Rupert Lowe Warns of the Globalist Agenda Destroying the West and the Revolution Soon to Come
📄 Extracted Text (8,924 words)
[00:00:00] Thank you for doing this. Uh so the
[00:00:02] similarities between the US and Great
[00:00:04] Britain are are very obvious, often
[00:00:06] remarked upon, but the one I notice the
[00:00:08] most is whenever you talk to people
[00:00:10] here, they say exactly what people in
[00:00:12] the US say, which is nothing changes. It
[00:00:14] doesn't matter if you vote for Boris
[00:00:16] Johnson or Rishi Sunnac or Kier Starmer,
[00:00:19] you know, different parties, Tory Labor,
[00:00:23] same result. What is that? Well, I I
[00:00:26] think Tucker, it's basically it's our
[00:00:29] democracy's gone badly wrong. So, uh
[00:00:32] what what happened is we are the mother
[00:00:34] of all parliaments and we effectively
[00:00:36] were the the genesis of of true
[00:00:38] democracy. I mean, forget the Greeks for
[00:00:40] now, but let's let let's just say we we
[00:00:42] we are modern democracy. We
[00:00:44] >> democracy at scale. Athenian democracy
[00:00:46] was tiny.
[00:00:47] >> Yeah. But this is democracy at scale.
[00:00:48] So, they but they had the right concept,
[00:00:50] I think. And there's some great, you
[00:00:52] know, great philosophers from from from
[00:00:54] that era. But I think our parliament was
[00:00:58] structured so that you had MPs elected
[00:01:02] by the people and they were effectively
[00:01:04] the people's representatives. So that
[00:01:05] the job of parliament was ultimately to
[00:01:09] uh put the interests of the British
[00:01:11] nation first. Uh make decisions uh that
[00:01:14] was first of all and above everything
[00:01:16] else in the interests of the nation. But
[00:01:19] at the same time there were internal
[00:01:21] rivalries about regional uh competition
[00:01:24] between each of those MPs to try and do
[00:01:26] the best for their constituency as well.
[00:01:29] But most of them were in some way
[00:01:31] invested in the in Britain. They
[00:01:33] [clears throat] were landowners. They
[00:01:34] were businessmen. They were peers. They
[00:01:37] were aristo aristocrats. They actually
[00:01:39] had a big shareholding if you like in UK
[00:01:43] plc. And you know I look at prime
[00:01:46] ministers like Lord Ssbury and I look at
[00:01:48] you know men who made great decisions
[00:01:50] and obviously we can talk about
[00:01:52] Churchill we can talk about the great
[00:01:53] leaders Maggie Thatcher who I loved. Uh
[00:01:55] we we can talk about great leaders, but
[00:01:57] I think what's gone badly wrong, and
[00:01:59] this is why I've set up a movement, not
[00:02:02] a party, to unite common sense thought,
[00:02:05] and to allow those people who share the
[00:02:08] view you've just outlined, that that it
[00:02:10] doesn't matter who [clears throat] you
[00:02:11] vote for, the smalus board of
[00:02:13] opportunities that you've got at the
[00:02:14] moment, whether it's the Tories, whether
[00:02:16] it's Labour, whether it's the Lib Dems,
[00:02:18] whether it's the Greens, whether it's
[00:02:19] the Scottish National Party, whoever,
[00:02:21] they're all part of this dying
[00:02:24] uh sort of remnant of what was
[00:02:26] parliament. So I I think we've got to
[00:02:28] have some form of what in geological
[00:02:31] terms uh uh rejuvenation and uplift uh
[00:02:35] uh uh to change uh the way in which
[00:02:38] we're governed and make sure that we
[00:02:40] reempower the MPs, the elected
[00:02:43] representatives of the people and we
[00:02:45] disempower the people who run
[00:02:48] parliament, the quangos, the unelected
[00:02:51] civil servants who are largely
[00:02:53] represented by the permanent
[00:02:54] secretaries, many of whom I now see on
[00:02:56] the public accounts committee. Uh the
[00:02:59] country uh Tucker is just run by people
[00:03:03] who don't know which way is up. So we've
[00:03:06] got a dying body of productive Brits who
[00:03:10] I have the greatest admiration for who
[00:03:12] who really fight all this regulation,
[00:03:14] this red tape, uh all of the oppression
[00:03:17] of government, of licensing, of
[00:03:19] regulations, of rules. They fight their
[00:03:21] way through all this, not to mention
[00:03:23] huge taxes which will probably increase
[00:03:25] dramatically tomorrow uh in order to uh
[00:03:29] basically debit the productive and
[00:03:31] credit the indolent uh the most
[00:03:33] extraordinary sort of um uh uh uh
[00:03:35] formula which which is doomed to
[00:03:37] failure. But so I think I think we need
[00:03:41] uh the people uh who ultimately care
[00:03:44] about the country to rise up. Now, I
[00:03:47] don't think the way in which our
[00:03:49] government is structured is ever going
[00:03:51] to serve them well. So, all they will do
[00:03:54] is go around crying into their beer
[00:03:56] about the fact that they voted for, as
[00:03:58] you say, Rishi Sunnak or they voted for
[00:04:00] Kama
[00:04:02] and they're all the same. There's
[00:04:03] there's no real difference.
[00:04:04] >> I don't think you're overstating it. I
[00:04:06] mean, look at their priorities. are both
[00:04:08] totally dis I'm an outsider but I'm just
[00:04:10] watching this from thousands of miles
[00:04:12] away but they seem totally disconnected
[00:04:14] from the actual country
[00:04:16] >> what happens here what it's like what it
[00:04:18] looks like who lives here they don't
[00:04:20] seem interested at all
[00:04:22] >> well I think what's happened is
[00:04:23] parliament as I say when it whereas it
[00:04:25] was elected by the people and it its
[00:04:28] interests were aligned with the people
[00:04:29] now parliament and the MPs an an MP
[00:04:33] earns about £92,000 a year something
[00:04:35] like that I actually give high salary to
[00:04:37] charity. Each month I give it to a great
[00:04:39] Yarmouth charity. Um but I think a lot
[00:04:42] of the MPs need that money. So they've
[00:04:44] they've become they've become dependent
[00:04:47] on that. Uh they've obviously got status
[00:04:49] as an MP. Uh they they there's a lot of
[00:04:53] talk goes on in parliament. there's a
[00:04:54] lot of sort of, you know, video calls
[00:04:56] and and and meetings in room P and, you
[00:04:59] know, all all sorts of stuff goes on and
[00:05:02] people feel important, but actually, are
[00:05:04] they delivering for the people? I I
[00:05:06] would argue they're not. So, uh, I I I
[00:05:09] think we've got to have some form of
[00:05:12] massive change. And I, you know, I I
[00:05:15] watch what's happening in the US and I
[00:05:18] think we need some help from the US. I I
[00:05:21] think I think what's happening uh with
[00:05:24] Donald Trump and with with with JD Vance
[00:05:27] and and with with with Rubio, I I mean,
[00:05:29] you've got some great people who are
[00:05:31] really trying to change uh the way
[00:05:33] things are going. I I think I blame you
[00:05:35] partly for infecting us with this DEI
[00:05:39] nonsense and all the other stuff that is
[00:05:41] is is seeping into the veins of Britain,
[00:05:43] but I think you've realized that that's
[00:05:45] not the way forward. That's not how
[00:05:47] we're going to get the quality of life
[00:05:48] and the common sense and the logic and
[00:05:50] the fairness that we used to have. We've
[00:05:53] got to expunge all that. And the only
[00:05:55] way we're going to do that is by very
[00:05:57] strong people standing up and actually
[00:05:58] affecting change. And I, you know, I
[00:06:01] reflect on the US a lot because as you
[00:06:06] probably know that there was a man
[00:06:07] called John Lambert who uh played a part
[00:06:10] in the civil war. Cromwell, Oliver
[00:06:11] Cromwell is one of my great historical
[00:06:13] heroes.
[00:06:13] >> Your civil war
[00:06:14] >> in in the British civil war. Yeah. He
[00:06:16] and Henry Arson when when when Croml won
[00:06:18] the Civil War,
[00:06:20] >> he said he always said if if I lose one
[00:06:23] battle, I lose my head. The king can
[00:06:24] lose a hundred battles and he keeps his.
[00:06:26] Well, he didn't fortunately lose a
[00:06:27] battle and he won the civil war. And
[00:06:29] then they had to work out how to govern.
[00:06:31] And uh this guy John Lambert and Henry
[00:06:34] Arton wrote this thing uh this this
[00:06:36] paper uh uh which ultimately guided uh
[00:06:40] uh it was called the instrument of power
[00:06:42] and its job was to effectively separate
[00:06:46] the powers that Cromwell was going to
[00:06:47] have as Lord Protector and put in the
[00:06:49] checks and balances which is what you
[00:06:50] need in any any form of uh democracy
[00:06:53] proper checks and balances that controls
[00:06:56] uh uh any sort of aggregation of power
[00:06:59] which can be damaging. need some power
[00:07:01] but you don't want anybody to become
[00:07:03] omnipotent and he this was this is an an
[00:07:06] incredible piece of work which was then
[00:07:08] used in our bill of rights and then some
[00:07:10] of it was lifted by by by your founding
[00:07:12] fathers Jefferson Madison Adams and Jay
[00:07:14] who who effectively played a big part in
[00:07:17] in writing the US constitution which is
[00:07:19] is the best uh I think uh attempt at
[00:07:23] setting out uh uh uh a a sort of code
[00:07:27] for governance uh which always return
[00:07:30] power to the individual states and to
[00:07:32] the individual because it's always the
[00:07:34] individual who gets oppressed by the
[00:07:36] state. Uh and and here we've got a a
[00:07:40] state that now accounts for 50% of our
[00:07:41] GDP. Uh we've got, as I say, all these
[00:07:46] quangos, unaccountable people who are
[00:07:48] doing things which are damaging the
[00:07:50] interests of Britain, aggregating money
[00:07:52] and influence to themselves, but
[00:07:55] damaging the interests of those people
[00:07:57] they're supposed to be serving. You
[00:07:58] know, they're called civil servants for
[00:08:00] a reason and that's their job.
[00:08:02] >> Christmas season is here and although
[00:08:03] it's a bit of a cliche, it really is
[00:08:05] important to keep Christ in Christmas.
[00:08:07] Should we focus on cookies and presents
[00:08:09] or on the reason we're doing this, which
[00:08:12] is Jesus, obviously the point is Jesus.
[00:08:15] That's the whole point. That's the only
[00:08:17] point. And all the decency and good
[00:08:19] cheer of this holiday comes [music] from
[00:08:22] Jesus. The hallowaps pray 25 challenge
[00:08:25] reminds us of that. It features Chris
[00:08:26] Pratt, Gwen Stefani, our friend Jonathan
[00:08:29] Roomie, and many others. This 25-day
[00:08:31] challenge guides you [music] through
[00:08:33] Advent and helps you keep your focus on
[00:08:34] the true reason for the season, Jesus.
[00:08:38] Experience the Nativity story where
[00:08:40] Jesus brought peace and calm to a world
[00:08:42] in chaos. That's exactly what we need
[00:08:43] right now is peace [music] and calm and
[00:08:45] still. And Jesus is the only one who
[00:08:47] brings it. Period. Hallow's thousands of
[00:08:50] prayers and meditations and music to
[00:08:52] help you connect with God all through
[00:08:54] Christmas and after, including several
[00:08:56] Christmas original songs and albums.
[00:08:58] There's a whole world on hallow. It's
[00:08:59] like unbelievable. It's changed our
[00:09:01] family's life. Check it out. You will
[00:09:04] not regret it. Get 3 months for free at
[00:09:06] hallow.com/tucker.
[00:09:08] Experience greater peace and stillness
[00:09:10] this Christmas. One of the maybe the
[00:09:12] biggest factor scrambling every one of
[00:09:14] these calculations and eliminating the
[00:09:16] historical knowledge that you just
[00:09:18] displayed is mass migration. This is
[00:09:20] very true in the United States as well.
[00:09:21] It's not just here. It's throughout the
[00:09:23] West.
[00:09:24] But what is that? That is the one thing
[00:09:28] that I notice as a foreigner coming here
[00:09:30] that does not change regardless of who's
[00:09:32] in power is this constant churn in
[00:09:35] population. Millions of new people.
[00:09:37] There's never been any indication that
[00:09:39] Native Britain want that. No Native
[00:09:42] Americans, you know, no one in the
[00:09:44] United States wants that. We've gotten
[00:09:45] it anyway. In my country, they used to
[00:09:47] say, "We need to do this for economic
[00:09:49] reasons. We need the labor." They don't
[00:09:52] say that anymore. No one explains why
[00:09:53] this is happening. Why is it happening
[00:09:54] here? What's your guess?
[00:09:55] >> Well, I think the essence of immigration
[00:09:57] is that targeted immigration is good. So
[00:10:00] if you if you have a a leadership of the
[00:10:02] country that can identify where skills
[00:10:04] are short
[00:10:05] >> and you can actually attract people
[00:10:07] who've got those skills who are going to
[00:10:09] contribute to the economy and actually
[00:10:10] >> we have no dentists. Let's import some
[00:10:11] dentist.
[00:10:12] >> Exactly. Exactly. But but you need to
[00:10:13] have a you need to have a leadership
[00:10:15] who's capable of identifying where the
[00:10:17] shortages are. Uh and and and that's
[00:10:20] good immigration. It's it's targeted.
[00:10:23] It's it's small and it basically
[00:10:25] improves the standard of living and the
[00:10:27] quality of life for the people in the
[00:10:29] country.
[00:10:29] >> Is that happening here now?
[00:10:31] >> No. I I I was just going to go on to say
[00:10:32] that what's happened here is it's
[00:10:34] actually been turned on its head. So
[00:10:36] what we're doing is we are allowing
[00:10:38] millions or hundreds of thousands of
[00:10:40] illegal migrants from different cultures
[00:10:43] to arrive by boat. And really since
[00:10:46] since the war we've also brought in uh
[00:10:49] lots of legal migrants who have in some
[00:10:52] cases contributed but in many cases they
[00:10:54] still haven't integrated into what
[00:10:56] Britain is and what you know we are a
[00:10:59] Christian country. We are we have our
[00:11:01] history we have our roots and now we've
[00:11:03] got sort of pools of of of people from a
[00:11:06] different culture with a different
[00:11:07] belief and a different uh a different
[00:11:10] sort of outlook on life and that's
[00:11:12] getting worse. So we are now and you're
[00:11:15] seeing this we're now seeing our best
[00:11:18] people leaving Britain. So the rain
[00:11:20] makers are leaving in huge numbers now.
[00:11:23] Uh the nondons who used to be here are
[00:11:26] now have been uh taxed uh uh and they're
[00:11:29] leaving. They don't have to be here. As
[00:11:31] you know in the modern world you can
[00:11:33] basically do a job from almost anywhere
[00:11:35] in the world. And and what you have to
[00:11:37] do is create the conditions where people
[00:11:38] want to live somewhere. And 10, 15, 20
[00:11:41] years ago, everybody wanted to be in
[00:11:43] London. You know, when I was young,
[00:11:44] London was the place to be because it
[00:11:46] was deregulated. It was fun. Uh, you
[00:11:49] know, people actually could generate
[00:11:51] wealth. You didn't have too much
[00:11:53] oppressive regulation and statism. And
[00:11:56] gradually, it's been strangled a bit
[00:11:57] like Guliva. So, I think a lot of people
[00:12:00] and a lot of my friends are leaving.
[00:12:01] They're going to live in Dubai. They're
[00:12:02] going to live in in in in Milan. They're
[00:12:05] going to live in
[00:12:05] >> Montenegro.
[00:12:07] >> Could be Montenegro. It could be it
[00:12:09] could be almost Maitius. It could be
[00:12:10] almost anywhere. We we we just sent a
[00:12:12] whole load of English money out to
[00:12:13] Maitius. I mean, they're getting tax
[00:12:15] cuts out there. So, you know, we've
[00:12:16] given the Chaos Islands away uh when we
[00:12:19] didn't need to. We we we've sort of uh I
[00:12:21] I think um
[00:12:22] >> Maitius is an island in the Indian Ocean
[00:12:24] far far far away.
[00:12:26] >> Maitius is an island in the Indian
[00:12:27] Ocean, but the Chaos Islands uh
[00:12:29] basically a lot of Chagosians live in
[00:12:31] Crawley here and they didn't want us to
[00:12:35] they didn't want to be part of Maitius.
[00:12:36] They they they and what what's happened
[00:12:38] is K star and Herma and Philipe Sanss
[00:12:41] this sort of bunch of human rights
[00:12:43] lawyers uh you may or may not know the
[00:12:45] history we actually paid Maitius some
[00:12:47] money in 1963 when when we gave her
[00:12:50] independence
[00:12:51] that so she had no claim on the Chaos
[00:12:53] Islands arguably arguably the se shells
[00:12:56] and the Maldes have a bigger claim on
[00:12:58] the Chaos Islands that are 1300
[00:13:00] kilometers away from Maitius but these
[00:13:03] human rights lawyers have indulged their
[00:13:05] fantasies And at the expense of the
[00:13:07] British taxpayer, I mean, we don't quite
[00:13:08] know what the number is. It's somewhere
[00:13:10] between 18 and 30 billion over the next
[00:13:12] 90 years. We've literally handed that to
[00:13:15] Maitius who've now given a tax cut to
[00:13:17] their citizens on the back of it.
[00:13:19] >> Have you committed a lot of atrocities
[00:13:21] in Maitius? Why why would you owe them
[00:13:23] billions of dollars?
[00:13:23] >> Talk about the Diego Garcia base.
[00:13:25] >> I'm no I I know the actual story.
[00:13:27] >> So So the Chagosians, a lot of them live
[00:13:30] in Crawley here. So uh you know, they
[00:13:32] they didn't want the the deal to happen.
[00:13:35] They they they they basically don't like
[00:13:37] the militians.
[00:13:38] >> But if you take three steps back, like
[00:13:40] why would you do that? You would only do
[00:13:41] that if you hate yourself. There's no
[00:13:44] potential for gain at all for you, your
[00:13:46] children, your country. What What is
[00:13:49] that?
[00:13:49] >> Well, I think a lot of them do dislike
[00:13:51] what Britain was. I think they have this
[00:13:54] sort of hatred of of of colonial
[00:13:56] Britain, which I mean, if you have a a
[00:13:58] hatred of any form of colonialism, you
[00:14:00] have to have a hatred of the Belgian uh
[00:14:02] uh uh a sort of colonization of the
[00:14:04] Congo empire
[00:14:06] >> or even France's occupation of of of of
[00:14:09] North Africa. So, they still occupy
[00:14:11] Africa to this day.
[00:14:12] >> They do. No, no, they do. They do. I I
[00:14:15] Yeah, absolutely. But I I think I think
[00:14:17] no I Britain may have done some things
[00:14:20] that that weren't great. But on the
[00:14:21] whole we've I think been a force for
[00:14:23] good. We've left you know sound legal
[00:14:26] systems in India. We've we've done
[00:14:29] [clears throat] good things not bad
[00:14:30] things. We voluntarily ended the slave
[00:14:32] trade. Uh you know we we actually cost
[00:14:34] us a lot of money. The British Navy was
[00:14:36] was used to police the the the the the
[00:14:39] cessation of the of the slave trade. So
[00:14:41] I feel very proud of Britain. I love
[00:14:42] Britain. And I think I think these
[00:14:44] people these these human rights lawyers
[00:14:47] I actually despise them, Tucker. I I
[00:14:49] think they're the enemy of Britain. And
[00:14:51] I don't understand what motivates them.
[00:14:53] Well, so that's that's it. It's clearly
[00:14:55] not a hatred of colonialism because
[00:14:57] Africa has been colonized at a scale
[00:14:59] never before seen by China. And they
[00:15:01] won't say a single word about that. I
[00:15:03] mean, colonialism will never end. The
[00:15:05] weak dominating the strong is just a
[00:15:06] feature of life. It's sad, but it's
[00:15:08] that's what it is. They're not mad about
[00:15:10] that. They're only mad about the west.
[00:15:13] >> Well, in the end, history will tell you
[00:15:15] that we always return to rail politique
[00:15:17] and rail politique is basically uh power
[00:15:21] power ultimately dictates what happens
[00:15:23] course
[00:15:23] >> and as you say that's happening. China
[00:15:25] is very cleverly positioning herself you
[00:15:28] know in in countries which are
[00:15:30] struggling for money obviously in Africa
[00:15:32] I mean her tentacles are going almost
[00:15:33] everywhere and you know I I I think I
[00:15:36] think China in a way is an extraordinary
[00:15:40] economy because you've got this you've
[00:15:42] got this extraordinary relationship
[00:15:43] between uh communism and and and
[00:15:46] [clears throat]
[00:15:47] their capitalism which Deng tried to to
[00:15:49] to introduce which has generated a sort
[00:15:52] of class of people who and the Chinese
[00:15:54] are enterprising people who have
[00:15:56] generated wealth. But then, you know,
[00:15:58] you've also got this communist block and
[00:16:00] I visited um when I was chairman of
[00:16:03] Southampton, I visited Ching Dao where
[00:16:04] we we were Southampton's twinned with
[00:16:07] Ching Dao and it's an extraordinary uh
[00:16:11] sort of relationship. So very much the
[00:16:13] the capitalist is is is effectively uh
[00:16:17] uh uh in hawk to the to the to the
[00:16:20] communists. So they they control
[00:16:22] everything. And if you look at what
[00:16:23] happened to Jack Maher, I mean he he he
[00:16:25] built an incredibly successful business
[00:16:26] in Alibaba. So I think that their blend
[00:16:29] of communism and capitalism which if you
[00:16:32] dig deep you all their state enterprises
[00:16:34] are incredibly uh uh indebted and almost
[00:16:37] bankrupt. Uh so I don't think her model
[00:16:40] is sustainable.
[00:16:42] Meanwhile, she's generated or or huge
[00:16:45] amounts of of foreign exchange from
[00:16:48] effectively uh if you like she's
[00:16:51] undercut a lot of the the western cap
[00:16:54] capitalists
[00:16:56] uh in solar panels and in other things
[00:16:58] and she's running huge trade surpluses
[00:17:01] even if internally her finances aren't
[00:17:03] great. So I I I don't think her model is
[00:17:07] a sound model. Uh I I I I think she is
[00:17:12] actually quite a dangerous influence.
[00:17:14] She she I think bears a very long
[00:17:18] memory. Uh she never forgets uh what's
[00:17:21] been done to her in the past and and and
[00:17:23] I read an interesting book the other day
[00:17:25] uh by Colin Thubon called the Amma
[00:17:27] River. I don't know if you've read about
[00:17:28] the Amma River runs through Mongolia
[00:17:30] >> and it's the history of the relationship
[00:17:32] between Russia and China. It's it's a
[00:17:34] very good book to read, but she never
[00:17:35] forgets when people breach treaties.
[00:17:38] It may not happen tomorrow, but it's
[00:17:40] logged and she remembers
[00:17:42] >> sell opium to her.
[00:17:42] >> And we've done a few things. We've done
[00:17:44] a few things that she won't have liked
[00:17:46] historically. So, I think we've got to
[00:17:47] be very wary of China.
[00:17:49] >> Um I'm I'm in favor of basically
[00:17:52] liberating
[00:17:54] uh what I see as one of the best and
[00:17:56] most creative economies in the world,
[00:17:58] which is Britain. And [clears throat] if
[00:18:00] we can cut away all of the regulations,
[00:18:03] I mean when I was young and I worked in
[00:18:04] the city, London was the almost the
[00:18:08] primary center. We had the Euro bomb
[00:18:10] market. We had a hugely powerful stock
[00:18:12] market. You know, we we were raising
[00:18:14] money all over for people all over the
[00:18:16] world. Everybody wanted to be in London.
[00:18:18] Gradually the regulatory uh uh uh and
[00:18:22] again you have to blame Tony Blair for a
[00:18:24] lot of this stuff. A lot of the
[00:18:25] regulatory legislation, it was called
[00:18:26] the financial services market act 2000
[00:18:29] that basically tied the city down and it
[00:18:32] started this overregulation.
[00:18:34] >> Yeah.
[00:18:34] >> Which has meant that London is now a
[00:18:36] shadow of its former self. So we don't
[00:18:39] have we don't have a position I mean
[00:18:40] NASDAQ has has flown on the back of
[00:18:43] London's failure. Uh you still have a
[00:18:46] much more uh capitalistic approach to
[00:18:49] your financial markets. Ours are now so
[00:18:52] regulated that they've become
[00:18:54] [clears throat] arguably uh more
[00:18:56] interested in protecting the value of of
[00:18:59] of people's pensions than they have in
[00:19:02] matching risk capital with
[00:19:04] entrepreneurs, which is what they should
[00:19:05] be doing.
[00:19:06] >> They feminized your finance. No, I' I've
[00:19:08] watched. So, but what does that mean?
[00:19:10] So, what is the the British economy now?
[00:19:13] >> Well, I think the British economy is in
[00:19:15] pretty bad shape. I mean,
[00:19:17] >> I don't even know what it is. I mean, I
[00:19:18] thought it was it was manufacturing,
[00:19:20] obviously, greatest manufacturing power
[00:19:22] in the world and the greatest goods in
[00:19:23] the world still like 100 years later.
[00:19:26] That's remarkable how well they're made.
[00:19:28] >> Well, it's a service industry, a lot of
[00:19:29] it, as you know.
[00:19:30] >> Okay. But
[00:19:31] >> and Jimmy Goldmith talked about this. I
[00:19:32] mean, we Jimmy Goldmith, great man. He
[00:19:34] saved the pan through the through
[00:19:35] referendum party where the other the
[00:19:37] parties promised. He doesn't ever get
[00:19:39] enough credit for it.
[00:19:40] >> Um, so he spoke very well about this. uh
[00:19:44] and it was happening in the '9s really
[00:19:45] when we were uh outsourcing our
[00:19:49] manufacturing to cheap labor countries
[00:19:52] and he forecast what would happen which
[00:19:53] is that we would become a dependency
[00:19:56] culture rather than a culture of of
[00:19:59] innovation because actually when you've
[00:20:02] got your factories in different parts of
[00:20:04] the world it's there that the innovation
[00:20:06] takes place
[00:20:07] >> it doesn't take place in the consuming
[00:20:09] nations so I think I think what's
[00:20:11] happened is we've gradually been party
[00:20:14] or our our leaders have to closing down
[00:20:17] our economy, damaging the interests of
[00:20:19] the British people. But the British
[00:20:21] people are still incredibly creative. I
[00:20:23] have every faith in their ability if
[00:20:26] they're cut free. But they've got to be
[00:20:28] cut free pretty quickly, Tucker. I mean,
[00:20:29] our view is if we haven't done it by 29,
[00:20:33] it could be it could be too late.
[00:20:36] >> Election till 2019.
[00:20:37] >> There's not much time. There's not much
[00:20:38] time.
[00:20:39] >> It certainly feels that way. We're sorry
[00:20:40] to say it, but this is not a very safe
[00:20:42] country. Walk through Oakland or
[00:20:43] Philadelphia. Yeah, good luck. So, most
[00:20:47] people when they think about this want
[00:20:48] to carry a firearm, and a lot of us do.
[00:20:51] The problem is there can be massive
[00:20:53] consequences for that. Ask Kyle
[00:20:54] Writtenhouse. Kyle Writtenhouse got off
[00:20:56] in the end, but he was innocent from the
[00:20:57] first moment. It was obvious on on video
[00:21:00] and he was [music] facing life in prison
[00:21:02] anyway. That's what the anti-gun
[00:21:05] movement will do. [music] They'll throw
[00:21:06] you in prison for defending yourself
[00:21:07] with a firearm. And that's why a lot of
[00:21:09] Americans are turning to Burnerna. It's
[00:21:11] a proudly American [music] company.
[00:21:13] Burna makes self-defense launchers that
[00:21:15] hundreds of law enforcement departments
[00:21:17] trust. They've sold over 600,000 [music]
[00:21:20] pistols mostly to private citizens who
[00:21:22] refuse to be empty-handed. These
[00:21:24] pistols, and I have one, fire rockard
[00:21:26] kinetic rounds, or tear gas rounds and
[00:21:29] pepper projectiles, and they stop a
[00:21:30] threat from up to 60 feet away. There
[00:21:32] are no background checks. There no
[00:21:34] waiting periods. Burna can ship it
[00:21:36] directly to your door. You can't be
[00:21:38] arrested for defending yourself with a
[00:21:40] burner pistol. Visit burnab yrna.com
[00:21:44] or your local sportsman's warehouse to
[00:21:46] get yours today. Burna.com.
[00:21:49] And they're continuing, by the way, to
[00:21:50] change the population dramatically every
[00:21:52] year. So like the calculation changes
[00:21:54] every year as does the culture, etc. But
[00:21:58] I don't think you have an election. I
[00:22:00] think Labor's in charge until 29 unless
[00:22:02] I'm missing.
[00:22:03] >> Labor's in charge till 29. But I think
[00:22:05] the Achilles heel there possibly is the
[00:22:08] economy. So you you talked about what is
[00:22:10] the British economy? The British economy
[00:22:12] is as you know it's as has as as as the
[00:22:16] American economy was relied on something
[00:22:18] I hate called quantitative easing which
[00:22:20] is basically getting high on your own
[00:22:22] suppliers. I
[00:22:24] >> it's it's basically what third world
[00:22:26] dictators used to do shortly before
[00:22:27] their currencies descended into chaos.
[00:22:29] But because you've got this sort of
[00:22:32] manufacturing taking place in one part
[00:22:34] of the world and the consumption in
[00:22:36] another part of the world, they've been
[00:22:37] able to get away with it so far, but
[00:22:39] it's still further hollowed out
[00:22:41] productive Britain. So I I I'm very
[00:22:44] worried about our level of debt. You
[00:22:45] know, we're looking at a level of debt
[00:22:47] of around 100% of our GDP. Our civil
[00:22:50] service pensions are off balance sheet
[00:22:53] and there's another we don't know the
[00:22:55] exact number somewhere between three and
[00:22:57] five trillion maybe a bit more which is
[00:23:00] probably 200% of GDP that's not even on
[00:23:02] the balance sheet. Uh we have this
[00:23:04] accounting system called Oscar 2 which I
[00:23:07] think is probably delusional in that it
[00:23:09] leaves off chunks of liability and
[00:23:11] probably enhances chunks of of the asset
[00:23:13] side of the balance sheet. Uh so I think
[00:23:16] we're delusional. I I'm just waiting for
[00:23:18] our currency to collapse. And I think
[00:23:20] when you say there's not going to be an
[00:23:21] election or 29, we have the budget
[00:23:24] tomorrow where Rachel Reeves who seems
[00:23:26] to believe that she can tax herself into
[00:23:28] wealth and prosperity which nobody's
[00:23:31] ever done in history before. And I I
[00:23:32] certainly
[00:23:32] >> Who's Rachel Reeves?
[00:23:33] >> She's our chancellor of the excheer.
[00:23:35] >> Do what's her background? Pretty
[00:23:37] impressive person. Well, she's variously
[00:23:39] she's Rachel from accounts or Rachel
[00:23:41] from complaints or she told a few
[00:23:44] porkies about her CV, which she she
[00:23:46] seems to have got away with that as did
[00:23:48] a number of other Labour MPs.
[00:23:49] Apparently, it's okay to embellish your
[00:23:51] CV these days and and and nobody seems
[00:23:53] to care.
[00:23:54] >> But you're not aware of any material
[00:23:56] accomplishments in her past.
[00:23:57] >> Very, very few. I mean, she's not
[00:23:59] qualified to be doing what she's doing,
[00:24:01] but she's an incredibly she's incredibly
[00:24:04] uh arrogant. I think there there's a
[00:24:06] blend of arrogant and arrogance and
[00:24:08] ignorance which is always dangerous.
[00:24:09] >> We have that in our country. [laughter]
[00:24:11] >> So I think I think that the Achilles
[00:24:14] heel is if the economy starts to really
[00:24:16] go into reverse which I think from my
[00:24:19] businesses we're beginning to see orders
[00:24:21] slow uh the sort of carryover from the
[00:24:24] COVID money injections and from you know
[00:24:27] what the tries did in in their latter
[00:24:30] days which kept the economy going to
[00:24:32] some extent. Although Britain Britain's
[00:24:35] growth has been sclerotic for a hell of
[00:24:37] a long time now.
[00:24:38] >> Yeah.
[00:24:39] >> So if we start to see a uh a challenge
[00:24:44] to our ability to finance finance our
[00:24:46] deficits and you probably saw I mean our
[00:24:48] deficit is just out of control. So um
[00:24:51] you know it's it's it's going up every
[00:24:53] year and in the end if you have a
[00:24:55] deficit you got to finance it. So uh I
[00:24:59] always think the definition of of of
[00:25:01] credit is suspicion of sleep. So in the
[00:25:03] end people who borrow or fund our debt
[00:25:08] buy our guilts if you like at the moment
[00:25:10] they demand a premium uh in terms of
[00:25:12] income over other people's debts over
[00:25:15] the US debt or German debt.
[00:25:17] >> So eventually what they do is they
[00:25:19] decide they don't want to buy that debt
[00:25:21] and then you can't fund yourself and
[00:25:23] then you have a funding crisis a bit
[00:25:24] like we had in in the mid70s.
[00:25:27] uh and in in that in those days we went
[00:25:29] to the IMF uh and we we we got the IMF
[00:25:32] to bail us out. I'm not sure that the
[00:25:34] IMF would come and bail us out at the
[00:25:37] moment because I don't think an economy
[00:25:40] which basically robs the productive to
[00:25:44] fund the indolent uh and to fund
[00:25:46] welfare. I I don't think the IMF would
[00:25:49] put up with that. So
[00:25:50] >> I'm I'm confused. So you're describing a
[00:25:52] country on the very brink of bankruptcy
[00:25:54] in solving
[00:25:54] >> I think we're very close to it. But
[00:25:56] you're still importing hundreds of
[00:25:58] thousands of people every year as asylum
[00:26:01] seekers as if you're a global empire
[00:26:03] that can just like spend money with
[00:26:04] >> I don't call them asylum seekers cuz
[00:26:06] majority of them aren't. They're
[00:26:07] economic migrants.
[00:26:08] >> Well, whatever they are.
[00:26:09] >> So that's a big difference cuz
[00:26:11] >> of course, but I don't even understand
[00:26:13] how my country is in Southern also. So
[00:26:16] I'm not just speaking of Britain, but I
[00:26:18] don't understand how any
[00:26:19] >> France is probably worse than us if it's
[00:26:21] any consolation, Tucker. But I'm not
[00:26:23] really interested in a race to the
[00:26:24] bottom. France is Europe's Mississippi.
[00:26:27] You can always point to them and say
[00:26:28] it's worse. But I don't understand how
[00:26:30] any country that's on the brink of not
[00:26:32] being able to serve its own people can
[00:26:35] decide to serve the world. I just don't
[00:26:36] get that.
[00:26:37] >> Well, this is where we're delusional
[00:26:38] because we our own house isn't in order
[00:26:41] and we spend our lives worrying about,
[00:26:43] you know, what's happening everywhere
[00:26:45] else, including sending vast amounts of
[00:26:48] money uh overseas in overseas aid. I
[00:26:51] mean where the countries that a lot of
[00:26:52] these people are coming from, we're
[00:26:54] sending them aid. I mean Pakistan for
[00:26:56] instance, I think we send 130 uh uh
[00:27:00] billion130 million pounds a year to
[00:27:02] Pakistan.
[00:27:02] >> Why?
[00:27:03] >> Just one example. You tell me. Uh and a
[00:27:06] lot of the people are coming from
[00:27:07] Pakistan. So I I think it's just the
[00:27:10] people in power they get they get a kick
[00:27:12] like latter day emperors who used to
[00:27:14] travel around the world dishing out sort
[00:27:16] of uh cash. I I think it gives them a
[00:27:19] lot of pleasure to think that they are
[00:27:21] these important people dishing out money
[00:27:23] we haven't got.
[00:27:24] >> Does anyone in London ever go to
[00:27:26] Switzerland in the winter to ski or the
[00:27:28] south of France in the summer to relax?
[00:27:31] I know they do. Do they notice all the
[00:27:34] Ukrainians at the Hermes store using
[00:27:36] their money to buy handbags for 50
[00:27:39] grand? Like does anyone ever notice
[00:27:40] that?
[00:27:40] >> I think people have noticed the uh the
[00:27:43] Ukrainian money that's flowing into
[00:27:45] Monaco in particular.
[00:27:46] >> Exactly. So, the number of UK Ukrainian
[00:27:49] registered Porsches in in uh uh
[00:27:52] Porsches, Aston, whatever in Monaco is
[00:27:55] massive. This is a country in the middle
[00:27:57] of a four-year long existential war. You
[00:28:00] would think people would be poor, but
[00:28:02] they're richer than ever. Not the people
[00:28:04] of Ukraine, but the people buying Aston
[00:28:06] Martins in Monaco and, you know,
[00:28:09] spending $10,000 on dinner in Korchal.
[00:28:12] That money is your money. My money. Does
[00:28:14] anyone care?
[00:28:15] >> You and I know that some people make a
[00:28:17] lot of money out of war. War works for
[00:28:19] some people,
[00:28:20] >> but it's not not usually funded by other
[00:28:22] people's taxpayer. Like the war
[00:28:24] profiteeers are a feature of every war,
[00:28:25] of course, but this is this kind of
[00:28:27] weird war where
[00:28:28] >> Well, I I'm hoping and it looks like
[00:28:29] there's some hope that there's been a
[00:28:31] breakthrough today uh uh on that front.
[00:28:34] I mean, I I I feel for the young men who
[00:28:36] are on both sides who are
[00:28:37] >> definitely who are need needlessly
[00:28:40] losing their lives. It's a bit like in
[00:28:42] our first world war, you know, we
[00:28:44] >> we I I lost relations in the first and
[00:28:46] second world war, but I mean th those
[00:28:48] people if they looked at Britain today
[00:28:50] or they looked at America today, would
[00:28:51] would would they be prepared to give
[00:28:53] their lives as they did so valiantly in
[00:28:56] in the trenches in in in the U in um in
[00:28:59] Europe and and and you know, Gallipoli
[00:29:01] and other parts of the world. I I and
[00:29:03] many of them some of them were American
[00:29:05] people,
[00:29:06] >> including relatives of mine. Yes, I I
[00:29:08] absolutely
[00:29:08] >> So would they feel comfortable? I'm not
[00:29:10] sure they would. And I I think, you
[00:29:12] know, I think the I've always thought
[00:29:14] that an important element of what made
[00:29:17] certainly the US and and the UK
[00:29:19] successful was this Protestant ethic,
[00:29:21] this ethic of of working hard, of
[00:29:24] contributing, of uh being part of
[00:29:27] something which is basically driven in
[00:29:29] order to create a better community. Yes.
[00:29:31] And I think we've lost that ethic and
[00:29:33] and and we've we've now lost sight of
[00:29:36] what we are. And some somehow we've got
[00:29:38] to get that back. And if we don't get
[00:29:39] that back, I I don't think I don't think
[00:29:42] the outlook is very is very optimistic.
[00:29:44] I I think it's it's not going to be good
[00:29:46] news.
[00:29:46] >> How do you get that back?
[00:29:48] >> Well, we've we're trying with Restore
[00:29:50] Britain. We we we we see a movement as
[00:29:52] being the key. So the only way to I
[00:29:56] think show the sclerotic dying organs of
[00:30:01] power that they need to change what
[00:30:04] they're doing is for a mass movement to
[00:30:07] grow spontaneously which we are seeing.
[00:30:10] I mean our social media recently has
[00:30:12] gone uh stratospheric uh and I think uh
[00:30:17] people can see that we are trying our
[00:30:19] best to highlight the deficiencies uh in
[00:30:22] parliament. That's why it's so important
[00:30:23] to be in parliament because we're able
[00:30:25] to actually from inside expose exactly
[00:30:28] how deficient it all is. And then with
[00:30:31] social media and and thanks to Elon Musk
[00:30:34] uh you know we actually have now got I
[00:30:37] think a far better freer more functional
[00:30:40] platform to uh get the message of what's
[00:30:44] happening out and actually as you know
[00:30:46] transparency is the best cleanser of any
[00:30:50] system. a transparent sort of look at
[00:30:53] what's going on, which is why very often
[00:30:54] a lot of these uh uh administrations try
[00:30:58] and keep things as closed down as
[00:31:00] possible. I'm always a great believer
[00:31:02] in, you know, if it's transparent and
[00:31:04] open, it it usually functions a lot
[00:31:06] better. So, I I mean, look, I we we we
[00:31:10] haven't got long to do this and I think
[00:31:12] the people, if they agree with us, need
[00:31:14] to now show that they agree and actually
[00:31:16] do something about it. And I I say to my
[00:31:18] friends I and I, you know, they they've
[00:31:21] had life too good. Uh they have they
[00:31:23] have leveraged off the back of the
[00:31:25] people who did fight in the war, who did
[00:31:27] create this post-war uh respect for the
[00:31:32] US, for the UK, for the winners, for the
[00:31:34] Anglo-Saxon
[00:31:35] uh uh sort of um alliance.
[00:31:39] And in that I obviously include New
[00:31:40] Zealand and Australia and and and and
[00:31:43] India to some extent, other parts of of
[00:31:44] of of the world who fought for freedom.
[00:31:47] So I think we've got to stand up and be
[00:31:49] counted. I I don't think we can all sit
[00:31:52] back and think it's going to be okay and
[00:31:53] it's somebody else's problem. It's going
[00:31:55] to be everybody's problem soon.
[00:31:56] December's already here. Felt like it
[00:31:57] was just summer the other day. Your life
[00:31:59] is moving fast as always. There's a lot
[00:32:00] to keep track of between Christmas,
[00:32:03] family, giving presents, keeping up with
[00:32:05] your regular life. Times like these are
[00:32:07] when moments of peace become essential.
[00:32:10] They're the chance to recharge. And
[00:32:11] that's why we love Cozy Earth. If you're
[00:32:13] thinking about who deserves a gift, gift
[00:32:15] that will help them actually relax, then
[00:32:18] Cozy Earth has you covered. Bamboo
[00:32:20] sheets are the gift of better sleep.
[00:32:23] They're actually made from bamboo. They
[00:32:25] don't feel like it, though. They are
[00:32:26] wild, very soft. They keep you cozy
[00:32:29] without overheating, and they help you
[00:32:31] sleep several degrees cooler than you
[00:32:33] would with other materials. Their
[00:32:35] blankets make the perfect cozy gift.
[00:32:37] With its textured bubble design and soft
[00:32:39] fur feel, it is perfect for reading by
[00:32:41] the fire, staying warm in a cabin in the
[00:32:43] woods. Every single Cozy Earth product
[00:32:45] comes with a 100 night sleep trial, and
[00:32:48] a 10-year warranty. Everyday luxury at a
[00:32:51] decent price. Cozyear.com
[00:32:54] is the address. Use the code Tucker of
[00:32:56] up to 40% off. Order by December 12th
[00:32:59] for Christmas delivery. After the 12th,
[00:33:01] the code Tucker will still work year
[00:33:03] round for 20% off. And by the way, if
[00:33:05] you get a post purchase survey, mention
[00:33:07] that you heard about Cozy Earth from
[00:33:09] this show. Some of what's happening here
[00:33:11] is so humiliating and it's designed to
[00:33:14] be humiliating. Taking migrants and
[00:33:16] giving them better lodging, better
[00:33:17] conditions than nativeorn Britain, many
[00:33:19] of whom are poor, that almost seems
[00:33:22] designed to infuriate people. It's too
[00:33:24] unfair.
[00:33:26] I wonder does it stay peaceful. the
[00:33:29] response to that?
[00:33:30] >> Well, you you hope it stays uh peaceful
[00:33:33] and and legal, but you know, we've seen
[00:33:36] and again, we in in in response to the
[00:33:38] migrants, of course, they shouldn't be
[00:33:40] allowing these people. I mean, we're
[00:33:42] quite clear they should be detaining and
[00:33:43] they should be deporting all illegal
[00:33:45] migrants. Uh uh they are economic
[00:33:48] migrants in my view, not asylum seekers.
[00:33:50] They've traveled through safe countries.
[00:33:51] They have no reason to be here. Uh and
[00:33:54] they should be detained and deported uh
[00:33:56] straight away. And I think then we turn
[00:33:58] our attention to people who have been
[00:34:00] brought here legally who aren't
[00:34:02] contributing to the country. They also
[00:34:04] need to be looked at and we need to
[00:34:06] decide how they work. And then we also
[00:34:08] need to look at the 9 million people of
[00:34:10] working age who aren't contributing to
[00:34:12] our society. You know they've been told
[00:34:14] it's okay to have mental health issues.
[00:34:16] It's okay to you know stay at home not
[00:34:18] work.
[00:34:19] >> 9 million non-working working
[00:34:21] >> 9 million people. And so how could you
[00:34:23] justify?
[00:34:23] >> We also have these schemes like
[00:34:25] motability. I mean the whole country is
[00:34:27] basically a fraud if you look at it. So
[00:34:30] you know these people get motor cars. I
[00:34:32] think I think I'm right in saying 13% of
[00:34:34] new car registrations is motability
[00:34:36] which basically
[00:34:37] >> I'm ignorant of what you're saying. What
[00:34:39] is it?
[00:34:39] >> Motability is like a sort of scheme. So
[00:34:41] if if you've got if you tick enough
[00:34:43] boxes you get a car paid for by the
[00:34:45] taxpayer three named drivers all the
[00:34:48] insurance and every 3 years you change
[00:34:50] the car. I mean the whole thing is
[00:34:51] complete nonsense.
[00:34:52] >> You get a new car every 3 years.
[00:34:53] >> Yeah. My friends buy old motivility
[00:34:56] moability vehicles when when they've
[00:34:58] been used by by these people who are on
[00:35:00] benefits. So no I look Tucker there's a
[00:35:03] lot wrong and we have to have a society
[00:35:06] Britain voted for it. Britain the
[00:35:08] British people voted in 2016 despite the
[00:35:10] fact the government uh advised them not
[00:35:13] to but they voted to take back their
[00:35:14] sovereignty from the European Union.
[00:35:16] They voted for a British nation state.
[00:35:18] right now that a nation state's job is
[00:35:21] to protect the interests of its
[00:35:23] electorate, its taxpayers, its people
[00:35:25] who live here, who contribute, have
[00:35:28] contributed historically, who basically
[00:35:30] fill in their tax reform, write the
[00:35:32] check, work every every hour God gives,
[00:35:34] try and bring their families up and try
[00:35:37] and lead good lives. That that's what we
[00:35:39] should be rewarding. We should not be
[00:35:42] rewarding
[00:35:43] >> [clears throat]
[00:35:43] >> uh an indolent uh lazy culture. But as
[00:35:47] you probably know, the socialist sort of
[00:35:51] view of life often benefits from a
[00:35:54] dependency culture because the people
[00:35:55] who are on dependency tend to vote for
[00:35:57] more dependency. Uh and and and this is
[00:36:00] why I think uh you know the danger in
[00:36:03] the in the budget tomorrow is that
[00:36:04] Rachel Reeves does lift the two two
[00:36:07] child cap. So at the moment, you know,
[00:36:08] if if you're on benefits, there's a two
[00:36:10] child cap for benefits. She's intending
[00:36:13] to lift that and she's then intending to
[00:36:15] raise the taxes on productive Britain
[00:36:18] who can't afford to probably have more
[00:36:20] than two ch children so they can pay for
[00:36:22] people who aren't working who want to
[00:36:24] have more than two children. So the
[00:36:26] whole thing is completely ass about face
[00:36:28] and and I don't know how long it can go
[00:36:31] on before people do lose their temper.
[00:36:34] Hopefully they will join Restore Britain
[00:36:37] and give us the platform to be able to
[00:36:40] lobby for change and to affect change.
[00:36:42] Now I don't think we've got time to wait
[00:36:46] and I I do think uh if the economic
[00:36:49] conditions turn down very badly, we will
[00:36:51] be forced into an election at some stage
[00:36:53] and it may be before 29. That's the
[00:36:55] Achilles here on the election.
[00:36:56] >> Where's the fierce island spirit that
[00:36:58] allowed Britains to rule the world?
[00:37:00] >> Well, that is a very good question. I
[00:37:01] >> I'm not being mean. I'm just being
[00:37:03] >> No, I I think it's a very fair question
[00:37:04] and I I wonder I mean has everybody had
[00:37:08] life too good? Are they prepared to stir
[00:37:10] their stumps and actually contribute
[00:37:12] because there's no way that a few
[00:37:15] valiant people [clears throat] are going
[00:37:15] to be able to deliver this? This has to
[00:37:17] be a mass movement of entirely. It has
[00:37:20] to be a spontaneous movement. I think it
[00:37:22] is happening. I think it's beginning. I
[00:37:23] think we can see through our social
[00:37:25] media. You can see that people are
[00:37:27] concerned and I don't think it's a big
[00:37:30] jump from being concerned to actually
[00:37:33] doing something about it.
[00:37:34] >> But how can your average Britain allow
[00:37:37] its government to arrest people for
[00:37:41] saying naughty words on social media?
[00:37:43] Thousands of people every year.
[00:37:44] Thousands.
[00:37:45] >> How can they allow that? Why don't they
[00:37:47] surround parliament like lift it off its
[00:37:49] foundations or something? Seriously.
[00:37:50] Well, as you and I know, free speech is
[00:37:52] the absolute key to a functioning
[00:37:55] democracy.
[00:37:55] >> You created it.
[00:37:57] >> This country created free speech.
[00:37:58] >> We create and it's so important to
[00:38:00] everything. And uh we we recently had a
[00:38:03] debate in parliament because with our
[00:38:04] membership now we can we can there's in
[00:38:07] parliament you can uh have a debate or
[00:38:09] force a debate in Westminster Hall with
[00:38:11] 100,000 signatures on on an e petition.
[00:38:14] So to your point uh there's there's the
[00:38:17] best example of this is probably Lucy
[00:38:18] Connley who who who was caught up in the
[00:38:21] Southport in the whole the
[00:38:23] [clears throat] whole sort of
[00:38:25] emotional upheaval of of the the
[00:38:27] Southport killings uh uh where three
[00:38:30] three young girls were stabbed to death.
[00:38:32] Um and I think the country spontaneously
[00:38:36] reacted. Let Labour say it was some sort
[00:38:38] of right-wing planned
[00:38:40] >> only right-wingers object to kids being
[00:38:42] it's not. It was it was a spontaneous
[00:38:44] reaction across the country. So Lucy
[00:38:46] Connelly posted something ill- advised
[00:38:48] but but arguably you know she deleted it
[00:38:52] 3 hours later obviously after the heat
[00:38:54] had gone out of it.
[00:38:54] >> She said that the people who did this
[00:38:56] came from a migrant hostel
[00:38:57] >> but she went to prison for uh 30 weeks I
[00:39:01] think it was. Was it 30 weeks? I think
[00:39:03] something like that. Bit more than that.
[00:39:04] Bit more. So she but she came we we we
[00:39:07] we host her in parliament.
[00:39:08] >> Did she harm anybody?
[00:39:10] >> No.
[00:39:11] No, I get death threats, Tucker, and we
[00:39:14] report it to the police. I think I've
[00:39:15] had eight death threats in the last 3
[00:39:17] months. Uh, and we report it to the
[00:39:19] Metropolitan Police, and the square root
[00:39:21] of nothing happens. So, um, I I would
[00:39:24] have thought people making death threats
[00:39:26] is far more far more dangerous than
[00:39:28] people uh, posting something in the heat
[00:39:31] of the moment on social media that they
[00:39:33] then redact.
[00:39:34] >> But, you're a member of parliament.
[00:39:35] >> I'm a member of parliament. Yep. And you
[00:39:38] get death threats and they
[00:39:40] >> we get death threats on social media,
[00:39:41] >> but they took your guns away.
[00:39:43] >> Well, I was that was because reform uh
[00:39:46] for some extraordinary reason
[00:39:47] politically assassinated me and um made
[00:39:50] some false witness statements that that
[00:39:53] I had uh um Muhammad Zudin Ysef said
[00:39:57] that I had threatened him uh in a
[00:40:00] meeting which was palpable rubbish and
[00:40:02] that I stood over him and I was I
[00:40:05] threatened to hit him. Well, I'm 68 and
[00:40:08] he's 38, so that's a bad idea to start
[00:40:10] with. And it just didn't happen like
[00:40:13] that. So, you know, at the end of the
[00:40:14] day, we had a debate about Great
[00:40:16] Yarmouth and my branch office in Great
[00:40:18] Yarmouth, no more. And the WhatsApp
[00:40:20] train proved it. But he gave this
[00:40:22] witness statement and then Lee Anderson
[00:40:23] gave a witness statement to say that I
[00:40:25] was going around Parliament saying I was
[00:40:27] a very fine shot and I was going to
[00:40:28] shoot Zia Ysef.
[00:40:30] as a result of which the Metropolitan
[00:40:32] Police arrived more handed and took my
[00:40:34] guns away and it took me about 5 months
[00:40:36] to get them back.
[00:40:38] So look, and they also suggested I had
[00:40:42] early onset dementia, which was again
[00:40:44] [clears throat] pretty pretty unpleasant
[00:40:45] thing to do.
[00:40:46] >> Do they have any evidence?
[00:40:48] >> Uh I don't think I've got early onset
[00:40:49] dementia. Not not that I'm aware, but I
[00:40:52] obviously, you know, those people who do
[00:40:53] have it, it's a pretty horrific thing to
[00:40:55] have.
[00:40:55] >> Oh, of course it is. And if I did have
[00:40:56] it and they'd said that, it would have
[00:40:58] been even more unpleasant. So, you know,
[00:41:00] [laughter]
[00:41:00] I hope I haven't got it. I hope I
[00:41:02] haven't got it, Tucker. But, you know,
[00:41:04] anyway, so we we again, fortunately, I'm
[00:41:06] I I'm able to fund the legal costs
[00:41:09] required. I was able to go on the attack
[00:41:11] >> and and I think um you know, what they
[00:41:14] did was just morally and uh uh uh in
[00:41:19] everywhere every other way wrong. And
[00:41:21] >> but this country, its authorities can
[00:41:23] just show up and take your guns without
[00:41:25] producing a conviction, putting you on
[00:41:27] trial, proving you did anything wrong.
[00:41:28] They
[00:41:29] >> No, this this country is going badly
[00:41:30] wrong. I mean I mean it is it is going
[00:41:32] badly wrong. But I think that's probably
[00:41:33] a symptom of the fact,
[00:41:36] you know, we've lost our way. Uh people
[00:41:39] people aren't as principled as they used
[00:41:41] to be. Uh and ultimately it's it's a
[00:41:45] function of statism. I mean it used to
[00:41:47] happen in the Soviet Union when you get
[00:41:50] when you get central planning and you
[00:41:51] get stars like behavior.
[00:41:54] >> Yes.
[00:41:55] >> Uh you get little people making malign
[00:41:58] decisions behind closed doors and
[00:42:00] damaging the interests of the good
[00:42:02] people. So I always say in Russia uh
[00:42:05] when the USSR that the qualification you
[00:42:07] needed to best survive was to be a very
[00:42:09] good liar. Yeah. And I think as a result
[00:42:11] of that, you know, your entire fabric of
[00:42:13] your society starts to fall apart, which
[00:42:15] is what happened with them. Nobody takes
[00:42:17] any responsibility. And then what was it
[00:42:19] a generation and a half later, the whole
[00:42:21] thing imploded? But on the way, a lot of
[00:42:24] people died and a lot of people uh had a
[00:42:26] you know pretty hellish life. Uh not
[00:42:29] least one of my favorite characters, Al
[00:42:31] Alexander Solsitson.
[00:42:33] >> Yes. who I think made some very uh um
[00:42:36] you know meaningful comment about about
[00:42:39] sort of people being free and equal and
[00:42:41] >> yes
[00:42:42] >> equal and free
[00:42:44] >> or not equal and not free whichever way
[00:42:46] you want to look at it. So he made some
[00:42:47] great great comments. So
[00:42:48] >> certainly did
[00:42:49] >> I I think we are suffering from too much
[00:42:53] central planning too much statism and
[00:42:55] too many small people in positions of
[00:42:57] influence.
[00:43:00] >> Last question. I I I look at what's
[00:43:02] happening in Ireland and I know
[00:43:05] complicated relationship between the two
[00:43:07] countries, but what's happening to
[00:43:09] Ireland with mass migration
[00:43:11] is basically identical to what's
[00:43:13] happening here in Great Britain and it's
[00:43:16] also happening in Australia and Canada
[00:43:17] and the US. It's so close like almost
[00:43:22] precise. It's the same template
[00:43:25] that cannot be an like what is that?
[00:43:28] What are the forces pushing that?
[00:43:31] >> Well, I think we have to ask ourselves
[00:43:32] why did the post war elite uh think that
[00:43:37] this experiment with multiculturalism
[00:43:40] was a good idea.
[00:43:41] >> Yes.
[00:43:41] >> And I I don't think any of them have
[00:43:44] ever really answered that question. I
[00:43:46] think uh obviously Ireland is a function
[00:43:48] of what's happening here. I mean, you've
[00:43:50] obviously got the wretched Northern
[00:43:52] Ireland protocol which morphed into the
[00:43:54] Windsor agreement which which is
[00:43:55] shocking division of the of the United
[00:43:58] Kingdom which which effectively was a if
[00:44:01] you like sacrificed on the order of
[00:44:02] Brexit.
[00:44:04] >> Um so but but on the multiculturalism
[00:44:07] and again this goes to you probably know
[00:44:08] we've got a big
[00:44:09] >> Can I repeat what you just said because
[00:44:10] I think I want the question to hang in
[00:44:11] the air. Why did the post-war elite I
[00:44:14] think I'm quoting you decide that this
[00:44:16] multiculturalism experiment was a good
[00:44:18] idea?
[00:44:18] >> I don't I don't know. No, I think it's a
[00:44:20] it's a thoroughly bad idea. I I like
[00:44:23] >> so obviously
[00:44:23] >> nation states who interface with each
[00:44:25] other, who respect each other, who
[00:44:28] respect each other's culture and who
[00:44:31] [clears throat]
[00:44:31] >> basically,
[00:44:32] you know, interface with each other like
[00:44:35] that to try and create this. And again,
[00:44:38] does it go to the World Economic Forum?
[00:44:40] Is it the Bilderberggers? Is it the
[00:44:41] Council on Foreign Relations? Look, I I
[00:44:43] I where does the truth lie? I mean, I I
[00:44:46] find it probably like you do incredibly
[00:44:48] difficult to work out where the truth
[00:44:50] lies often in our in our modern age.
[00:44:53] >> Um,
[00:44:54] most people want to live a a healthy
[00:44:58] life centered around their community and
[00:44:59] their family and and and and they want
[00:45:02] to, you know, be able to wake up in the
[00:45:03] morning and feel that they've done the
[00:45:05] right thing by everybody. But it does it
[00:45:08] does seem that there is this malign
[00:45:10] agenda to break down families, to break
[00:45:13] down communities, to create this
[00:45:16] multicultural world
[00:45:19] where I guess arguably a small global
[00:45:22] elite are able to exert undue influence
[00:45:25] on how everybody else leaves their
[00:45:27] lives. I I I that's the only solution I
[00:45:30] can come up with in my in with my
[00:45:32] limited intellect, but I it doesn't add
[00:45:34] up, does it? It doesn't make sense.
[00:45:36] >> It honestly it doesn't. And I remember
[00:45:38] hearing people 30 years ago hint that
[00:45:41] there was some multinational or pang
[00:45:44] global conspiracy from the groups you
[00:45:46] just mentioned and thinking this this is
[00:45:47] obviously a mentally ill person talking
[00:45:50] and now you just watch the accumulated
[00:45:52] evidence is overwhelming. This is not
[00:45:53] organic. It's not the product of
[00:45:55] democracy.
[00:45:55] >> It's not in the interest of our country.
[00:45:56] It's not in the interest of your
[00:45:57] country. It's not it's not in the
[00:45:59] interest of Ireland and and none of the
[00:46:00] electorate want it. So
[00:46:02] >> So how are we getting it all at the same
[00:46:03] time?
[00:46:03] >> Well, it's a very good question, Tucker.
[00:46:05] I I I I just don't know the answer to
[00:46:07] that. But what I do know is the people
[00:46:10] who care about it happening need to now
[00:46:13] coalesce and actually start to show
[00:46:15] those people who are perpetrating this
[00:46:17] on us that they don't want it. Uh and if
[00:46:20] that means that they get turfed out of
[00:46:22] power, that's what's got to happen. We
[00:46:23] we've got to turf them out of power and
[00:46:25] make common sense prevail. It's common
[00:46:28] sense we're lacking everywhere. But I
[00:46:31] think there are, you know, as I said,
[00:46:32] there are some signs that um that that
[00:46:35] that in in the US, you know, people have
[00:46:38] people are beginning to address it and
[00:46:40] people are beginning to take action. Um
[00:46:42] but it's it's like walking through glue,
[00:46:45] isn't it? I mean, that the that there's
[00:46:47] this there's this malign power base
[00:46:49] that's that doesn't lie down very
[00:46:51] easily. Uh and it's it's always there
[00:46:54] waiting to pounce again.
[00:46:59] Thank you very much, Rubert, for talking
[00:47:01] to me. That was great.
[00:47:02] >> Pleasure.
[00:47:06] >> Christmas is back and so is our
[00:47:08] merchandise shop at TCN. Visit tucker
[00:47:11] carlson.com to see what we have to offer
[00:47:13] and it's awesome. Everyone has a long
[00:47:15] list of people they need to shop for
[00:47:16] this Christmas. Our new line can help
[00:47:18] you brighten the day with gifts they
[00:47:21] will actually love. Not the kind they're
[00:47:22] going to throw away or thank you for,
[00:47:24] but not mean it. Actually, good stuff.
[00:47:27] That's great for everybody. Ornaments,
[00:47:28] wrapping paper, Christmas sweaters. For
[00:47:31] real. The TCN shop has everything you
[00:47:33] need. Dozens of new styles and designs
[00:47:35] perfect for the giftgiving and spreading
[00:47:37] the Christmas spirit. That's tucker
[00:47:38] carlson.com.
[00:47:40] We hope you have the very best
[00:47:42] Christmas.
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
yt_VlcGvv-HKJc
Dataset
youtube
Comments 0