? We can't hear Eric. Well, I can hear Eric, and Eric's going out over the broadcast, so it must be something on your side, Patrick. I think I'm sorry in the studio. Paul, can you hear Eric okay? I could not hear him before the studio was unable to connect to his audio, so I had to leave and come back. So, Patrick, just exit and come back in. Yeah, I think he did, but I still think it might be your connection, Patrick, that's maybe not so good if you can hear me. Eric, we can all hear you loud and clear and everything you said got broadcast. Oh, that's good. Yeah, yeah, it's cool. Not fantastic. I thought it was a perfect photograph. It was a bit like the Brazing of the Flag at Iwo Jima, which we know was staged, wasn't it? It was just sort of, it was too ridiculously good. And then I saw some, it's like being in a comic. Then there were some stats, some data analysis where they'd gone out and done a sort of Vox pop amongst who everybody was going to vote for, you know, upcoming in November. And of course, the whole map in America is now red because, you know, Trump has escaped death and this, that. Look, he may well, it may well be genuine. I still don't really know. I mean, what strikes me at the moment, my little theory for what it's worth, is I think it was possibly, probably a genuine attempt to cause him severe harm, if not kill him. But it kind of went wrong and there was a contingency plan that if it goes wrong, they had some other kind of thing laid out. But, you know, I don't know. And also anybody else that says they do, they don't know either. Anybody in the chat now answers in a postcard, please, too. And, you know, we would find out whether it's really a genuine event. It's obviously done a lot for his standing. And yeah, as I said here today on the news this morning, the main story was that Biden's got COVID. There was no sort of further mention of this. Difficult to know really is difficult to know, which is probably all I can say is the real intention of this is to continue to confuse us. And you've got to give them credit. They're doing a great job on that front, I think. Absolutely. Okay. Just going back to the contextual thing, which I still think is worth saying again. I mentioned some moments ago that I've said, I've read this bit out from Hoffman as well before, but I want to read it again because repetition is the key to certain things about this psychological processing of us. This sense of bewilderment, this kind of listlessness that's taking place. I notice it everywhere in the country, which is why I try to speak to people all the time to try and rouse people out of what I perceive to be a sort of general lethargy and mental torpor and slumber. And in the revelation of the method, he's talking about what happens when they reveal their methods to us. And I've said this before, but it's brief, so I'm going to just read it again. He says, he said it's risky. Now, he's talking about our would-be controllers here, the people, I guess, who are in control of the security detail was supposedly in charge of Mr. Trump's safety. He writes, "It is risky," and this is a long time ago, this article was written maybe 20 years back, but it's spot on. It is risky to reveal to the people what has been done to them by the gangster class. That's correct. We are governed by gangsters that lords it over them. Painly, in the wake of the revelation, the risk is one of reprisal. You know, we're all going to get roused up and we're going to get our pickax's retribution and rage by the people. But where there is little or none of that, i.e. little or no rage, then the cryptocracy, the gangster class, has tripled its hold on the minds and hearts of Americans, or anyone really, it has strongly hinted about the mass murder it committed on September the 11th, and yet there are few significant repercussions. This non-reaction tends to demonstrate that the people of the US accept at the subliminal level of their consciousness, that their own leaders are mass murderers of their fellow citizens, which we know is true, and mostly what they do in return is shake it off and head to the mall. And that's from revelation of the method and the murder of the spirits, and I've got to read you this out because this is humorous and funny, but it illustrates that he writes this little story. And everybody, I think you need a clip of this, just to get, I read it every now and again, I think it's so useful. He says this, he says, it is as if a bank robber were to stand in the town square and declare, I robbed your bank. He then provides the citizens of the town with the phone number of the sheriff's office and makes himself available for arrest. Rather than call the sheriff, the people are shocked, awed, confused and deranged by the audacity of the robber, and I think this has been going on with regards to COVID. We're deranged with the way the communications come out, which is all part of it. He goes on, he says, the next day dawns and finds the bank robber is now an official at the bank. The people recall something peculiar and vaguely sinister about him, an eccentric schoolteacher along with the village idiot and the town drunk, proclaimed the new bank official to be the crook who robbed the bank the other day. The citizens aren't sure and the bank robber himself flatly declares that it was a dark, skinned foreigner with a large moustache who robbed the bank. The robber makes no reference whatsoever to his previous day's confession and takes up his official due to the bank with a plumb, a lovely word. Gradually, as the citizens patronize the bank as usual, I get back to the customary behaviour patterns as we've all done through COVID. The robber continues as an official of the bank warns the citizens that if they do not support him, the bank will be robbed again. The citizens of the town now become slightly deranged, exhibiting characteristics of paralytic apathy, amnesia and abuse and suffering from mysterious terrors. Burelier is a wonderful word, meaning lost of willpower, and I think we've touched on this as a theme over this show since it started less than a year ago. This kind of apathy that is all over the place, I suffer from two, I'm busy with things. It's not an apathy of not wanting to do things, it's like not being clear about exactly what to do, what is the effective thing to do when being given by, well, basically psychotic liars who are also willing, in this case, to even have, supposedly, you know, the US president or a US president killed, what do we do with that kind of a situation? So, answers Eric, you got any answers, what would you do? Well, as I've always said, our greatest weapon is humour, laugh 'em. That's the real answer, I really do believe it, I passionately believe it because that's why we're trying to destroy our humour with all political correctness and things like that. You know, instead of having a gun, put a joke up the breach and fire it because the psychopaths that rule us, they do not understand humour. There is a human trait that they don't understand, and rule number one is always take your enemy by surprise and lose a weapon that they don't understand, and it works. And look at what happened to Cho Chezku, what happened is he standing up on his balcony and everybody's killing themselves laughing. In fact, he got so worried about humour that he banned comedians from cracking jokes, so they did a buy-macked instead, which was even more funny. That's what brought him down. So, please remember that, you know, that brought Cho Chezku down, it can bring them down. Don't worry about political correctness or anything like that, laugh at it, laugh at it. I ain't gonna squab in the World Economic Forum, he's funny, laugh, you know, this is the only thing. So, oh, we can't be serious. I mean, can you imagine, when Kia Starler comes out, everybody whistles the Law and Artie show, you know, as... What would he do? I mean, apparently, scientists have actually made a breakthrough. You can now... It's very difficult, but you can tell the difference between Kia Starler and Amanda Quindami. It's difficult, but you can. You know, I mean, he's the nearest thing to... Just a corpse, isn't he? I mean, he's just... Well, he is. Yeah, I mean, I think... I don't know if you've seen those pictures of him as a young boy with Jimmy Sabo. Have you seen those? They've been flying around a bit. Yes, I have. Yeah. I mean, when I say young, he looks as though he's about nine or ten or something. So, you know, how does that work? Who moves in those sorts of circles? These are... This is a strange sort of sick arena, and I think he has that look because I think he's, well, maybe you would say traumatized, but he's gone on some level. I view him... It's not so much that he's cold. It's that he's not a proper functioning human being. He is beyond tedious, and of course, the only reason he's in is because he's been organized so that he be in, as we were talking about, you know, the other week with the fallout from the voting thing, which is still worth looking at. You know, not that I said at the time, Farage getting four million votes in four seats is weird if the Liberal Democrats can get three million votes in 70 seats, and if Labour can get ten million votes in 400 seats. I mean, I've never felt that the political route was a solution anyway, and it is a great distraction. I mean, as we said, Farage has the redeeming qualities of actually being listenable too, but not to be taken too seriously either, because I think he's filling his role as part of the overall play. And yeah, I mean, hard to say really. I sometimes just hit a brick wall in my thinking. I just go stop. There's nothing that can really be done with this, apart from the processing of everyone. I mean, I had a little incident today, right, I had to go to, I had to go down the hospital, part of my little daily routine. And in hospitals, they have these doors where they are on a sort of security timer, you press a button to go into the ward, makes complete sense, right? But there's a guy coming along as part of the staff who could open the door and go through. And I said to him, oh, that's good time and we can come through. Oh, no, you can't come through. I said, no. He said, no, he said, you could be a security risk. It's just mad. And I said, do you remember? He went through and I was with these other people who also wanted to obey his orders. This is, I'm always intrigued by this. And I said to them, I said, do you remember that quality that used to exist called common sense? And they went, oh, no, no, we've got to be, if a security, you know, someone could come in and blow it up. And what you, I said, are you mad? Are you mad? People sort of paranoia as escalated to a degree that's massively unhealthy. It's, and it makes them prone to being ordered around. I mean, of course, about five seconds later. Once he got on the other side, he pressed the button to let us in. I'm serious. What do you do? I'm trying to point this out to people going, can you see that we didn't need any of these books? No, no, we've got to do this procedure. And once people are kind of trained down these tracks, they don't even realize they're on them. They don't realize they're even on tracks or that they've been trained. There's literally, so that thing called common sense is becoming as rare as handsteath. It's absolutely vital, I think, for people like us. We can't operate without it. It's what you breathe. You've got to have some sense of, you know, don't be a cloth, which is a good door. I think I heard about that, that I believe they call that Pavlov's method of entering hospital. Yeah, the Pavlovian hospital door system. That's right. Yeah, I think you're right, Paul. I think you're spot on with that. It was just surreal. It really was, I'm sort of looking at these two people who are older than me. And I'm just immediately having all these instantaneous judgments. You took the jab, you're going to do everything the government tells you. You are nice people, but you're really going to become a problem for people like me. Because we can't be surrounded by this sort of compliance, this blind compliance with authority. If people are not going to think, that's what they do. Oh, it's all for everybody's best safety, what? Being an idiot. I can't say that's going to work out well. So, yes, those sorts of things. Right, earlier on when the show started, some early birds got in there and somebody made a request for a song. And although it's a little bit before the hour, we're going to put a song in here because I need to think about things to talk about and stuff like that. So, we're going to do that. You'll all know this one. You'll all know this one. This is, oh, this is Harry Nilsen, everybody's talking from 1969. And shout out to Dinghao. Yes, D-I-N-G-H-A-O, Dinghao. It was also telling me about steam engines. We might get onto that, steam car engines. Anyway, let's play this little song, but I'll just load it up again because I know. These things tend to go a little bit per show. It's only a couple of minutes long. We'll just play this, play this. And then we'll be back after this little break. Here we go. (Music) Everybody's talking at me. I don't hear words saying. Only the echoes of my mind. People stop instead. I can't see the faces. Only the shadows of their eyes. I'm going while the sun keeps shining through the pouring rain. Going well, whatever suits my clothes. Faking off of the northeast winds, setting on summer breeze. Skipping over the ocean like a storm. (Music) I'm going while the sun keeps shining through the pouring rain. Going well, whatever suits my clothes. (Music) Faking off of the northeast winds, setting on summer breeze. Skipping over the ocean like a storm. Everybody's talking at me. Can't hear words saying. Only the echoes of my mind. I won't let you be. I love you. I love you. I won't let you be. I won't let you be. I love you. (Music) Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 324 talk radio? Despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just wrap and download opera browser. Then type in WBN 324.ZIL. And stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's WBN 324.ZIL. The views, opinions and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own. And do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN 324 talk radio. Hi and welcome back. That was a little music interload before the top of the hour. In fact, seven minutes before the top of the hour because I'm clumsy when it comes to that kind of stuff. But you listen to Paul English Live here on WBN 324. As I've said, we're here every Thursday. 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the UK. Sometimes a bit longer on Rumble and 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in New York. I actually picked up another clip. Anybody here heard of John Oluni? It's an unfortunate name but have you heard of him? Eric? Yes, I've heard of him. Yes, he's an untie. Oh, hang on just a minute. Probably be the best if I unmuted you here on the Switchboard level. Hi, Eric. Welcome back to the show. Ella, your John Oluni, have you heard of John? Yes, he's an undertaker from Milton Cockup. Sorry, I mean, King. Yes. Yes, that's right. Yes. I just wonder if he's actually had a history of mental illness for living in Milton Keynes. Have you ever been there? Well, isn't that sort of a psychologically processed town? Isn't it designed along three Masonic lines or something? It's pretty weird with the number of roundabouts and all this kind of... I've seen people do whole videos about this, but because I'm so disinterested in that stuff, I'm not saying it's not relevant, but it's just not a thing that I want to spend too much time on. Yet, maybe I'll get round to it as some other time, but it is a horrifically built tedious place. Yeah, I think. Well, I spent a 50... Well, it felt like 50 years, one Sunday afternoon, completely lost in Milton Keynes, going round around different roundabouts, because everything looks the same. It's so boring. It's... It's like watching paint dry, it's so boring. Milton Keynes does nothing for me. It's a typical architectural area that needs to be bulldozed and started going. Right? Some of the housing there is atrocious, but similar to Harlow, you see the best of housing and the worst of housing, the two extremes. Well, it was... wasn't it knocked up sometime? I don't know, when did he go up? I can't remember when it went up. I mean, this is... It was one of the last... one of the first was Lechworth Garden City, and that was in... I believe people will be able to put it in Wikipedia. I think it's 1907, but I think that. So I could be wrong on that. That was one of the first. And remember this off the top of my head, I think it was something like 17 properties per hectare, when it was constructed, and now they want to put 100 properties per hectare in, and there was an estate going up near where I live, and a Councillor wanted 150 properties or dwellings, rather, per hectare. Just think of that. So it went from 17 to 100. And the Parker Morris standards that was set up after World War II, that was 40 properties per hectare. So you look at how things have changed, and that's why none has got any gardens. And it's just a... well, it's just a concrete jungle, that's all. But don't be able to opt out, go with all these things. But, well, no, I mean, all of these things are interlinked. I mean, Mr. Starmer has already... How long has he been in? I mean, he really needs to be in a mental asylum. How long has he been in two weeks, is it? It's two weeks. It's two weeks. And I'm a little bit concerned, because this has gone a little bit overdue, because I don't want to be sounding anti-simile, or anything like that. They usually go to a place where they talk to a wall where a dolly on their head and are surrounded by people with cowboy hats. So I don't know what's happened, you know. He's not gone there yet. But give it a tie, I think, about a couple of weeks. Or it may be, because his wife is actually the Prime Minister of Great Britain. Yes. Not him, because I don't think he is actually. I think his wife is secretly. Well, someone is. I mean, he's obviously a compromised... I don't know. He's compromised. After looking at these things for years and years, you just go, "What is the point?" I mean, really. I think, you know, it's like why it's the reason why I don't vote. I don't want to give them any legitimacy to exist. And to keep extending their power as part of their hobby of just ruining the world, sticking their nose into everything when it's not asked or wanted or required and pretending to us and themselves that they're making a big difference. And that because I'm doing all these decisions, the world is a much better place, whereas in fact, if they just went home and did nothing, everything would steadily improve. But I've noticed he's made some already. And maybe these are kind of like intended to be, from our point of view, people like us distressing sort of polity statements. First of all, he's halved all the prison sentences of some of the most foul individuals in the prison system, pedophiles and things like that. They're all coming out quickly. Oh, they're going to be let out quickly. Secondly, I saw today, I mean, I'm saying a section. There's probably some more of this sort of nonsense going on. What are they? What is it? The migrant workers act or whatever it is. They're not going to put any restrictions on it. Everybody can come. There's a conversation that's never had. And because it's never, I mean, there's many, but the one I'm thinking of, because this one it's never had, you can see that it's part of the attack upon us. What is a sensible limit for migration and people arriving in this country conversation? I mean, I've got my own answers to that. The sensible limit is not ever. Not because I want to be hostile to people. I have no problem with people coming here for extended holidays or working as part of embassies or teachers or whatever they want to do. That's not what we're talking about. But huge numbers of people supposedly fleeing all classes' refugees to come here. Is there a limit on it, Eric? I don't think there is. You see, I can see their minds. There's any limit on it. My personal view is that some people have said, oh, these military age men are coming over because they're going to fill the army. No, because it takes over a year to train an infantryman. No, I personally think that they will be used in security. So when they start screwing things down even further, they'll be thugs that will come along and boot your door down. That's what I think they're going to be used for. Because it's very easy to train a security person. All they have to be is a thug. And that's it, basically, and just do what they're told to do without any feelings whatsoever. I think that's what they're there for because near where I lived, there's a hotel I won't mention its name. And it was rather a classy hotel at one time, a nice car park. Now, it looks like full knocks. There's concrete that they are obviously permanent. Concrete blocks in the car park to stop cars going in because no guests stay there. It's all for these so-called bogus silent seekers. So I'd also believe that there's a lot of new censorship because I think there's a lot of crime that's going on that is not actually being printed, especially in the local newspapers. May I? Yeah. You're absolutely right. There's a quote for you from Aristotle, Cosina, as one does. And this is to do with what's going on with our so-called leaders. And as how they are psychologically collapsing. I've got my own sort of thing, but this is from Aristotle from some time back, he says. It is also a habit of tyrants to prefer the company of aliens to that of citizens at table and in society. Citizens, they feel, are enemies, but aliens will offer no opposition. I think this completely makes up in a way what you're saying. These so-called migrants are nothing of the sort. They might have a little thing. I'm sure there's even better detail thinking than this, but mine kind of goes like this. They have been betraying us. They are traitors, not because they say so, but because by their fruits shall ye know them. Anybody using common sense, unlike those two people today that I was with that couldn't go through the door because this is why you need common sense. If you look at what was hand, the fruits demonstrate quite clearly the quality of their character. So they have been committing crimes against us for a long time and in earnest and with a really foul plan since the end of World War II, after we'd lost that conflict and they pretended that we'd won it. They'd won it, of course, we hadn't, but they had because they were now in a position to begin to speed up the complete removal against Christian values, whatever you might think about that, but we are that. That is our history. And in its right shape, it's tremendous and of course it's been in its wrong shape for a long, long time now. So they've done that and they've been doing all these lies and all these other deceits for a long time and being able to get away with it. But although I don't want to drop it all in the lap of the Internet, the fact is that this distribution of information which prior to the Internet we would have never known of. It's not that we could never have read it. We're intelligent enough to read it, but we didn't even know that these books existed. Suddenly getting a hold of them, we've begun to say that there is more than one story to be consumed, that when you read the other side, something wholly different springs out. It's unsettling because you lose your own national myth in the process. What do you mean? We're not all good all the time. All that kind of stuff goes out of the window now. No, it's very, very bad. And they know that we're kind of onto them. And that's why they brought them in as a bodyguard, almost like, you know, iron sides to protect them. And so Aristotle's things absolutely spot on. Their waging war against us, our own governments are. I know this is not new. It's not profound in any way to people who've got to this point, but it would be profound to like those people who wouldn't go through the door today. They'll never get there. They're probably not going to get that sentence in their life. It's not going to come to them, whereas we obviously take it for granted, I guess, to some degree. Paul? Yes. Erick is absolutely correct. The migrants, and I use the term very loosely, that are coming into the U.S., they get between $2,000 and $3,000 a month. They get put up in the best hotels. They get put up in B&Bs, air B&Bs. And they're actually being allowed to become police officers in Michigan. They're allowed to get driver's licenses, even if they're not residents, and I believe either Washington or Oregon. And when they get a driver's license, they're automatically registered to vote. Doesn't that give you a warm, fuzzy feeling with an election coming up in November? They're automatically registered to vote. It is an invasion force, and the government is flying them in. Yes, because they've been up to so much hanky-panky against us. Our government, that they fear, rightfully, I suppose, that were we to get more and more power to begin to call them to book on their prior actions, their little game is completely destroyed, I would like to hope. I mean, you know, it sends a bit grandiose for me to say that. But I think that that's the case. They're anxious, and moving quicker and quicker, these crazy things, because I still think, you know, their mindset is, I'm in charge, and if I'm not in charge, I'm quite willing to burn the entire planet to the ground, if we are my little mob, but not going to be in charge of things. They've hooked addicted to that. And so they're using other people, who they know, will treat us with great cruelty. And I think, I mean, I've got a long clip here. It's actually slightly too long. It's about seven minutes, although I might put it on. We've still got a bit of time left, which addresses these points quite brilliantly. In fact, do you think I should play this? It's from a lady in England. Let's give this a go. I want to give this a go. So this is about six or seven minutes this. So, you know, pull up a gin or whatever you're doing out there, or if you want a cup of coffee or whatever, let's just listen to this. I found this tremendous. And someone kindly placed this in the telegram group for this show, the ball English chat telegram group. So thank you for that, whoever did that. It's forwarded on from another channel and picked up from TikTok somewhere. But it's an English lady in her car talking. And I think she nails this. And this is quite, you get the seriousness of our situation. Here we go. So since 2020, more and more people started to find out about the oaths that are taken by court judges. Police magistrates that all reside under the Queen or King's oath that they take to the people, to protect the people, to protect the people of the people, and to make sure that no harm, lost or injury in any capacity comes to the people by anybody else, any other man or woman. So the power of the police is currently all they have. That is their greatest threat to the common people. That is starting to break down or has been over the past four years. So our belief and our fear of what might happen to us in a court of law, or have been arrested and then taken to court, is being broke down at the moment. This means that their power and control is diminishing. I don't think it's any coincidence that as soon as the pandemic started, 2020, the number of illegal immigrants that flooded in, not just to our country, but to Western countries, grew immensely. In 2020, when this first started to happen, my download was their building an army. They're building an army. That is what they're doing. Because when the power is lost and they don't have their front-line defence anymore, which is those police that are going to turn up on your doorstep and make threats and threaten to take your car and find you and all these scary things that they do, pull you over for speeding. They know that once that power diminishes, they're not going to have their front-line defence and then they are exposed. So, me, many, many others, no. And you probably do, too, that what they are building is an army of people that hate the Westerners because of all the shit that our tax money has gone towards, like the destruction of their homelands. The robbery of their resources. And because of all of that stuff that we have funded for our taxes, they are not going to give one shit about you or your family when it's their turn to stand up and they are given the equipment that they need to take people out. They are not going to care. And if you think they're going to be, like, say, our army would be in this scenario in other countries where they would, usually, hoping be respectful to the women and the children, they're not going to do that. They're not going to give a shit. When this army is put together and they are sent out, they're going to be savage. That is what I see. They're going to be savage and they won't care. So think about why they took our guns a long time ago in this country, why they're trying to take the guns from the people in America, and why they're trying to get rid of our dogs that protect us. Why do you think they did this to the exel bullies? Because they know that that is probably our own defence mechanism if we have big dogs. So, and also if you think that the exel bullies is where that's going to end, you're wrong, because now that people complied with that, back down and gave up what they consider to be family members Because of legislation, which isn't even law, by the way, they're going to push that to the next boundary. It will be the next big sized dogs and it will be other big sized dogs. So be very careful what you aren't learning at the moment, and if you aren't learning what other people have been learning about these oaths and what the truly means for this country and what their restrictions are under those oaths, then you're going to be hoodwinked into doing many many things to make yourself super defenceless. So when they do collect these people up, why do you think they're putting them at hotels? These are not refugees, where are the women, where are the children? Why didn't they not bring in their families with them? They're all fighting age men, they're all being put up in hotels, which the government makes sure the owners of these hotels get rid of their own staff. Why do you think they do that? So that nobody knows what's going on in there. They supply their own staff and they're giving these people money to live, more money than our own people on benefits again, or veterans or elderly. They are making things very comfortable so that when it's the right time and they are given the go ahead, these people are going to be very happy to do that dirty work that our own British police and our own military won't do against their own people. This is for entertainment purposes only, none of this is true. But just ask yourself, how does your gut feel when you hear this? Does it feel like this is absolute nonsense? Or does it actually feel like you know it could be truth? Because that is the only way you're going to be able to navigate from now on, because they're media are spilling absolute bullshit and propaganda all of the time, to confuse you and to keep you constantly guessing and worrying. The only voices out there that are trying to get truth out are being quiet and down and pushed aside condemned as iconopes. So ask yourself how you feel when you heard what it was I said and put a comment. What do you think? Is this truth? Do you feel it could be true? This is what they have planned, whether it happens or evolves or not. Because it will be up to us, whether that happens. Look, man, I follow for no banana in my tailpipe. So, guys, that was a bit long. I accept that. It was a long clip. What do you think, Eric? She actually nailed it on the head, didn't she? She actually nailed it. Because I often said they have done a better job than any enemy could have ever dreamt of in this country. They've absolutely destroyed it from within. But people just have been conditioned not to see it. I had some Jehovah's Witnesses knock on my door today. Look at you. Oh, I've been Jehovah's and I listened to them and I said, look, of all days, there was no Kim Charles. I was missing him. There's no blue sky, no Kim Charles. I said, well, look at the Kim Charles. They said, well, are they? So, haven't you seen these lines go across the sky? No. I said, well, you haven't seen them? No. Well, they're just looking too long in their Bibles. I said, what's going on? But people can't actually see if they've been conditioned not to see them. That really is a problem. And I think that Yuri Brezhnev, the Brezhnev was correct when he said, truth will mean nothing because we're getting some lies, some truth, et cetera. But the other thing that's really getting me is that what people don't realize is that governments do not run countries. This is the superplicity. It's years come as raw countries, financially. Civil servants run countries. The government is the pantomime act. That's all it is. And Ronald Reagan did make one true statement. He said, if government took several months off, people wouldn't notice any difference. It's true. They wouldn't notice any difference. The only difference they would notice is there wouldn't be so many damn draconian laws being made. That's the only difference I think they'll make now. But the fact is that people don't realize that that's why I don't vote. What's the point? Because it's a pantomime act. What we should be voting for is a civil servant who's elected near you. And if they do a crap job, they're out. It's as simple as that. They've got to represent us. And that's it. But that won't happen. I don't think until, you know, I just don't, I think somebody's going to happen that we least expect. But I'll optimistic despite what's happening. I am very optimistic. I think things are going to turn out right. That's my personal view. Yeah. Well, there's a comment in the chat here from Vinlandis and saying, glad you played the clip nailed it. Indeed, it did. It's a sensational clip. And we've all had those thoughts. I imagine that we have. We know that this is an inordinately lying space. It's ridiculous. The fact that no actions are taken indicate that nearly all of these agencies, political parties or whatever, are in it in some capacity or other. No one. And this is, you know, you begin to see this disease that spreads through the decision-making process of a nation. And ours is riddled with it. In fact, all of the Western nations of Europe are riddled with this disease. The disease of not going through the door unless the man tells you you can, even though it's wide open and there's no one around that disease. This disease of supine compliance with idiocy. And I've, I mean, I'm going to go with what you say, Eric, in the sense that I do it. Do I expect something to happen? I don't know. It almost feels as though it's the only way because some, in other words, something untoward, a revelation of some sort. Maybe you would call it a miracle, some shift that we couldn't possibly anticipate coming in the inner planes of people. But I'm keen for it to happen yesterday. And I ought to at least play a role in lighting more and more fires. I don't quite know where it's going to go. But in light of anything else, to do something, anything, to talk people, to light them up in some way. And yet, and yet, and yet, you know, you talk to people. And I've mentioned this before. I've talked to people. I've seen them a little bit later. And I go back to the previous conversation. This happened for me, loads in pubs and things. And it's as if the previous conversation never took place. I have to start right back at square one again. Oh, that wasn't important. Well, I didn't bother listening to any of that. Oh, you mean the outcome of your own life? That's not important. Is that what you're saying? But I guess for most people, they've been trained out of it. They've been trained out of being responsible for their own life. And someone else is going to sort it out and they're completely trustworthy. You can trust the government. Yeah, you can. You can trust them to ruin your life. Have you seen, I made a prediction about a couple of weeks before. Pierre Stalin, he actually was elected. And what happened is, I can hear himself back as a deco. Yeah, just a minute. Just a minute. I'm just letting you know, Paul, you're producing an echo. It's gone there, Eric. So. Yeah. It's going there. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, no, no, no. No sound, Paul. No sound, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No sound, no. No sound, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No sound, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I'm obviously interested in the plight of the English and the Scots and the Welsh and the people of Northern Ireland and Ireland, particularly because we are the people of these islands, even though, of course, the history between these people is littered with acts of violence, nearly always orchestrated by those who are in charges always, you know, come on people don't go, oh, I think we better have a punch up. Apart from what Tyler in 1381 and it was right to do so. But generally, most things don't rise up from the people, not anymore, certainly not in England since 1381. They actually got their act together and made sure that if there's going to be any sort of craziness, they were going to organize it like they did with Cromwell. You know, these are internal funded things that you're supposed to buy into the story. So, I mean, what do we do with it? Why saw us, for example, not? I know it's an asinine question. I know why, but I'm just sort of throwing it out there. Why is saw us not arrested and imprisoned for life? Because he's a terrorist. He's a financial terrorist. Paul, you were on the other week. Paul mentioned the other week that, you know, the definition of terrorism is to achieve political ends through violence. Well, he employs financial violence to achieve political ends. He's a terrorist. Bill Gates is a terrorist. All of these people are terrorists. Schwab is a terrorist. The WEF is a terrorist organization, as is the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve, because they use non-consent as part of their control grid. They believe it's subtle, it's quiet and it's calm, but it's still violence because it doesn't build anything. Violence destroys. You can have, you know, you've probably had this. You can have heated discussions with people and they can, at times, when they're right, when they're done right, and both are even more than two. But when both participants are coming from the right ground of being, you can create really good things out of that even while the process is bloody uncomfortable and no one likes it. But if it's done in the right spirit with a shared aim, you can get to that point. But when it's violent, all that you end up with is destruction. Now, speaking of... I haven't brought this up at all, really, but here's a highlight for me. Anyway, of course, on Sunday, just gone, and this is still about this racial thing. As everybody knows here, I use football as a political football and as a racial football because it's just a brilliant topic for us to alight upon. We can draw people into the conversation in that way. The result on Sunday night of this football match between the team called Spain, I have to call them that because they weren't Spanish, and the team called England, and I must call them that because they weren't English, at least resulted in the team called England not winning the match. And you may be appalled here when you're saying that, but I was absolutely really clear that if the team called England had won, then Keir Dilla's Ditchwater Starmer was going to make even more hay out of that, and I was not happy that that was going to happen. I was bracing myself for a non-slot if they had won. Fortunately, they did not. I don't know how you felt about it, Eric. It's not that I was watching it. I just saw the last two minutes and was just thrilled that the team called Spain won. That's all I can say. I'm the same. I 100% agree with you because it's no longer. It's no longer an English team, is it? I mean, England doesn't come into it. I mean, it all started when Zola Bab was asked over. Do you remember that when she was asked over to Olympics? Yes, the barefoot runner. Yes, what happened to her? I don't know. But it's all political agenda. That's all it's for an agenda. Yeah. And it's a bit like this green movement. Pollution is a completely different question to the green agenda. Pollution, in fact, the green agenda creates more pollution and destroys more of the earth than the people that are against pollution. Because I think everybody really is in our interest to breathe clean air and clean up rivers and have clean environment. Yes, I think everybody should really be for that. This green agenda is more to destroy the earth with the electric noddy cars and stupid windmills and you name it. So really, what they do is Tarkapath's world is always reverse. Good is bad and bad is good. So to do something positive is a negative and to do something negative is a positive in their mind. And I've found that right the way through. So they're doing a negative all the time, which they're promoting as a positive. Well, you mentioned Ronald Reagan, didn't you, a few moments ago. And it's interesting because I was thinking about him earlier today, chuckling, as one does, remembering that at the time that Ronald Reagan was the president of the United States, he was a figure that was ridiculed mercilessly over here as been some kind of cowboy, as it were, which we'd all be thrilled about having a cowboy as impotent as him back in the White House seriously. But at the time, he was deemed to be a little bit sort of sandwich shot of a picnic. Of course, he was nothing of the sore. He was a tremendous storyteller and very charming, actually, because, of course, he was a trained actor. And that's what they are, they are actors. But I thought, my how things have changed. We had this, you remember the first edition of Spitting Image in the 80s where him and Margaret Thatcher, I mean, it was just hilarious, some of those things, they were absolutely vicious beyond belief. But you look at it now, and you think, well, in comparison to Joe Biden, Reagan is a rocket scientist. And it's literally true. I mean, yeah. What was that Patrick? Hello, I was going to say they have something in common Reagan and Trump. They both had assassination attempts on them now. Yeah, there was an assassination attempt on Reagan when he first took office. And they're both actors. But the assassin didn't remember doing it. And now the assassins are always bumped off. I mean, why couldn't they have injured that bloke on the roof so they could question him? That was the first thought I had as well. It won't let me in the room. The room is full. In plain sight of the cameras and people could snap pictures of them. They're right behind the stage. It's just, it's all theater. It's interesting what you were saying about shooting, just there. There was a comment in a little bit earlier on Rumble from Harvey No. 1. Hi, Harvey No. 1. It was shot several rifles in Vegas. You absolutely, caps can not miss. Could hit a rat's ear from three times the alleged shooter's range. And I have a stigmatism in my aiming eye. Move on, please. Well, we're trying to, Harvey, but we keep getting back to guns from time to time. So apparently it's an absolute dollar. If you can pick up a modern rifle, I guess this is an AR-15 with telescopic sights to pick off anything. So there's that. But I miss Reagan. It's ridiculous. I mean, it is. I was in my early 20s and I've been disinterested in politics all my life. I'm still not really interested in it because I view it as a, it's a sort of shallow end of the dream pool and you don't want to hang around there. But there is that other quote from someone saying, you know, the problem with not participating in politics is you get governed by people that do. And they're generally the worst sort. And that's, that is what we're facing. I accept that. That is true. Although the ones who are most readily say, yeah, hi, I'm me. You can stick your hand up my bum and make me a puppet. I don't mind. This is great. As long as I get plenty of plaudits. Well, that's what happens, isn't it? I mean, if it would be truthful about the very, if you were being truthful. Okay. Is it my funny phone? Yeah. Well, it's true. Hi, here's my bottom. Put your hand up. I don't mind. That's really what they're saying, isn't it? Don't you think? Well, you're right. I mean, we didn't have a care star. Should be stable. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You're a bit a care star, but he looks like, how can I put this? Look, I can't put it politely. He looks like the type of man that's just discovered that fault shouldn't be lumpy, isn't he? isn't he? He's got that half surprise look on his face. You know, he looks shell shock to me. I'm serious. He looks like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, like some really, you know, when you see pictures of him in the presence of Jimmy Savile, that all about, right? Yeah. How did that happen? How does, how do you get in the presence of someone that's that odd, right? Your parents, if they've got any instance, wouldn't allow it. You're not hanging around with that blog. You know, when you're a parent, you know, believe you me, when you're a parent, you absolutely know. If there's anybody dodgy around your kids, because you just know, I mean, if you don't, you're dead. I mean, as far as I'm concerned, but yeah, I know, you know, when I was in that active phase, when my boys were young, I'm sort of policing the area all the time, just casually, no, I'm not sort of like a maniac, but I'm fully aware and clued up as to what's going on, because some, you know, what could happen? Of course, it seems to happen even more. There's something wrong with his history in all sorts of ways. And then all these quotes that have come out like, you'd much rather spend these time at Davos, because they can get things done. And the question is, what care? What are you going to get done? Who invited you to do anything for us? And this is why voting does irritate me. I mean, you know, I don't think people should vote at all, because you're actually giving them legitimacy in their own mind to behave like they are so hard. They behave like they are souls that they always behave. No one should vote ever. No one. There should be literally zero votes. And they've got to come up with something else that they're useless. And as you said, as Reagan said, I mean, he made some really good things. One of the ones was the problem is not that it's too much government. Yes, 100% too much almost on a national level. You've talked about the civil service. We don't need much. We need people that are in charge of the military because you do need a defense system. I don't care what you say, you absolutely need one because you can't guarantee that all the other nations are never going to produce an our soul. And they always produce our souls. They just do. This arena produces them. It's like a machine, right? So you've got to defend yourself against that. And that must be done. And you need a civil service. And most of it could be worked out. I mean, one of the things that I've got to go into all these sorts of words, but Sussex man who's not here tonight, he's out. He's out doing something else. I was speaking to him earlier today. He's actually a common law training meeting tonight, which is good. Because I've got a debriefing from him tomorrow at some point. But we were talking about this word, denizen. You ever heard this word? A denizen? Everybody's heard of denizens of the deep. It's like a phrase. But denizens in the English Constitution are people who are here but are not of the tribe in simple terms, right? That means we've got millions of them here. Now, denizens in English constitutional law, which exists, but which is not applied because it's not living and breathing in our breasts right now. And we've got to do it that so that we talk from a position of force when we communicate these things, these lackeys of this system. Under English constitutional law, a denizen cannot occupy any position of power in this country for 10 generations. That's 200 years. You're going to be at 200 years, right? That means, so you know, in the past, I've said things like Sadiq Khan is not the mayor of London. He's not. He's absolutely not. Rishi Sunak was not the prime minister of these islands at all, ever, not for one million moments. The fact that all these idiots run around and say he is, they show that lack of awareness of what we've got. It gets dry in a way because you go, well, I've got to read all these documents. Yes, you do. You have to read because if you get the command of this knowledge and can communicate it in a simple way, you can put them in their place. And this, I've got someone on next week, Fingers crossed a guy called Peter's coming along. I spoke to him the other day and this is just, you know, he's got to get back to me. He's up in Liverpool. He was telling me a bit about his story. In fact, Sussex man put me onto him about a week or so ago and I got to talk to him. So Peter, if you're tuning in higher, look forward to having you here next week, I hope. He was telling me just very briefly about what had been happening to him. Now, they have a kind of rapid response group where he is. And they're getting judges to leave courtrooms regularly. And I'm looking forward to having him on next week because these are the sorts of things where we can put them in their place. The idea that that judge passed that sentence on Sam Melia for putting stickers up, right, and putting them down for two years, even though he's due out in autumn, it's completely out of order. This guy is in breach as far as I'm concerned, what I want for my country. I don't want you as a judge with the L.E.U. I don't want him, you know, and there's something about when we communicate in that way, that's when we draw the power. It's in the way that we sound, the look in our eye, where we stand, how we say it, the tone in our voice. These things are massively powerful. An incident, so I'm just going to go back to this again. The peasants revolt in 1381. What Tyler was like that? He addressed the king as if he were the king and the king were a commoner when they actually met at Smithfield Market. He'd had enough and he had 100,000 men behind him. So you can talk like that when you've got it organized. People stop because the thing is that in the end, once we've exhausted all these avenues of fine communication, and I wish we couldn't. I wish they couldn't be exhausted. I wish people would actually communicate with integrity and honor and admit when they are wrong. Of course, politicians are never wrong, right, which is why they're useless, literally. You'd forgive them if they said, look, we cock this up, left, right and center, but we put it right like this. You go, OK, I cock things up too, but they never cock things up, did they? They're perfect all the time in their own mind because they're psychos. But if we learn to talk like that, that's what we can do. And Tyler addressed the king in that manner. And Walworth, the mayor of London, was beside himself. He went out of his mind and they killed him. And a night ran through with a sword on his horse there. And he died, I think, over at Putney Church later that day. But that was a genuine revolt against power. And Tyler was talking about that. We are going to be free. All of us and our heirs in this land as Englishmen. Now, I love talk like that because that's really important. And I think I'm going to be free of this filth. And we've got this filth that's in charge. Anyway, I'm not saying anything new. But this talk reminds me of G. K. Chesterton's definition of a foreigner. A foreigner is basically anyone who laughs at anything except jokes. Yeah, that's a good expression of an alien. I'm an alien then. Well, we are kind of knew that. But we can't knew that a bit, Eric, about you. But no, you're not. You're not. I'm from a country called Fockham. So I suppose I am a foreigner, aren't I? Well, not really. No. You see, I think it's to do with kissing. This is why I think race is so important. Because if it's not cherished by people who are in it, whatever your race is, it willers and dies and it's prone. And others take advantage of it. They can't help it. It's like nature. Nature says, look, I've given you these attributes and you can't be bothered to use them. You lose them. It's that thing. If you don't use it, you lose it. And we've got to get back into using what we've got. And we've got some amazing stuff in our toolkit. It's just that it's right at the bottom. It's covered in dust and no one's looked at it for 300 years. It's that kind of stuff. And to simplify, you know, get this message across to people no matter what it is. And I do keep thinking about all of this local stuff. I mean, I don't know if I mentioned last week. I was on with Rhea, by the way, on Sunday and a great time for an hour. One of the things I mentioned there, it's just a lot of fun that show. It's just so well screwed together. And it's great. It moves in a really light way. You know, we obviously get a bit heavier here because we're blokes and it's in the evening at times, I suppose. But I did a little quick check. I went to the Church of England's website, Eric. You'd be proud of me. Well, you might not be appalled, but I went there, right? And I was looking at parishes and they've got a parish map for the whole of England. All the parishes there, 12,500 digitally. Yeah, I went, oh, I like that. Then I did a quick search on village halls in England, right? 10,000 plus, 10,000 plus village halls here in England. And they were basically, they'd always existed as sort of like parish halls as part of churches for a long time. But after World War I, there was some kind of an act passed to almost like permanently fix them in the countryside. They were deemed rightly very, very important centers because they were where many of those families that had been shattered by World War I, they would meet to restore some kind of a social life in the local community and to share stories and to work out their grief and their loss and all this kind of stuff. It was a key part of it. So that tradition in the land here for us, the English, is very strong. And I keep thinking we have to find a way to make use of the use of those meeting spaces to get these points across. You know, even if you only had one meeting every six months in all of them, right? That'd be 20,000 meetings a year. And if you've got three at each one, you've got a 60,000. I want to think like that. We've got it. If Wall Tyler could get 150,000 in 1381, can't we get 1.5 million in 2024? Well, people kept the Sabbath. You would be there every week. Yeah. Yeah. But I mean, the thing is the church is over here. I just shot. They're a nonsense. They've been a nonsense for a long time. Yeah, they're just ridiculous. They're just anybody can come in. They don't even know. They can't even read the very book that's supposed to guide them. They don't understand it. It's just clap happy guitars and nonsense. It's why we're men go there. They leave. They think it's a joke because it is a joke because it's not right. It's a joke. It's a pansy organization. They're wet. They're useless. Not all of them. But I can't stand them because they hijack something and they've got all about this lovely stuff. And I'm going, it isn't, you know, there's some real meat and force in this thing. Do you know how horrible this book is? Right. And do you know that you must pay attention to it to understand it? We'd rather not look at that. I know you'd rather not. But because you'd rather not, this country is going down the toilet at ever increasing speed and you're part of that process. Because people won't confront unpleasant things. And we've got some massively unpleasant things to confront. As that woman's clip that I played, that seven minute clip, which was brilliant, she absolutely nailed it on. We all know that that's happening. I know it's happening. And I don't know about you, but I can only think about it for a short period of time because I get so angry, distressed, and then I feel, what do I do? What do I do? I want to conquer older people. And yeah, it's such a big jump is that information for where most people are at, or at least it used to be. That's diminishing as well, which is a good sign. But you blow people's fuses inside three minutes, if you start bringing that stuff. I had a problem getting these people to go through a door of the revolution today. No, can't do that. How do you think compensation like that go down? You're mad. That's what happens, isn't it? Yeah, that's our challenge. That is absolutely our challenge. There's no two ways about it. There's a problem. The problem with using the public buildings and using churches, even if they're even if it's out there. And even if it's outside the formal church hours, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit tax exempt status, there's 20 or 30 things that they have to agree. They will not talk about it. And they will not allow to be discussed in their building. Then that has to do with political discussions, conspiracy theories, group organizations, the church is still responsible for everything that is discussed in that building. The VFW halls and the Legion posts, the veterans associations. They're also 501(c)(3). And they are under the same restrictions. All of these public meetings, these gathering places, they are under precise control by the government. Really, the only way you can discuss this stuff together is to get 50 or 60 or 100 people together in the middle of some farmer's cornfield and discuss it. Because there's not going to be a venue for you to discuss anything outside of mainstream. They've locked it up already. Well, I think you're right, but I still think it'd be worth a try. I mean, I'd like to talk to you, Eric, maybe off air at some point, and anybody else's interest in this sort of thing. I've got to get something going on to act, but I'm thinking of getting a leaflet and literally going around the houses near where I live and inviting them to a meeting at the local parish hall. It's 150 yards from my bottom right now. I'm sat in the chair, and it's about 150 yards away, this thing. And on that map, the Church of England map, there are about six within one and a half miles of where I'm sat. One's absolutely fabulous. I mean, it's got a stage, and we could put on plays and all that kind of stuff. Now, you may well be right, Paul, that the minute we go in there and start talking about things, which are a little bit... Ooh, all that. That would be the first and last time we'd ever get to use the facility. That in itself would be worth finding out. We're upset me. I go, great, fine. Thanks, we got that. We've also got this thing. We still have quite a few thousand of these things left in the UK called pubs, right? Now, most of them have been turned into plastic pubs. They're just full of noisy music or TV screens with everybody swilling down chemically adjusted lager, shouting at television screens, and they're charmless, dull, tedious places compared to what they used to be like. But there are still good ones left. Like I mentioned, the one that we go to every couple of weeks is a bit more upmarket. It just is. And we go there for that reason, and it's wonderful. It's absolutely marvelous. And if you're ever down here, Eric, we'd have to make sure that we'd make it coincide on a Tuesday evening so you could come along. Because you'd absolutely love it. It's absolutely fabulous. And it's things like this, like connecting with people to try and have a regular in real life connection point. I think he's going to be absolutely vital for us. I saw something today on Telegram. Somebody, I can't remember what my name is now, I think it's called UK Pantry or something like that. An effort to develop a food connection network here in the UK. We need that. We need to, I've mentioned before, if we had these places to draw in the local farmers and to say, we're going to buy from you direct, that's really, really constructive stuff. Because I've worked out that all I really need to live off is probably steak and eggs. I can probably get by on that. I'm serious, because the eggs that come off the farm are just absolutely fabulous. They're all full of tons of protein and energy. And you just go, yeah, I'm fine with that. So, you know what they're planning to do? Whether it goes as far as our horror stories would imagine, I don't know. I don't want to be sort of like just fear-pawn-monger all the time. But you have to look at history, and I know how many people they have, and you look at what they did in the Ukraine, and you look, they use food as a weapon. Church will use it in India. It's sick. These people are sick. They intend to use it as a weapon now. And I'm not trying to be negative. And I'm not trying, I'm not trying to just take pot shots of things for the, just for the sole purpose of doing it. What I'm doing is I'm pointing out the places that may not be possible so we can get creative and we can find places where it will be possible. And as far as the pubs, that would be wonderful if those pubs weren't operating under license. All it takes is somebody from the health department to go in and look at their kitchen, or somebody to audit their liquor sales and their ordering system, and have created some kind of a problem with their license to do business, and once that goes away, all they can do is lock the doors. So, the public venue is going to be a problem. I just know it for a fact. Well, it may be Paul. I mean, the history of, the history of public houses over here in England. And I'm assuming we could replicate this. I mean, okay, maybe this turns out to be a massive assumption. But public houses really sprang up because someone, Bob Smith, would say, on Sunday, I've got a barrel of beer in. I've got 50 barrels of beer in, and my house is open to the public just on Sunday. Licensing hours or whatever you'd say, you can come in and you can buy beer off me. You can even run a private club, 50p entry, a free half a pint of beer, whatever, something like that. These things are possible. There's also this thing called a private association, or a private members association, where you can do these things as long as it's on your property. Now, the fact is that I think that if I went around this area with a leaflet, and a leaflet won't be good enough, I actually want to engage with people a bit like somebody touting for their vote. I want to talk to them over the gate fence and say, "Hi, you don't know me, but I'm the bloke that lives down there." And I just wanted to know, are you concerned about the state of the country in a way that you've never been concerned before? Do you think we're in really serious trouble? No, I think everything's fine. Okay, sorry for bothering you. Until you find the ones that do, because you have to sort of do an identification thing and see what would happen. I'm not saying that I've got a massive hope about it, but it's almost like a market research exercise that I think would really be worth doing, because it's a bit like, what's that old phrase? Shoot for the stars. You might not get one, but you won't come up with a handful of mud either. It's something happens when you go out and do that stuff. You know what I mean? It does. It happens, and it changes you. If you come back and go, "Look, I spoke to 50 people," and every single one told me to go jump in the sea or whatever, I've learned something, and then you might find a different sector of people or section of people that respond more fully. But it's something about being on the ground. Yeah, hi, Patrick, sorry. Yes, I'd like to tell you a little bit about what I've been doing on the parish level, which is a little bit similar. In our parish, there's a lot of funny business that goes on. I'm sure with the C of E over there, you have that kind of stuff going on, too. But I find people who take a common interest in the things that I like and will listen to me, and I've come up with a Bible study in private homes of Bible and catechism study, where I meet with them on a weekly basis, and they're my neighbors. I go over to their house and we whip out the Bible and the catechism, and we go through that, and we have a chapter and verse type set up that we do. But also, you strike up these conversations about what's going on in their lives and my life. Even things like trade, like I have pigs and pork and beef, and they have chickens and eggs and that sort of thing. You're talking about swapping food and that kind without having to be part of the system. Oh, that's naughty. Well, the conversation, just getting the conversation going with people and in a place where you can be of good humor and not feel threatened by people listening in with their ears. They're ready to pounce on you for any incorrect thing you might say or do. That's the kind of thing I think we need. That's why I'm doing it. It's just kind of a way to build that structure, the institution, because we don't have those institutions. We can't rely on them, but the churches and the parishes are already there, and the tradition that's been there for thousands of years, why not take advantage of that? Well, I agree. Yeah, no, I think you're right. I mean, well, they are currently useless. I was thinking about phrase like, "I want to do a reverse buyout of the Church of England." Well, yeah, that's what I mean by funny business. Yeah. Well, I mean, I thought, you know, does the congregation, I mean, the Church of England, it makes me just wins when I think about it. Honestly, really, my soul shrivels at the thought of what it's become and what it ought to be. I mean, I've got a picture of what it ought to be, and it'd be just absolutely amazing, and it's not necessarily going there to sing songs and do all that. If people don't want to do that, that's great. Many people don't want to do that. I don't really mind. I don't think that what they talk about when they say it's prayer is prayer. That's me. I don't think that that happens in gangs. I think it happens alone. I think it's an internal thing. But my little Picadillos aside, because I wouldn't stop anybody doing what they wanted to do if it was in line with things, these need to be dynamic places. My understanding of a church is that it's a gathering place for the elders of the tribe to discuss the affairs of state. That is because we live under the laws that come from that book. In England, we do, more dynamically and more effectively than just about anywhere, or did, because that's how we got the common law. The common law is rooted in that. And these are the actual laws that governors like natural forces, like gravity and heat. And so they rule us. And of course, the people that we're up against have decided that they know better than that. No, we've got these man-made things, yes. And they're way, way better than the natural order of things. Yeah, they're not. Oh, no, they are. We're going to create utopia with them. Right. Well, I don't really want that. Well, if you stand in the way of us creating utopia, we're going to have to kill you. But I thought you said your laws were better. They don't get that. They literally don't get that they have to create hell. And are quite willing to get to their perceived heaven, because the ends never justify the means, because there aren't any ends. It doesn't end. You know, they achieve their victory on Sunday night. They get it Monday morning. What are you going to do? Oh, yeah. We're going to do it all over again. Well, it's an nonsense. I'm with Eric on the idea that there's a lot of power and humor. And I think that what our enemies use against us is they just make laughing stocks of their enemies. It's a very common tool. Just like Winston Churchill and Roosevelt, I listen back on their speeches to crowds of people and their stand-up comedians just mocking their enemy, making fun of them. And you listen to the old records of that time of them making fun of Hitler and Mussolini and all that, and they just make a joke of them. But at the same time, there's this violence behind it, backing it. And that's the problem is just, you know, where do you draw the line between humor and then the force that comes with it? You may pull. Thank you, Patrick. That's great. Pull. What I believe we need to look for, and I don't know what they call it, across the swamp in England. There are two different kinds of tax exempt entities, nonprofit entities in the United States. There's the 501(c)(3), which is strictly controlled and is limited on what they can speak about and what they can host and what activities they can do and how much money they can make and everything else. And that is characterized by the parishioners who are tithing and filling the offering plate. They can deduct what they contribute on off their taxes. That's the 501(c)(3). Now, there's another one that is a 508(c)(1)(a), that is a church. It's a faith-based organization. Anybody that contributes to it cannot deduct to their contributions from their taxes, but the entity itself is still nonprofit. Now, the 508(c)(1)(a) is not under the same restrictions and guidelines that the 501(c)(3) is. So those type of public houses, if you can find a church that is not fully tax exempt, then those are venues that you can use. There's also the private membership association where you can set up a private membership where somebody pays a dollar to be a member for a year and they can come in and everything that occurs within those four walls is completely private and it doesn't leave those four walls. So there's likely no control over that as well. And if we can find those entities in the United States and those entities in Britain, in Germany, in Russia, wherever, then we can start putting these groups together and not be under the controlling thumb of government. But those are the places where we have to look. Anyway, that was a good point Paul. There'll definitely be structures. I guess I'm just before that I'm looking for the human connection points. This is why I speak to everybody that I meet in the street. Anybody that I'm passing, if I think I can get their attention, I'll just say hi or whatever, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And if I sense that we can talk for a bit longer, I will. It never goes badly because I intend for it to never go badly. I'm never going to push it with people. I mean, having gone down the hospital recently, I go down every day. My wife's in there, as I mentioned, and everything's going fine. So this is not a violent playing moment. I talk to everybody down there. I've met friends with everybody on her ward. It's really good. People, when you warm them up, they all care about everybody else, but they're just a bit frightened to get the conversation going. Understandable, right? But people are, I'm always, I do it because I know it will completely re-inspire me that our people are good. They are, and I need reminding of that because sometimes my mind will give me a kicking and tell me that it starts going off on one and I have to shut it up. We all have that, I think. It's that little voice in your head going, that kind of stuff, right? It's useless. It's absolutely useless. And yet it sort of, you know, gets a bit too much time in my head at times. So I do it for those reasons. We can light a fire under people. We'll find a solution to all these meeting things and this, that and the other. But most groups, the other challenge with them is they tend to sort of splutter or fizzle out, or if they get too big, you get all this sod politicizing. You were mentioning Eric the other week, or I don't know whether it was here or when I was on with you, about this, the stand in the park gatherings that you kind of went along to a little bit, but it didn't kind of turn out so well, if you remember. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, two minutes before. And, hang on, I think you're coming to the end of the show. It's all right. You can talk over it. We're down to the last minute, yeah. Right, what I was going to say is that I was talking to a chap called Nathan Allen, and he's been a protester for over 30 years, and he said the main problem is infiltration, because if you start a big group, it'll be infiltrated. And that's what my grandad used to say. He said, oh, watch out for the infiltrators. And he said, small groups of six, and then they join with another group of six, and another group of six, so they can't be infiltrated so easily. Yeah, we're carrying on after the case. Hold your thoughts there. We'll carry on. Let me just do the wrap up here. So, hi, we're going to leave you now on the WBN324. We'll be back again at the same time next week, 3 p.m. U.S. Eastern, 8 p.m. here in the U.K. Keep tuning into WBN throughout the week, particularly real show on Sunday, and WTFR with Joss of an evening. He's on tomorrow night at 9 p.m. Some good stuff on there. We'll be back next week. And if you want to carry on, come to Rumble, Paul English Live.com. Bye for now. And we are now back purely in the land of the rebellious streaming set of the Internet, where Rumbles, yeah, we're rumbling. We're still going out live over radio soapbox. I'm pretty sure. So, if you're tuning there, you'll still pick up feed for as long as we go. Eric, what you were just saying there about infiltrators. I think it's key. Surely, the military have some kind of a psychological communication system for groups to detect infiltrators and then have their bottom beaten hard with a birch stick or something like that. Are you aware of anything like that? Yeah. Well, I don't think it's the '77 brigade. I mean, I think because you're not going to announce your enemy, what you're doing. You always show, you always say it's red herrings that you put out. Look at it from there. But I'll remember, I probably said this before, boring, but my granddad, he saw the destruction of the Labour Party in the 1920s. He saw it being infiltrated because he was more 19 years of age when the Labour Party was formed in 1907. I think you joined in 1907. I can't swear to that. I don't know. And he said, when I was a kid, watch out for the infiltrators. Just watch out. I wonder, what the hell is he on about? Because when you're about 10, you think, what? But as I've grown older, I realize what he's talking about. And I've seen things infiltrated as well. And it's very clever what they do. And I think that this idea that Nathan's got, where you just have groups, you reckon it's preferably three, then you join with another group of three to make six. But that's how the Vietnamese and North Vietnamese worked. They had groups of three and six. So if they got captured, they couldn't really say very much because the central command, that was a group of six, who then is like a kind of pyramid. I don't know if that makes sense. It reminds me of Napoleon. They had that similar structure where you had the head honcho Napoleon and then you had two officers under him. And then there was groups of five that they would have. It works. It's very effective. And I can't say, but he read that. Again, please stop me if I repeat to myself, but do you remember all the early 2000s, late 1990s that I was going to put special chips inside clothing, supermarkets were going to do that. And so that when you walk down the road, they would track you and you'd have screens up telling you, you know, if you bought a pair of shoes, have you remembered to buy the shoe polish and all this sort of rubbish. Yeah. Minority report. There was a book about it, but then there was a Philip K. Dick and then Steven Spielberg. There's a scene where he's walking through a mall and they recognize him by his face and they start doing catered advertising just to him. That's right. Well, what happens is a chap decided to protest about it. And he tried to get a group of people to stand outside a supermarket and protest. But he had contacted several other people in other areas. So it was only him. He's looking after a child, his own child. So he's there with a push chair on his own with a placard. And other people were doing this in other areas. And the thing that supermarkets don't want is bad PR. And the in those days I'm talking about 30 years old is very different. The press got hold of it. And the supermarkets back down. And I know that in this country, as far as I know, they don't put the chips in clothing as far as I know. But that's the story he told me. I don't know what it's like in the States. I mean, have to do the supermarkets put chips in clothing. So it's sort of like plot where you are and that type of thing. If they did, they wouldn't tell you about it. I think. I mean, I think, I mean, there's obviously that we can come up with and should come up with and we'll continue to come with lots of observations about the restrictions on how we can behave. But we've also got to, you know, you can't make a normal it without smashing a few eggs. We kind of smash this thing up a bit. It's like a release of energy. And at least to try and provide some kind of binding point for people. No matter how ramshackle and silly and daft, it may seem at the start. I know that groups get infiltrated. I mean, couldn't we have a sort of special infiltrator section? Hi, infiltrators. Hands up, everybody who's in place. It's okay. You can still stay and keep infiltrating. We've got a special badge for you. That's nice. That's very good. All that kind of stuff. Are they nicely infiltrators? They're very good. They can't help it. They're very silly people. But never mind. You know, we don't mean them any harm. I don't know. I mean, being stupid here because it gets down to dangerous things. But the, I mean, I never went to any of those stand in the park things, but I know people that did and there are lots of good people that came out of that. And it was a really good sort of connection point. People had this internal itch that they needed to scratch. And by going to these sort of connection points, they were able to do it. Now, it may well turn out that we find out down the line. Oh, that was an MI5 operation. It may well be case. Well, even so, I kind of also put faith in the idea that a bit like, you know, all these sorts of people throughout history have their handlers, supposedly. Right. And they're all agents like Putin, you know, I've got photographs of Putin doing the British Royal Arch-Free Masonry training at PowerGen in 1981 when he's about 22 years of age or something for British Royal Arch-Free Masonry. You know, it was one of them. Okay. Well, maybe at the time he was, but there's this thing throughout world politics, I believe. I mean, maybe it's just bladder as well. Call blowback. They have a guy or gal or whatever under their control. And suddenly they find out that they don't. That person is actually very, very bright, has figured out a lot of things, sees that if they carry on that at some point, their head is going to be severed from the rest of their body. They're not too happy about this. They don't let on. And they can cause mayhem because if it was so plain sailing for them all the time, I kind of feel that this situation would have been stitched up an awful long time ago, probably within five years after the end of World War II. Yeah, that's why the big question right now is, is this assassination attempt against Trump, an organic thing or an organic? Yes, good question. Is it real or is the bogus? Absolutely right. Yeah, because it is. I leaned towards it being bogus, but I could be wrong, because the information that we've got is so fragmented. It's very difficult to make up our own minds. But to look to the future, I think we've got to keep one eye in the past, that's an old saying. And when you look after the First World War, there was almost a revolution in this country because the veterans coming back from the front realized they've been lightened, and there's came back to worse poverty than when we left. And there was a lot of veterans associations set up. There was riots throughout the countryside. There was one in Luton, a very famous one, where they were smashing up that went and smashed up the town hall. And what happened is the government infiltrated the Veterans Association, some of them were very, very militant. And remember before 1920, you could buy firearms over the counter in much the same way as you can in some states in America today. They were quite freely available with firearms, and they rushed the 1920 Firearms Act through Parliament and put people's arms away from them. And then, surprise surprise, in 1921, the British Legion was started. And what happened is the Secret Service people infiltrated the Veterans Association and trashed the leaders and used the press to drag their name through the mud, making up all kinds of things about them. And then people were wandering around aimlessly, and then the government starts the British Legion and people flocked to it because it was telling the people what they wanted to hear, like for our starts. And then slowly, slowly, slowly, it started to change because it was a pacifist organization. People don't realize that up until 1939 and it became politicized. So looking back on it, this is why we're going to be very careful that any leaders, and this is why I say that if you want to find a leader, look in the mirror, that leader will be looking back at you. Be your own leader and do the same as what the yellow vest did. They didn't have an overall leader. It was all small groups that were getting together to make huge groups. And I think that's the way of doing it. If there's one leader, they'll pop them off, they'll trash them, and then the government will start some alternative organization that people are very gullible, they'll fall for it. And I think that's what might happen. We've got to be aware of that. Yeah, the Canadian trucker envoy protesting the blockades of the border crossings and making them show a vaccine passport was kind of a final straw in that whole COVID lockdown era, because at that time it was a challenge to the authority structure of Canada. And they had to call in United Nations troops. They had foreigners come in and set them up with jack boots and body armor to come and break it up when it was just truckers there having parties and bouncy castles for children. But what then distracted everybody was when they started the war over in Ukraine up again. And so you got to kind of look at this whole assassination thing that is taking place amidst to what you could call wars they haven't been declared, but it's Ukraine and Gaza. And there's talk recruiting soldiers to go and fight, and they're going to have to draft people or be able to convince them to join the fight. And it's looking like if they had been successful with taking out Trump, who would they put in his place? And Trump doesn't seem to me to be somebody who's going to do anything about Gaza. He wants to just finish the job, whatever that means. He doesn't speak out against it. And he's got the full support of Netanyahu who betrayed him to support Biden. But, you know, it's just ridiculous. He lost the election because he locked down everybody over the flu. That's why Trump lost. There's no other explanation for it. I mean, I'm posting just fine. He may well have done. I guess, I mean, it's difficult. I just think that they're playing sort of musical chairs with that whole thing. And when we start talking about local things, I get much more excited. I get much more excited about what we can do in terms of what we need to do for ourselves. Because I think it's very easy to anticipate because it's true that we're outgunned if we play them in their sort of playground. But if we can find this way, and it does exist, you know, I just need to get out and do something and see what happens. Because that's it. Everybody's kind of frightened of failing. Oh, well, we had these great ideas and only eight people turned up and three of those were dogs, you know, this kind of stuff. Well, let's find out what it is. Let's find out what's actually going on. And just to let you know, we've got a caller coming UK Steve is in, I haven't even announced this tonight. But if you do want to call in and somebody else is in there called device not connected. I don't think that's their real name. Actually, Thomas was in there. But if you hear this, Thomas, we've opened it up. But you can call into the show by going to PaulEnglishlive.com. And there's a link at the bottom. And if you go to PaulEnglishlive.com/call, it brings you through into the studio. Anyway, Steve's with us. Let me just unmute him. I think I've got him muted, actually. Have I? Yeah, let's see if we can hear you. Okay, Steve. So try and say something and let's see what your sounds like. This is UK Steve from Leeds. Crystal Clear, UK Steve from Leeds. Hi, we've spunked before, but it's been a bit of a gap. How are you? And welcome to the show. Thank you very much. I've been quite active on my own Telegram channel and I've been doing like a weekly table tour. I did a show of a short while ago with Scott, just before, like the show before he left. But he's come back to comment on the Trump situation, which is what I would like to do after I just address a news article that's just come up with my bit of interest. Yeah, sure. So I've been watching the Telegram channels this evening as I always do for the news flow and it seems Leeds has come up on the radar as it occasionally does. And there are massive where it's going on right now in Harold and Gipps and the bleeds. It's like my old estate school in Harold's. Right. And basically there was a, I guess, must have been one of a dozen cop cars and maybe about 60 police being chased off by a massive crowd. And then they progressed to burn out all the vehicles. Is this a massive crowd of indigenous white Yorkshire folks, Steve, or is it possibly not our own people doing that? It was me looking at some of the videos like because there's several videos that are coming out, it's going viral on the background right now. Okay. The first one looks like immigrants, so they try to label it as immigrant gangs. Yeah. When I look at the other videos, it seems to be 50 50 or 60 40 white and black and Muslim, right? And they were all destroying the pigs. I'm happy to see it. Now the reason I want to bring it up is I've got a feeling if this goes to the other states like Seacroft or Basin and this travels and does become like a migrant thing, like an immigrant riot rather than an anti pig riot. You could see this spread. So you could, as the potential to be a lot bigger. So I'm watching till the gram, we'll see if it goes viral. Is it the way forward? I mean, ultimately you want to get the divisional headquarters off of Seacroft because it leads to the scene as the universal enemy. And then you've got the banks, leads being the second one for finance and judiciary. But I think it's something to be done. It's interesting now because the areas you've mentioned. So for those of you who are not familiar with leads, which is in Yorkshire, which is my hometown, as I've mentioned before, I grew up not far from Seacroft. I used to pass through Gipton all the time, which was rough as hell even when I was a kid. Harehills became a red light district. It didn't used to be about 120 years ago. It's full of this fantastic Edwardian and Victorian houses, but it fell into the shoddy part of town. And it's been, I know from friends who are still up there who drive through Harehills that it's of Islamabad or something like that. I don't know. And we went through there once or twice and I thought, oh God. My grandma lived and died in Seacroft, which is, or was, at the time, really rather pretty. This lovely sandal quaint, done, I English, had a church with a cricket green there and everything. I don't know what it's like these days. But in a way, what you're saying is not too surprising, Steve, but I'll chase it up on telegrams. So that's just for people who are not in Yorkshire, not in Leeds, not in England. That's what Steve's talking about, these different areas of Leeds, which is the fourth Biggie City in England, with about one and a half million people there, and one football team that can't win anything, and maybe they can get off about the football. But no, I've been flippant really, but that's useful to know. It's all about the estates really, because the estates are very territorial in Leeds. I moved from north Leeds to south Leeds, like Beeston. So the seven-seven bonters apparently came from Harley-Krod, where I used to live. Oh, hi. Okay, right, yeah. It's not my first car, it's not Harley-Krod. I lived on Harley-Krod, and I moved to the other side, because there were so many Indians, and Muslims moving in at that time, even when I was growing up. But yeah, Beeston is extremely rough now. It's a real shame for what I used to do, as well, I'm middleman. But I'm wanting to see at the moment if the violence travels, you know, they say to Leeds, you know, that Leeds people is to predict a riot. So we'll see what the people, there's a lot of anger out there. I guess the poverty is motivating people. The lack of manufacturing and jobs and employment there. The lack of housing now caused by the immigration. So there's a lot of pressures there, and it is a powder keg. Yep. I guess we'll find out. People are now saying on the internet, watching the comments, that the UK has to now prepare for a race war. I thought it was an interesting comment. Where's that? Where are those? Are they on Telegram or elsewhere? Just Telegram, you're saying. On Telegram. So these are people outside of the UK who are looking at this, thinking it's a bit of a pressure cooker at the island, because it's not like a big country like America or like a continent like Europe, where people can move across borders very easily. And people are very territorial, especially in Yorkshire. And the world we knew no longer exists. Yes. Yeah, we're not happy about it. We're happy about it. Of course, what's happening there, I've seen more stuff about Ireland recently. I don't know why. I just have. I don't spend all my time on Telegram. But Ireland are suffering exactly the same sort of situation. Very small place, geographically, physically. Well, I'm near Minneapolis. It's similar. Is it in Minneapolis, Patrick? Yeah, Minneapolis, where the George Floyd riots took place. That's right. It's the most Scandinavian area of the United States, practically. At least it was. And now it's crazy. And the same deal. We had tons of, in the 90s, Somalian's coming in and buying up, you know, the ghetto areas. And it's just been a sprawl, urban sprawl since then. Yeah, because I'm mixing these races together. What could possibly go wrong? Back to UK, Steve and Leeds. But Steve, you mentioned something about Trump. There's some comments that you wanted to make about Trump as well. Or about this little event. Or maybe it's a big event. Would you like to talk about that? I'll talk about assassination. I want to talk about the political forecast based on that. Right. So, I was studying it for quite a bit and thinking. First thing is thinking. I've come to the discernment that it was a real shoe thing. There was two shooters on the audio analysis. I've come to the conclusion looking at the angles that the first two shots were shot to kill for a headshot. By the shooter, who we think is Jewish with Jewish grand. And the second shooter shot the crowd, convicting the real shooter that he's evil. And that therefore justifies putting a bullet in his head. Rather than arresting him and finding out who sent him or what his motives were. If anybody paid him like black. So, we have to... Yeah, well, we don't know. She's dead. Dead men tell no tales, right? Right. But what I wanted to talk about is this hit. I was trying to figure out whether it was to keep the Ukraine war. Well, I Biden done it and the Jew. Or whether this was a Netanyahu move with possibly Trump's enemy. But what I've come to the conclusion that I've changed that view slightly the last 48 hours. And I've come to the conclusion that Netanyahu did it. And I think he aims to kill Trump. And he wanted to get rid of Biden. And he wanted to put a black female president on the throne. That's what I think he was going to do. So we have Ukraine more chalked up as a Biden loss. And we have a Democrat in there to keep the borders open. But the new Democrat will pursue a war on Iran next year. Now that didn't happen. And then what all of a sudden magically Netanyahu is getting in touch with Trump. And I thought you're giving the guy away here. And he's putting out the olive branch, right? Because basically they all wanted to keep the borders open at some point to close them so they had a fallen out. But what he now needs, because he's failing in the war against Hitler, when the Jew is getting their asses kicked. He needs the white man to go die. And they need to follow white nationalists to go die for the Jew. The light is well, fighting Hezbollah in South Lebanon, Syria. And I guess in my view, I think it's a deal to take all of the Middle East in Trump's new war next year to take all of the oil. And that's the only way they're going to keep the dollar propped up. That's my view. So don't forget it. No, I like it. There's a lot in that, Steve. Steve, there's an awful lot in that. And remember, you are allowed to upgrade your view, right? It's not hard and fast. I think where are we now? We're several days after the event. It's difficult to know with all of these things. Even if we knew, even if what you said is true, we've still got sort of these challenges of dealing with, you know, I'm actually sort of more concerned about what's going on in hair hills, I suppose, metaphorically than that. But you're probably right about these things. It's how long? I mean, if we're getting back to the banking thing and the oil, and just by way of shorthand, really, for, I would just to say it, really, when you're spending money, you're basically spending oil tokens. That's really in very simple terms. That's what it is because it's the number one traded commodity. So there's also a geopolitical military reasons why they fight over oil. It ain't just because of the oil. There's so much oil we've got more than we need. But it's obviously to prop up purchasing power of dollars. We're going to have to see what they do with all of this sort of digital leather that they're going to do. But you may well be right about a lot of that. We're going to have to see, you're going to have to keep your eyes open though to actually check that and see what it's true. I can't imagine that you're right about all of it. But who knows? You might be pretty close to it. But that's a good thing. Yeah. And thanks for calling in, Steve. No, it's good. We've not spoken for a little while. And I particularly value the information about leads. In fact, weirdly, I can't get out. I was even thinking of going up there this weekend to have a nice time. I don't get out because I've actually chained into the house. But I'm currently in a situation where I've got a little bit more latitude and freedom. And I was saying, "Oh, I think about just jumping the car and go up and see some old friends." Because the last time I was there was in March for an old friend's funeral. Met some people I'd not seen for like 35 years. It was absolutely amazing. It was absolutely wonderful to see all that. And we went to a nice place and it was lovely. We didn't go to harehills, right? I didn't go to Gipton. There wasn't a reason to go there. But if that's going on, I'll check that up afterwards. That's fine. It's going viral now. Okay. That's cool. Eric, do you have any sort of comments on the sorts of things that Steve's been talking about? Yes. It's quite interesting. Can you turn it over a bit? You're a bit quiet. A little quiet again. I had a bit quiet, so I dropped my microphone. You've got a Rick in your neck from holding that microphone, haven't you? I'll put it down for a few moments. I forgot to pick it up. I can't. Well, I'll get you set with the arm next week. Don't worry. It's been brilliant. You sound so much better this week because of it. And you know, it's massive difference. It's brilliant. You sound really good. So it makes a huge difference, Eric. I'll get the arms set up first thing tomorrow morning. Before you break your neck, yeah, please do that. Before breaking your neck, yeah. I'll just put it down review moments. Oh, sorry. But what I was going to say is that I don't, personally, I don't think there's going to be a World War III because World War III started in 1945 and it's been going on ever since under our noses. I think it's all fear pole to get people frightened all the time because the only way they can start some formal World War is to have a false flag. But how are they going to do it? I mean, how are they going to do a false flag? All right. Some people will believe in it. But people don't think they're as gullible as they used to be. Yes, they're still gullible, but they're not as gullible because it's going to be up to be a pretty heavy false flag. I mean, for example, most people fell for the baton kin incident. Most people fell for 9/11. So it's going to have to be something that a lot of the may call break them. And I think they're running scared. So I've got a feeling that Ukraine will be a what they call a sustainable war. That's what Vietnam is supposed to be. That it's just like a sort of like a killing machine. Wasn't there something floating around about Ukraine the other day, last 48 hours where they were saying that they want to actually broke a peace now with Putin? I saw something on that. I don't know how it must have been telegram. Yeah. Yeah. We've had enough now. We've organized it and we've killed it. We think we've now killed off enough of our own people, which was our entire gull. And now we'd like to stop fighting it. We've wiped out most of the fighting-age men out of Ukraine. That was the purpose of it and reduced and sat there morale down to nothing. Let's have some peace now. And then we can sort of divvy it up. I don't know what's going on. But do you want to make out with Putin? Boris Johnson. Boris Johnson met with Isov, which is supposedly a radical agreement. Well, the Nazis. So they're supposed to be the Nazis. They're supposed to be the Nazis. Of course. Yeah, they're the Nazis, right? Yeah. And they're the Nazis. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He's trying to convince Trump to not give up the fight and stand with Ukraine and all that. So that's in the news. Wasn't the guy that tried to shoot Trump? Wasn't he of Russian descent? Wasn't that a false flag? I mean, did I miss something? Oh, it's just so complicated. Somebody put it into a TV series and put it on Netflix or something. Dead men tell you more tales. You can't find out the motive. No. Scrub anything that the guy was posting. I'll tell you. There is an encouraging thing about all this though because I'm not even too attached about whether I suss it outright or not because we've already got the context of what's going on. I think the details are secondary. I really think that it's the principle at play. But one thing that I think is a positive. This conversation is indicative of it even though it's on a relatively small scale I guess in the world of mass media who knows. But more people have caught on and questioned that event more rapidly whilst it was possibly even taking place than at any other time before. In other words, when these sorts of events happen, there's a much larger proportion. It's still small in compared to the great mass of people, but there's a much larger percentage of people that look at it and go, ain't right. I can't tell you I ain't right, but ain't right. Every sane thing right because we know that these things are used all the time to create the confusion that is actually the main product of these events in many ways so that you can't think straight about stuff. You have to sort of take a deep breath, chill, look at it and go. And like I've said before, my little sort of get-out phrase is, all we're trying to do is be less wrong tomorrow than we were today, removing error, we're not 100% right. We don't even know how to do that. I wasn't there. I'm not a security guy. I'm not a member of some evil, satanic cult that plots these things and I've no intention of joining one, but we cancel with out the guff and get away from an awful lot of it to see what's going on. I mean, why anybody's even bothered about what's going on in the Middle East is, oh, no, why is that? Oh, could it be because the people that control all the banks are pretty sort of concerned? That might have something to do with it. That might have something to do with it in a gentle way, just expressing it in a gentle way. Does anybody want a song? There is. I've only done one song on that. Yeah. Yeah. There is one more thing that this most recent event did was it allowed the left to paint themselves exactly as they are. I mean, they're saying, oh, he should have had a bullseye on his head long ago. Damn, he should have spent more time at the shooting range. We were this close to it being my best day and it turns out he missed. So this is my worst day. These despicable people, I don't care if they hate Trump or anybody. If they can talk about anybody the way they are talking about Donald Trump, they need to be extricated from the gene pool. Yeah. That's the worst example of humanity. They are the disease, they are the diseases, the attitude in the heads of these people. How can you point? You know, we go, look, we don't agree with anything that you, we don't agree with any of your girls or anything. I'll talk about, I'll sit down with a table and see if we can talk about it rationally. You can't. You can't do it. The opportunity to, it doesn't exist, doesn't exist, does it? Right. But they're mutants, as far as I'm concerned, they, these people are mutants, their brain is very, very different. I mean, you could disagree with people. Yes, I mean, as most of my friends I disagree with. But we come to a sort of a conclusion, okay, we beg to differ or something like that. But when you look at the mentality of these mutants, there is something very odd. And I think that Professor Edward Dunness onto something, I'm not saying that we should go back to prior to the Industrial Revolution. But more people being born today, surviving childbirth today than they ever did. Because years ago, you know, a woman would have someone like five children and only two would survive. That's how bad it was. But there's now a breed of mutants that are coming up that there's something wrong with their mind because it seems strange that communists read its ugly head around about the 1840s. And that's when the first batch of mutants start to get into power. It starts to come back. Yeah, it is. I'm fine with the world mutant, whether it's purely genetic or whether it's that behavioral patterns affect subsequent generations of genetics, which may be the case. I don't worry about it. I just think, if you've got an ideology, which is what it is that has got a sense of certain ideas such as the destruction of the family, the destruction of the true roles of men and women, the championing of perversion, the provision of a centralized back and of an incremental income tax, you're dealing with ideas that are puke on a stick. These guys, it's not so much that they're not, and that's what's affected people. And growing up with dysfunctional parents grow up dysfunctional, don't they? I think they do. And many of the things that you would think are just and are completely normal behavior, like disciplining your children, because you need it when you're young. You need it. You really do. I got some from my dad, and once I'd had a bit of it, I went, "I'm going to listen to what he says in the future about these things because he brings you up here." Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. I got a bit more mad. I didn't like it at the time. I moved it like it because, you know, Paul and all that kind of stuff. But he was right. I looked on it right, and I could see it was kind of, my dad didn't like doing it either, but he knew it was the right thing to do. Now all of these things have been removed. You're creating a kind of young people that are growing up that are just coming apart at the seams. I can't, I do believe what I see, but you see these young lads, and they're the shape of light bulbs. They're all blobby at the bottom. They've got arms like pipe cleaners. They overly enunciate everything. They don't know how to be men, they're not doing it because they've not been around any. And everything's been softified, and I'm not arguing for pointless, useless hardship. With doing plenty of that, our people have been abused massively up and down, sitting down in the pit, working with a death. I'm not for that. Well, there isn't infant mortality, and yeah, yeah, we have better infant mortality rate, but at the same time, think about this. We have murder for cowards, which is abortion. People who don't want to bring children into the world, even though they should think responsibility for themselves. You know, there it is. It's, and then pass the buck when it comes time to discipline their children. It's totally, totally backwards. It is totally backwards. You've reminded me, are I going to find this? I'm probably, I need to, I saw a series of posts the other day on Twitter, and if I can find them, let's see if I can find these, I'm just looking for them now as I go. Where's this? Is it there? Is it there? I'll find it. I'm just going to the search. Okay. Say something amongst yourselves. Something interesting. Well, I've got a quick story, you know, what the, what is the principle difference between a pregnant woman and a light bulb? I don't know what is the difference between a pregnant woman and a light bulb, Paul. You can unscrew a light bulb. That's the whole basis behind abortion. Is that, that's, there's one for the fucking whole joke inside of me here, Eric. Yes, that's smarty enough. It gets through the smart, smart line. Yeah. It does. It is a good one. Oh, I can never find things when I'm looking for them, but why not? So from memory, I was the whole thread of these things, they were worth actually reading out. Some guy had written in on Twitter, on this whole series of posts, and he was blaming the boomers, right? People do this, right? And I think you can blame everybody from every generation you want, if you want to have a go at it. What he was saying was, he said, we were told that we needed to get careers and do all this kind of stuff, and that we could just have a lot of fun, you know? And I mean, this is kind of so, it shows you where the mind goes all the time. And we could, you know, our parents said, no, have fun and get a career and do all this kind of stuff. And this was a guy that was writing this, but I think he was addressing the fate of both men and women throughout this period. He said, then we find that we get a late 30s and 40s, that we can't find women to her. And now we haven't got any children. And I'm 41. And I haven't got any kids, I don't have any children. And I'm going to get to 60. And there's no one going to look after me because blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. It was not phrased in a desperate way, but he was going on about all this stuff. Well, there's a really simple solution. Find a woman and have children. And people got to talk because we come up with so many reasons about why you can't do things. I've heard this over and over again. I can't afford to bring children into the world. The actual truth is we can't afford not to, there will be a world if you don't. And you might say, well, Paul, that's very easy for you to say, yeah, it is. That's why I said it. We should do things that are easy and straightforward. It's absolutely vital. I mean, it's not even, it's not, now that's what you call a law, see that that's a law. No one escapes that. And going back to the parishes, then you would have your parish meeting hall that you would go to. And you would meet these people that say that they can't afford it. And then you could get support of the people that go there to, to pool their money and help those people. Yep. It's that connection, that community bond, which arises more naturally amongst members of their own race. It can do that. It has to do that. And that's why people need to be with their own and work it out. So you know, we're with Muhammad Ali on this and bring them up every now and again. You got to quote him and bring him up because it's worth to do it. We've got, it's part of the bullets we've got. So fire them a lot. We can fire them these ideas, infinite amount of time. So they got to be fired young parents certainly need the small parish groups because they're going to need the resources and effectiveness of that group to help them with their child. There will probably be a doula or a midwife in the group. That way the child can stay out of the hospital system and off of the the whole birth certificate train rack. There's a group of parents that can get together and each parent takes one or two days a month and the kids are all homeschooled and they stay out of the public and not for a nation system and they have play dates and play groups and children that interact with other children that come in households with the same basic belief system as far as religion and politics and everything else. And it's a more cohesive and a more standardized and normal environment for all of the kids in general. I mean there are all kinds of good reasons for young parents to get together at a local parish, a small group, political, whatever. The reasons are, they just keep going on and on and on. I mean everything that our parents did, that's what we've got to do, it's really straightforward. We don't have to invent anything new, people have just got to get off their high horse about thinking that we've made progress, we haven't, right, we've got more toys, there's more technology diddling around and it gets boring after a while, even that gets boring. Nothing can even come close to raising a family, nothing at all, it doesn't even come close. And of course some people for unfortunate reasons never get around to it, I accept all that. I'm not trying to say, you almost do that. But we've mentioned before, every parent wants their children to be better than them at everything. You just do. And when you think about it, it's very rare that that happens to you as an individual. You don't want anybody to be better than you, but when it's your children, you want them to be better than you, add everything, you want them to be the best you could possibly make them. And you want to do that job with a woman in my case that you love or with a man in the case of a woman, nor the combination will do by the way, it's all complete shit. And that's what's, it's the old fashioned values and not old fashioned. They're the truth, they're the law. That's why, because those guys didn't come up with that arrangement, because somebody a committee said, this is how we'll do things. It just arose naturally over thousands and thousands and thousands of years, because nature has the guiding hand in all things. I mean, we have to listen to all this complete drivel, people whining on about, oh, I can't do this, I'm going to do that, and I don't want to have babies, you just need a good slap. Isn't it funny? It's called labor and you got the labor party and you're talking about getting unscrewed, you're not going to get unscrewed with the labor party, it sounds like, so we just need them. We need to take advantage. How do we organize labor? How do we make labor, you know, how do we put it into like a military terms, like how do we put labor into action, how do we get a hold of that, because that seems to be what we need, is we need people working together for a common purpose, and accomplish these things where we wrestle the power away from the political media organizations that have it currently. What that plugged into people is they've indoctrinated people to be, to have no, I mean, we need to look forward to the future, optimism, they've actually programmed people with pessimism, total pessimism. You look at everything from the 60s, I was looking at an advert today from 1965 for the mini-myther car, and it was all positive, you know, getting to the mini, you would be exporting them, they showed you the production line, they're rolling off the production line, they're fantastic, and it worked. And even though, excuse me, I mean, well, they're a lot of crap, I think the mini was, but it still sold very, very well. And I think that what happens now, everybody's been dragged down, to pessimism, you go along to one of these standing in the park groups, and they're the most pessimistic, you never wish to meet. Oh, yeah, well, it's terrible, oh, this is all for, oh, whatever you see, and you get your phone full up with links to people that say the right things, we're not really doing anything. And that's the problem. It's that. It is, it is the problem. Hold that thought, we're going to have a song, right, from Bing Crosby. Oh, I can't sing, oh, oh, come on, Eric, I was going to put you right, you've got a new microphone, he's going to say he's a good lad, he's come a long way to be with you all here tonight, I want you to give a big round of applause for Bing Crosby, here we go, this is only a couple of minutes, thanks Warren, Warren always throws in a song. And here we go, Bing Crosby, I think, yeah, should be. Oh, give me land, lots of land, under starish skies above, don't fence me in, let me ride through the wide open country that I love, don't fence me in. Let me be by myself in the evening breeze, and listen to the murmur of the cottonwood trees, send me off forever, but I ask you please, don't fence me in, just turn me loose, let me straddle my old saddle underneath the western sky, on my coyote, let me wander over yonder till I see the mountains rise, I want a ride to the ridge where the west commence to, and gaze at the moon, till I lose my senses, and I can't look at hobbles, and I can't stand fences, don't fence me in, oh, give me land, lots of land, under starish skies, don't fence me in, let me ride through the wide country that I love, don't fence me in, let me be by myself in the evening breeze, and listen to the murmur of the cottonwood trees, send me off forever, but I ask you please, don't fence me in, just turn me loose, let me straddle my old saddle underneath the western sky, on my coyote, let me wander over yonder till I see the mountains rise, I want a ride to the ridge where the west commence to, and gaze at the moon, till I lose my senses, and I can't look at hobbles, and I can't stand fences, don't fence me in, no, oh, don't you fence me in, oh, let's, that's what I want to show. Bing, bang, Bing Crosby, hey, that was really groovy, I really enjoyed that, you know, I was just, I was in a leather, in my mind I was in a big old leather setty, and I was listening to that through one of those massive wooden valve radios, and all the lights were lit up, and I was just sat, that's where I was for those three minutes, brilliant, brilliant choice war, and that was so good, I love the Andrews sisters there in the background as well, just fantastic, loved that, there you go. It's why I love the show, because if people are looking for a positive influence in their life, all they need to do is tune in to Paul English life, I mean, because where else are they going to find a properly positive Brit, who would actually use the term sweaty and wonderful in the same sentence? Well, it's true, it's true, you know. If you really want real music, you won't foster, was a name Florence Pinky's, a wonderful one. Steady man, steady, look, I'm prepared to unleash Florence Jenkins on the audience, but only with the right sort of preparation, Eric, I want to keep, I want to keep this audience, and I want to see them happy, and I want it to grow. No man should be facing Florence Jenkins without a sort of public health warning. We'll do it next week, okay, but we're going to have to work it in, and I'll need a lot of public health warnings. Please sit down and make sure no sharp objects are around, and that kind of stuff. Yeah, that's, we'll do Florence, we'll get Florence in, she's what to find. Anyway, we better not talk about it, no one probably knows what we're talking about, but she's very moving, I would say foul on the evening, I think, but they will do soon, they will do soon. You know, being Crosby, wow, it's just like, it's all, it's just perfection, what an absolute perfection, and it's all organic, there's no electronics, it was all skillful musicians, and you know, that took me to another place, it was brilliant, I really do that. Me too. I absolutely loved it. It did mean, Warren just, look, Warren, we all love you, fantastic choice there from Warren in the, in Rumble, that's, that's what it works, everybody, in Rumble, you select a good song, and we just sort of love you, you feel this, that we just think it's great, so do it. You had a good microphone. Yeah, he did have a good microphone, yeah. Well, Eric's got a good microphone now, but he doesn't sound like being Cosby, does he? He does wonderful, wonderful stuff, no, it's great, that's, that, this is what radio is all about, didn't it? So no, really good, fantastic stuff, and yeah, I was looking at the picture, the cowboy as well, don't fence me in there, he is roaming on the range, lovely cowboy picture we got this week, I don't know, I just sort of dig these things up and find them, thank, thank Crikey for AI, image generation, because it just produces some pulling things, we ain't got enough time, or a budget to actually have artists do this, I'm terribly sorry if you are an artist and feel that we should be sending you lots of money, but we just don't have any, but just to get some images rolling is great, and I think, look, you're talking there about singing, you know, there used to be this tradition in pubs, it's disappeared, of course, but it used to even be there in the '70s, when I first started going to pub as a teeny, they had pianos in them, and people actually would get around them and sing, usually very, very badly, it was absolutely toe curlingly bad at times, but there's something about people feeling a bit of alcohol, singing a song off-tune with tremendous vigour and energy that's just really something else, I think there's something about that commitment that people bring when they can slightly out of their good, and they're going crazy on drugs, so maybe we need to revive that, what do you think, should we revive it, it could have been, it gave, oh, how about I did that, it was literally giving me toothache, that's how bad it was, it's not to sit there, you know, you, K, Steve called in earlier about leads and stuff, right, there's a pub, I don't know if it's still there, there's a pub down in the centre of leads called the Scotsman, it was, I mean, leads was, when I was in a teenager in the '70s going down there, there were a lot of really rough pubs, there was one called the Scotsman, and the roughest one, it sounds rough, it sounds as rough, it was even rougher than it sounds, it was called the whip, absolutely, there was a pub called the whip, and it was like going into a Dickensian dark home with all these skulking characters, reeking of alcohol, the whole place was unbelievable, and literally sawdust everywhere on the floor, but the Scotsman used to specialise in having drunken singers, they were always Scotsman that were in there, these are the sorts of guys, you must have seen this in the pub, they're fuelled by a bit of beer, they get up on a table and they really fancy themselves as a singer, and they're very, very bad, and it's impossible to get across to them that they're bad, and they sing with even more and more energy, and you just go, I've got to go home now, I've been in a lot of situations like when that's happened, and I just can't, I don't get how people are able to go through, it must be the alcohol, it gets you through anything else, but it's like, it reminds me of Carole for now. - Carioca, yeah, at the pub, yep, well Eric, if you want to set up some things in the pub, we need to have a single, I think sing a long night, so be great, I'm serious, I really think they would, because when you get people singing, because everybody goes, "Oh, I can't sing", you know that, shut up, get up here, right, I don't mean alone, you get them in a little group thing, and get everybody, it breaks something inside you emotionally, something actually changes with you when you start making a musical sound with your voice, and I've actually been considering sort of joining a choir, yes, I'm serious, because if you think that's not got power, go and listen to those male Welsh voice choirs, tell them that's not got power, blows mountains down that stuff, it's amazing, and something is happening that's occurring outside of language and intellect when that happens, and we've got to bring that back in as well, it's absolutely got to be brought back in, because it's not happening enough, and I've got a cousin who's about 10 years older than me, and he saw him maybe a couple of years back, maybe not even that long ago, maybe a year or so ago, and not singing for quite a while, and he got back into, and he's a big tough lad, he's not like, but he said, "Oh, I've rejoined a choir", and he said, "Yeah", he said, "It's just brilliant", and loved it, because it does something else to you, I think he's very good for your health, I'm quite serious, I actually think making a sound with your voice and singing, like frequency passing through your body, the air passing through your body is really good for your physiological health, it really is, yes. Vibrations, the vibration and just getting your blood moving and all of that. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. And you remind me, because Maleficus has the Colonel connection, and he's been playing a lot of sea shanties from Cornwall, to people in Cornwall, get together at churches and the Cathedral or wherever, and sing these things, and there'd be a lot of men's groups doing that kind of thing, it's fun, it's fun to listen to that stuff, it just, it really is. Yeah. Eric, I've got an idea for you. Yeah. Do you think you could do a duet with Florence Jenkins? I would probably win it as being the worst, you know, I mean, the only thing I could do was cure people's constipation, that's about the only thing I think it would do. Oh, no, you're talking my language. Yeah, I mean, but there isn't even worse one, because do you remember Kenny Everett's worst record shot, spot in the early 80s? No, is that when he was a radio, still a radio DJ, was he then? Yes, doing that. Right. And the worst ones, I want my baby back, and it won it on bad taste, it was the overall worst record ever made. Oh, that's that one about she's dead or something. Is that right? It's a zombie. We had an accident, and there was my baby, and there was my baby, and I looked over there. There was my baby. Oh, gosh. I won't go into it, it's absolutely sick, it's true. I love it. I love the way you're describing it, maybe it's better than the record. We need records like Patrick specialises in these things, don't you, Patrick? That's why he got me to play, you know, there was Fred by Bernard Cribbins the other week and all these sorts of comedy numbers, they're great. And then I played, I think there's a hole in my bucket the other way, which I love, because it just turns me into a kid. I'm sort of like, she is the age again, listen to it on the radio. But... Do you remember, don't jump off the roof, Dad. That was by Tommy Cooper. No. I'm going to look you up. You don't jump off the roof, Dad. Mom's just planted a bit of a petunias, can you go jump somewhere? Sick. I can't keep going somewhere. I was loads of them, like a real sick, but we don't get records like that anymore, do we? Well, now that you've got that microphone, Eric, maybe a new opportunity calls, you know what I mean? There is a disgusting one, which I would not play on the radio, seriously, I wouldn't play on the radio. If you go on to YouTube, and I won't swear on the radio, I've, and it's record that was making 1956, and it's called I've S-H-I-T on your lawn. And it's 1956, 1956, it was made, and you got YouTube, but I've shit on your lawn. I can't believe the word. Everybody that's listening to this right now, they're all going to the chat room, they're all going, I want to know, I don't want to listen to these guys, I want to go here this classic record, they've all cleared off, because I think they're doing a world's worst record spot on my show, I'm really seriously thinking about it. And I'm afraid I'm going to have to put Florence in there. It's funny, I did an interview with John Barber out of Las Vegas, and he was the original, he did the pilot series for the gong show back in the 70s, he was going to be the host of it, but he ended up not being it, that reminds me of that, the gong show, it's not, instead of like the American Idol or the voice or any of these things where it's like, oh, who's the best, who's the worst, and who's the last longest without the gong. Do you remember Mrs. Miller, what about Mrs. Miller, singing Yellow Submarine? That is the ultimate, that really is, if you haven't got manic depression before, it's certainly went up afterwards, let's pull this away, it would have to be improved to be rated as awful, that's how bad it is. Shall we, we're near it at the end of our hour long overrun, and I'm always really happy with just doing an extra hour, which is pretty cool. And I remember, we've been talking about Florence, I don't know whether this is wise or not, but the one that you sent Eric is Florence Jenkins Massacre's Mozart, do you remember that? Yes, that's right, yeah. And I think it might be appropriate for us to play out with this this week, tell the audience, do you want to know what did you explain? Yes, we could play out with it now, I think maybe we should do this, just a little back story so the audience knows about this gal. Yeah, well, come around, sorry. Go ahead, tell us. No, no, you're better, come on, say that. No, okay, she was basically fancy herself to be an opera star, and she was anything but but she thought she'd give these performances that were just terrible, and she thought she was just the greatest thing since sliced bread, but the audiences would just pay to go see her to just laugh at her because it's so bad, and she's an American and thinking that she was going to go. Can't hear you. Oh, she played, didn't she? She actually played in Carnegie Hall? Oh, probably. Yes, she did. And there was a film, there were only three people there listening, and one of those was a manager, I don't know, I mean, no, no, it's a full house, but there was a film made about it with Meryl Streep, no, I don't like Meryl Streep as a person, but I have to admit she's a good actress, and she actually, they did in one take, she took Florence off, and I have to admit it was close, and they did in one take, because she is completely deaf when it comes to music, Meryl is straight, so she just, okay. Well, she seemed well suited to the role.