Flatcap Nationalist

Why Am I Doing This?

Flatcap Nationalist Episode 8

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0:00 | 45:44

An explanation of the purpose of this podcast.  Thank you for listening.

SPEAKER_00

Good evening, welcome back to Flat Cap Nationalist. I'm sorry it's been a while, what three weeks, give or take, since I've been with you. But incredibly busy these days. So uh I thought I'd record an episode today because I'm not gonna have a chance to do it on Sunday. So let's get into it. So over the last few weeks I've been uh thinking quite a lot about why I'm doing this. So I thought I'd just record this little episode. It'd give you my perspective. Um so I thought about scripting this a little bit, but to be honest, I I prefer speaking from the heart. Um so why am I doing this? You know, uh you you may have noticed this is not a professional podcast, you know, it's not particularly polished, I'm not particularly great, you know. I'm just a simple working bloke that feels the need to do something. You know, I'm not I'm not here for recognition, I'm not here for money, I'm not gonna try and make a living out of doing this, like I don't want to be doing this. You know, a lot of people that know me probably assume that I like politics, I like talking about politics. I don't, I despise it, I hate politics. You know, and I I know that I annoy people with it, I see people rolling their eyes anytime a political topic comes up in person, you know, I I I can see them basically saying, oh, come on, don't start him off. And I don't like that. You know, speaking with family and one of these topics comes up, I have to speak about it because they're not going to hear about these things from mainstream media. Um but I wish it wasn't that way. You know, I wish I could just have a straightforward conversation. I wish I didn't have to get drawn into the political chat. You know, but I don't really have a choice. I mean, my primary reason at the moment for doing this is I've held my baby niece. Right, I've played football on the park with my best mate's little lad. He's only two years old, I reckon he's good enough for a Leicester back four already. But that's why I've got to do something. You know, I I've seen the joy on that little lad's face. Yeah, he's exploring a world that's completely new and exciting to him. Yeah, every new experience, every new thing that he tastes or sees or hears, you know, it's all new. And I want the world that he is so excited to explore. I want it to be a good world. Now, I never never used to believe in the great replacement theory. I always used to think it was a bit hyperbolic and a bit paranoid. But the other day, I went to my childhood shop, uh, a place I used to buy Freddie's back when they were 10P. Everybody in there, and I mean everybody in there was African. Now I grew up in a very white working class place, and seeing all those people replaced by people that you know I arrived there in the last couple of years, you can't help but feel replaced. I went to another shop just down the road, and everybody in there, customers, staff, you name it, everybody was Indian. I was the only person in there speaking English, and it just made it really clear, really stark, that the replacement is real. You know, sectarianism is on the way because there is just so many disparate groups of people scattered about all over the place. You know, and and this is not a future that I want for us or for the generations that come after us. You know, I don't want I don't want my my niece, my nephew, my the children I'm gonna have, my grandkids, I don't want them growing up under sectarianism. I don't want them growing up to be a minority in their own country. Yeah, I mean we've seen increasingly over the last few years, particularly during things like Ramadan. I've seen so many videos of people at work, non-Muslims, eating their lunch in the canteen, you know. The purpose of the canteen is there. And being insulted and intimidated by Muslims because they're they're they're fasting for Ramadan, and non-Muslims are not doing that. And I've seen they're getting increasingly bold, increasingly confrontational about it, and it's like, well, I'm sorry, mate, I'm not a member of your religion. I'm gonna eat my lunch in peace. Thank you very much. But I don't want them growing up in that kind of world. I mean, imagine that in the classroom. You know, already there are there are places in this country where the majority of the class doesn't speak English as a first language. Now, what's this gonna look like 20 years down the line? You know, 40 years down the line. Yeah, I've got grandkids going to school. They might be the only English kid in there. And I don't want them being targeted, singled out, and abused simply for the crime of being English. I don't want my kids growing up in a country that teaches them to be ashamed of their flag. You know, and this is something I've seen increasingly over the last few uh last few years, is usually Indian people, to be fair, complaining about colonialism and the flag, and they feel intimidated by it, they don't feel it includes them. Well, it's not supposed to include them. Right? It's the flag of our country. And they're they're very offended by it because it was also, you know, the flag of England when we were running India, you know, when we gave them a civilization and infrastructure and you know, helped them become what they are today. That was the flag that we did it under. But if you want to talk about flags, I would just like to mention, you know, that curious little wheel on the Indian flag? Well, it's a spinning wheel, and it was put there as a symbol of India's determination to destroy Britain economically in order to obtain their independence. Well, they got that coming up on 80 years ago. The wheel is still on the flag, so if you want to talk about flags causing offence, you know, take the wheel off your flag and uh we can start talking about our flag. But our flag is going nowhere. It's here to stay, you better get used to it. But this is entirely the point. You know, we we shouldn't be ashamed of our flag. And I don't want my children growing up in a country that teaches them to hate that flag and to feel shame for things that they never did. You know, being shamed by people that never experienced things like colonialism and slavery. I don't want them being used as sticks to beat my kids with. I want them to grow up in a country that is aware of its own identity, that is proud of his existence. I want them to grow up in a country whose institutions don't hate them or try to silence them or pass them over, you know, not give them opportunities in order to meet some kind of diversity quota. I don't want growing up in a country that steals their money to pay for the indolent or foreign wars. And I don't want it to pay for their own replacement the way we are. I don't want to have to explain why they can't live in a country that doesn't hate them because we didn't want to be called racist. Right? And just imagine a day. Five, ten, twenty, maybe fifty years in the future. And you're sitting down with your kids, maybe your grandkids, and they ask, why's everything against me? What did I do? And you'll have to say to them, you didn't do anything. It's because we did nothing. So that's why I'm doing this. I'm doing this to play whatever small role I can in making this country a better place for the people that come after us. So I'll be doing episodes in the near future, sort of focusing on different elements of the state in its current form that I find to be particularly perverse and destructive. I'm gonna do that to highlight certain issues and give perspectives maybe you haven't considered. And if I can say one thing that makes one person think differently or gives them another talking point to counter some of the arguments of the left, you know, or to dispel the notion that we're all just mindless bigots and racists that don't like outsiders. If I can say one thing that helps one person, I think I've made a contribution, okay? Because I do see, I see a lot, you know, a lot of talk online about, well, you know, nothing's happening, nobody's doing anything, you know, how how you you're just letting yourselves be conquered and taken over without a shot. Which, from an outp outside perspective, yeah, I can certainly see how it looks that way. Now, realistically, what can we do? What can we do? And I'm not asking that in a defeatist way. I'm not saying, oh, it's all over, what can we do? You know, this is just the way things have to be. No. I mean, what steps are we actually taking? Right? And I I see a lot of people saying, you guys there's no voting your way out of this. There's no democratic way to achieve your objectives. But all I can say is maybe that's the case. Maybe that's true. Maybe there is no democratic way, maybe there is no peaceful option. I think we really have to try. I I see all too many comments, you know, saying civil war, civil war, civil war, bring on the civil war. You can't vote your way out of this, so let's just have a civil war. It's an increasingly common perspective. Yeah, I see this plastered all over right-wing spaces, and they may well be right. Maybe there is no voting our way out of this. Maybe we do have to fight a civil war. But while there is still potential for an off-ramp, I think we need to take that. Yeah, I mean, a lot of these people calling for civil war, you know, or saying bring it on. I think a lot of it's internet bravado. I don't think too many of them are giving all that much thought to what a civil war actually looks like and the destruction that that would wreak upon our people. You know, I mean, this is just like, you know, the the English Civil War from the 17th century. You know, or like the American Civil War, houses are divided. You know, we we've been exploited and divided along so many different lines that households are divided. You know, a husband and a wife, they might have completely different political perspectives. And then their kids, who are all you know, growing up in this indoctrination system, they've got a different perspective. And if we deepen those divisions to the point where it is all out war, I mean think about it. Think how that looks. Think about a family you know, and every member of that family might have a different perspective. If if it comes to war, what does that look like when every house on every street in every town and every city is divided and willing to fight for it? That is carnage. You know, that that that kind of destruction we will never ever recover from. So that has to be the absolute last case scenario. We need to pursue peace. We need to look for the democratic routes to peace and prosperity. We need to do that. You know, anybody that's so eager to go to war without thinking through the implications of it. I don't know. I don't know. I mean it to me it reeks a little bit of Fed posting. You know, I get the distinct impression a lot of these people are just saying this to try and make people on the right kick off so they can clamp down on them. Right, and that does no good for anybody, does it? We simply do not have the numbers. The the smog of indoctrination is so strong and so deeply ingrained into such wide sections of society that we're only now, in 2026, you know, three decades after our borders have been flung wide open, we're only now at the point where we can start talking honestly about deporting illegal immigrants. Well, people that broke into the country on rubber dingies from France, we're only just getting to the point where we can talk about that. Let alone the millions of people that have come here legally and that our establishment believes have an indefinite right to remain here, simply by virtue of being allowed in in the first place. So if we're only just getting to this point now, after all the damage and destruction that's been wrought upon our society, you really think we've got the numbers to fight a civil war, knowing full well the entire weight of the establishment will be against us. This is why it's not in our favour to look beyond the political realm at the minute, the democratic way of doing things. Now, I personally am not overly enamoured with democracy. But I can tell you for the time being, it's a lot better than the alternative. You know, maybe in the future things change. But for the time being, you know, I think if we can prevent hundreds of thousands, millions of deaths through civil war, if we can avoid that by engaging in discussion and debate, we have to try that. We simply have to. Okay, otherwise we will be annihilated. Now, even if a good chunk of the right turned out in arms to fight our case, okay, what happens? What happens? They get swallowed up by the establishment, they get locked in the bowels of some prison in the offsend of nowhere, and our numbers are greatly depleted. And we need every number. We need every member that we can get. We need them voting. We need them using their voices first and foremost before they use their fists. Right now I'm under no illusion. I know that we're being stifled by mainstream media, by the establishment, by all the institutions, by everything, every sort of block of people in the country is trying to try and deny the validity of Restore's message. Because I'm all in with Restore people. I think we have to be, because there is no denying it, millions of people need to leave. Millions. Yeah, taxes need to be slashed, regulation needs to be slashed, and we need to grow. We need to do whatever it takes to get this country back to a place of peace and prosperity. And it ain't gonna be an easy road, a lot of hard graft, and it'll be a thankless task. You know, there's gonna be so many people that hate us for doing what we're trying to do. You know, think about like the the green voters, the Zak Polanski types. You're never, never gonna get a word of thanks from them people. They're gonna hate you until the day that they die. Okay, but the day that they die could be a lot sooner if we don't take action. And while for some that might be a reason to think, oh fuck it, yeah, let's let them do it then. Let's let them sow the seeds of their own destruction. I don't want to see that. You know, I I don't like Zach Polanski, I don't like a lot of Green voters, a lot of Labour voters. But I love 'em. They're people. And I don't want to see them die. I don't want to see bad things happen to them. So peace is what we need to pursue. Okay, and if we can't have peace, then we'll prepare for war. We will fight like fox. But while there's a chance to avoid that, and all the chaos, destruction, and misery that comes with it, we have to take that route. So that kind of brings me to my role. Now, what do I want this podcast to be? Because I'm under no illusion, you know, I work full-time, I've got quite a social life, and uh uh, and obligations to friends and family, things like that. So I don't have a lot of time to do the most in-depth research and get every, you know, fact, figure, and statistic. I don't I don't like social media, so I'm not, you know, relentlessly following politicians on there and seeing which way the wind is blowing. You know, I where I can, I get a lot of perspective on how people are feeling from comment sections, you know, in different right-wing spaces. And keep my finger on the pulse of sort of the sentiment within our movement, you know, the direction of travel, where we're going, people's concerns, potential divisions that might arise in the future. These are the things that I I want to address. Now, if I find an issue that I think I've not really seen anybody else covering this, then I'll cover it. You know, or if I think I've got a perspective on this that maybe other people are not seeing, then I'll put that across. But I would like to use this time just to keep a check on what people are saying, how people are feeling, you know, the the temperature of the room, so to speak. You know, I'll be a bit of a thermometer and put that across. And the goal in doing so is seeing the kind of objections that people are putting up against our rhetoric or logic or or desires and policies, see the kind of resistance there is to them or things about them that people don't like, and just try to have a little bit of a say, you know, or give a new perspective on how to view a particular issue. Now I'm never going to tell you what to think and what to say, but if I can spark something in your mind that enables you to debate with a leftist or a reform voter or something, you know, anybody essentially that's not already on board, and it gives you just that little extra bit of ammunition to help bring somebody over to our cause, well that's another soldier in our fight. So that's what I'd quite like to do. Okay. I I see a lot of chatter online, and you can see potential for future fracturing in the movement, and I don't want to see that. You know, uh obviously we've already had the big reform restore split, and it can get quite vitriolic between the two camps, and it's a shame because we're all essentially on the same side of this struggle. You know, effectively, reform voters want the same thing as restore voters. The difference comes in where they're putting their faith. And I have lost faith in reform completely. Well, and I'll do I'll do further episodes on this. You know, but I I've lost faith in them. And unity. Unity is going to be a massive strength for a movement, and I just want to do a little bit to pull the wool from people's eyes. I'm not trying to demonise reform voters. Same ways I don't actually want to demonise green and Labour voters. You know, a lot of them, yeah, and I I still do believe, I still believe that fundamentally most people are decent and just want to be good. They want to do the right thing. Okay, and as I've discussed before, the left has an incredibly compelling sales pitch because it sounds compassionate. It sounds reasonable. You know, it sounds like, you know what, that that would be a nice world to live in. It's all built on lies, but I can't blame people for being seduced by the rhetoric. It does sound nice. Living in, you know, peace and harmony, it's all going to be come by and everybody's fine. The reality's very different, of course, but the voters I I can't hold it against them. You know, particularly with the level of indoctrination that we are subjected to basically from birth in this country. You know, there's little wonder most people coming out of the university system are rapidly left wing. Which reminds me, by the way, I found a channel the other day, Thomas Chester Politics. I found him, he's a guy, he's currently at university, I think he's doing uh psychology, I think it was. And um, yeah, very switched-on young man. You know, and uh it was very reassuring to me actually that somebody, you know, going through an education system steeped in leftist belief can come through and still identify where the propaganda is. You know, so I'd I'd implore everybody, just go and check out his channel. He's far bigger than I am. But check him out. Yeah, it's nice to see a young man with his head screwed on, right, that can see through the laws and indoctrination. You know, he was talking a little bit about um how, you know, in the in in the course of what he's learning, it's being taught as fact that you know that gender identity is whatever you want it to be. Just despite the you know, Supreme Court ruling that uh men and men and women are women in the university system that are still teaching, actually, that's not the case. So uh yeah, go and check him out. Uh because I I feel very optimistic every time I see his videos, because if there are more young men like him, maybe everything ain't lost after all, you know. So I don't mind on a lot of issues being out of lockstep with many on the right. You know, and I I presume, maybe, maybe erroneously, but I would presume that saying I don't hate green voters and Labour voters, it's probably out of lockstep with a lot of you people. And that's fine, you know, we're entitled to your opinions, right? But I do think a lot of people that vote left, fundamentally are good people. And there are people that vote in green, well, if you actually speak to them, they would be good allies. They would be good people to have on side, and they don't actually disagree with any anything we say. You know, and that their aversion to right wing parties is partly put there by the propaganda system, you know, that says anything right of centre is just fundamentally evil. So they can never identify with that, right? But a lot of people that are looking to vote green are. Voting green for the same reason as many of us are voting restore. It's something outside of the two party paradigm. Now many of them are probably not dying the wall communists. They're not full-on leftists. They're just people that are sick of the way that the two party system has treated them over the years. Right, which is why they're heading for the Green Party, because they are quite clearly outside of the establishment, right? So there's potential there for conversion. You know, to open the eyes and see the light. There's potential there for that, which is why I don't want to demonise them and write them off as a as you know you know, that's a lost cohort of people. Nobody's a lost cohort of people. I've not always held the positions that I held, and people around me, they've not always had the positions that they have, but people can be won around by reason, logic, rhetoric, undeniable facts. They just need to be exposed to those facts. Yeah, which is where the system really does its part well in obscuring and hiding and muddying the waters surrounding all the facts, so people can't actually make informed decisions, so it's our job to do that. Right? And that that's kind of where I see this podcast. If I can give you any ammunition to help convert people to the cause, then I've done my job well. Okay, so I'm not here to scream and shout and rant and rave, you know, and point out, oh, Labour are doing a bit of shit, aren't they? Oh, I can't wait for the next election. To me, that seems kind of pointless. There are people far more capable, far more established than me, you know, with more time on their hands to actually get those messages out there and to keep us informed of what's going on. My role, I I the way I see it in uh at the very least, is to keep my finger on the pulse of the sentiment of the movement and to inform you guys on that, give you a little bit of ammunition and try and keep the thing together. And if you'd like to join me in that endeavour, please stick around, keep supporting, keep listening, keep sharing to people you think might get some value out of it. Okay? Because I'm not a bells and whistles kind of guy, you might have noticed that. You know, I'm not polished, I'm not scripted, I don't have intro music or outro music, yeah, I I don't have socials set up because I despise social media. All I want to do is try and help keep this movement together, and any little effort that each of us can make makes a huge difference. You know, if every restore supporter went out and converted one more person, we've doubled the numbers. You know, it's not complicated maths. We just have to do what we have to do now. I want all of you to think about a kid in your life, uh, baby, toddler, maybe coming up on adolescence, who knows? Think about the kind of world you want them to live in. Or use that as your motivations. Keep your shoulder to the grindstone and let's just keep going, keep pushing. We will win this, okay? And I tell you this, like I said before, I'm not in this for money and recognition clout, I'm not here to pedal this up into a social media career. I can't think of anything worse, to be honest. So if we win and we win big, I'm gone. You know? I'm gone. There's no further need for me. And that would be the ideal, because at the time of recording, it's Friday evening. You know, Friday evening, after a long week at work, I just want a couple of beers, spend some time with the missus, play my guitar, and that's it. You know, normally I recall on a Sunday afternoon, after church, you know, I want to see friends, family, do some cooking, and find a quiet spot to play my guitar or read a book and forget about the world. That's what I want. So that's what I'm aiming for and what I'm hoping for. Okay, but if we lose, I want there to be a record for my kids and my grandkids of the state of the country, of the way that things were. You know, in in the words of somebody that they know and can trust to not distort reality for them. I want this podcast to serve as an educational tool for them. You know, maybe point things out to kids 50 years in the future, what to look out for. You know, the signs of creeping authoritarianism. If we lose, I want this to be a message to my kids and grandkids. This entire podcast, this entire project, I want it to be a message for them that we did what we could for them and it wasn't enough. But I don't intend to lose, ladies and gentlemen, and I hope you don't either. So please share this podcast with people that you know, people that might have questions for the right, or people that might be undecided between reform and restore, or the greens and restore. Now share, share, share. Get the message out there and do this for all content creators, all the people in the right-wing space whose message resonates with you, or whose message makes you think, yeah, you know what? You got a point there. Now, whether it's me, whether it's any any number of other outlets, make sure you're getting that message across. You know, some people will be receptive to it, some people won't be, but get it out there anyway. Or let's all mock in and do what we can. Because I I really do believe, given the trajectory that we're on, you know, if we cannot get restored across the line, the future doesn't look too good for us, does it? And for our kids and our grandkids. Yeah. And we for their sake, we cannot fail. We cannot fail. So please keep the faith. Keep going with this movement. Right? Talk to as many people as you have to. Do the work that the guys in Restore can't do themselves. You know, within the family unit, try and convert, try and get people interested, you know, try and get people on board with the message, try and get people out in the streets talking to other people about the message. And let's get this thing won. And and this is where restore for me really wins it. So I just I want to take just a couple of minutes to look at the etymology of a couple of the parties, right? Specifically restore and reform, but fucking we'll do the others as well, because it's fun. Alright, so a Labour Party, you've got a Labour Party where as far as I can tell, none of the members have actually worked. Right, you got them. You've got the Liberal Democrats. Now, they recently had their I think it's their annual conference, uh, I think it's called the Demos, which is the you know, the demo part of democracy from the Greek for the people. And uh during that conference, they were talking about how it's it's not fair and it's not right that you can just jump on social media and make a right-wing talking point and have your voice heard. Who would have thought that? The Liberal Democrats at the demos. So you've got two instances there of words that mean essentially letting the people speak, complaining about the people's freedom to speak. That's your lib dems for you, so they don't really stand for anything, do they? Um, you've got the conservatives that conserved fuck all. Well, in actual fact, they conserved all of the ground that Labour stole in the nineties. Right? Because this is how it tends to work. Labour, when they get in, they'll they'll lay the foundations for all these horrible lefty projects that they want to implement. And the Conservatives conserve that for them, so when they get in again, they can hit the ground running. That's why things change so quickly when Labour get in, because the groundwork was already established before. I don't know if you'd noticed, they don't seem to be particularly environmental these days. A lot of people don't seem to realise that the green it's been co-opted by Islam, with green being the colour of Islam. Okay, now you may have seen the greens referred to as watermelons, well, green on the outside, red on the inside. And uh I'd say it's pretty accurate. Islamist on the outside, communist on the inside. Now anybody familiar with world history, you know, Iran, Lebanon, don't know how communist Islamist alliances usually end up. And this is what I made my earlier comment about not wanting to see Zach Balansky murdered. Yeah, because that's that's the way it tends to go. Okay, then you've got reform, reform UK. Well, they're telling you in the name what they want to reform. They want to reform the political entity that is the United Kingdom. Okay, compare that with Restore, restore Britain. They want to restore the homeland, yeah, the place of Britain. They want to restore that to what it used to be, what it should be. You know, what we've let ourselves get away from over the previous three decades. Complete and total restoration of the greatness of this country. Okay, now I'm I'm not overly concerned with outside events. My focus is here at home. You know, that's what I love. Uh all the people I love are here. Everything I know is England. I've been many, many places. But this is home, and I want to restore that, and you should want to restore that too. So that's what this podcast is about. Uh one of the things, just this just gonna be a quick example of where I'd like to set this podcast. So one of the things I've been seeing a lot of lately, uh not just in the UK, uh, I think even people like Nick Fuentes were saying this not so long ago, that uh fundamentally there's no difference between left and right. You know, uh it's just a question of economic approach, and that's the only distinguishing feature of left and right. Now, this is only true if we accept the positions allocated to us by the opposition. You know, so when you've got a Marxist, and they they'll call you a capitalist, and many of us, myself included, for a long, long time, it's a trap that I still fall into occasionally. Many of us will say, Well, I'm not a communist, so obviously I'm a capitalist, because I'm the opposite of that thing. But capitalist is a term invented by Marxists. You know, Karl Marx used the word capitalist to refer to the system outside of Marxism. So there's not actually a concrete defined structure of what capitalism is and isn't. Now, what is referring to by capitalism seems to me to be free markets and personal property. Okay, you you you play those things together, and if you win, hey, you end up really, really rich. You play those things badly and uh things don't go too well for you. Maybe you find a nice balancing point in the middle where you've got a bit of cash, a bit of assets, yeah, but you still have to work for a living. Okay, that's that's acceptable. That's just that's just human nature, is it not? You are free to sell your labour at a price that you know the market finds to be acceptable. If your price is too high, well hey, you can't sell your labour. Yeah, and if you're willing to sell your labour for way too low, well that's why you end up with low wages. Now, what I find particularly infuriating about this is from that perspective of communist versus capitalist, yeah, essentially the the players of those games they want the same things and they've got different approaches to getting it. But they also use the same approaches at times. So if you were to think about left versus right, you know, the left has gone all in on mass immigration and you know cultural capitulation to our new guests, right? Right wingers don't want that. Right wingers don't want our country given away, our culture subjugated by outsiders that have come here specifically to do this to us. We don't want that. Okay, but if you look at it through a different lens, communism is all in on mass immigration because it decays the social fabric, it makes it far, far easier to implement communist style policies. Okay, but capitalism, as they would define it, yeah, big business, also loves mass immigration because it stifles wages, it means they have to pay less money. You know, they they get the labour achieved for a far smaller price than would be the case if our entire labour market wasn't open to the rest of the world. So, in that sense, communists and capitalists, yeah, they're engaging in the same behaviour. And communism is undoubtedly left wing. But that doesn't necessarily mean that capitalism is the right wing perspective, does it? You know, we need to get away from accepting the labels that they put on us because they will put any label they can on us, they will tell us what our position is, and that means they don't have to listen to us. Okay, but we're we're tired now of not being listened to, you know, or or having words put in our mouths. Because that's that's essentially what has happened. You know, the fact that the left is against big business and hates rich people doesn't mean that right wingers have to be beholden to the billionaires and prop them up at every opportunity. Now we have the economic sense to understand you know what these people actually pay a huge amount of taxes, and if you raise the taxes on them, well they they're just gonna move to a more you know wealth and asset friendly country, uh a system that doesn't punish them for having achieved things and for having acquired wealth. They're just gonna go there, and we've we've seen this. This is what Ireland was doing pretty well because they they undercut us massively on corporation tax. So all the corporations thought, oh fuck it, I'll go over to Ireland then. Yeah, so there's there's a certain economic sensibility in the way that we apply taxes to the you know the rich people. But it doesn't mean that we're all in on the right, that you know, we want to be governed and ruled by billionaires. We don't. I I despise big business as much as the leftists do. I understand, you know, employment and the taxation paid through employment, i it's an enormous contribution to the country's finances. I understand that. But at the cost of open borders, is it worth it? You know, I mean, for example, you know, huge corporations, a lot of them will back the Conservative Party because they tend to be a little bit, you know, less tax heavy on corporations than leftist parties are, because leftist parties see them as a huge cash cow, whereas the Conservative Party sees them more as employers and treats them accordingly. That doesn't mean, you know, that I'm in favour of big business. I'm a conservative, small c conservative. I may have mentioned, I'm a restore guy. But yeah, essentially, they they will contribute to the conservative cause, and then the conservatives in turn will hold the doors open for mass immigration to stifle wages. I mean, look at look at Brexit. Brexit, prime example of this. So for many of us, when we voted to leave the European Union, what we wanted was sovereignty over our own borders. Okay, it wasn't the only issue, but immigration was pretty much the definitive issue surrounding Brexit. We wanted control of who came here, we wanted to get the numbers down, people that voted for Brexit, that's what we wanted. So when Boris Johnson implements Brexit, you know, no more EU immigration, or well there there's still some, but you know, no more mass immigration from the EU. Well, the Financial Times, they weren't so happy with that because they were they were essentially pointing out the wage rises and the the increased cost of business by closing the borders. So Boris Johnson, to get back in their good graces, opened the floodgates to the third world instead, which has massively accelerated the decline of the country. You know, a lot of people try once again they try and explain your position to you, they try and put words in your mouth. They assumed, you know, they preached that we were voting to leave the EU because we just hated foreigners. You know, we just haters, can't stand foreign people. Right? And for some that may have been the case, and there were certainly raising tensions with certain European communities because they were here in such huge numbers that they felt it was their country, you know, and they began treating it as such. But I think most people would tell you, European immigration, far superior to third world immigration. I'll also tell you this, we didn't want any of it. Now, going back all the way to pretty much the 1950s, every election cycle, every winning candidate has promised lower immigration. And we were at about 10,000 a year when we started asking, guys, could you slow this down please? And under the so-called conservative government, that number rapidly shot up to around a million. You know, I think from ninety seven onwards under Blair, it was around a quarter of a million, three hundred thousand a year, somewhere in that ballpark. The Tories more than doubled that. Now, good old conservatives that they are. What what exactly were they conserving when they did that? They were condemning is what they were doing. They condemned our country to the kind of problems we're facing now. You know, and it's only going to get worse with Labour's expanded access to the welfare state and the lifting of the two child benefit cap, things are only going to get worse, and drastically so. So the so-called capitalists are engaging in the same behaviour that's pissed us off with the communists. We don't want our country flooded with mass immigration. We don't want people from Lord knows where just turning up on our shores one day and being entitled to the full range of benefits that are only available here, by the way, because of the pragmatic management of the country in decades past. You know, our ancestors, the people that actually built this country, not, you know, the immigration and the diversity that they claim built this country, but our ancestors, the people that fought for these lands and worked their entire lives, you know, work their fingers to the bone to build this country. This is not what they wanted. And when you realise that, you know, more people have come here since Covid than in the thousand years before that, you start to see why, yeah, we we really are spitting in the faces of those that came before us and punching huge holes in the futures of those that come after us. So the moment is now, people, the moment is now to start acting, to start taking actions, making decisions that are gonna benefit us, our children, their children, their children to infinity. Okay, that time is on us now, and we have to wax. And while there may not be much that any one individual can do, we can all play our part, and I think that starts with rejecting the labels placed on us by the left, or rejecting the beliefs that they ascribe to us, okay, and actually establishing our own positions and having the confidence and the knowledge to set those positions out and defend them, and we've got to defend them like hell, because the left they they've perfected their sales pitch. They've got all their answers lined up, right? And we can punch holes straight through them because leftist rhetoric does not hold up. When it runs into reality, it crumbles. Okay, this is why any time communism has been attempted, it has failed. Every single time. And this this is why we've got to be very, very wary of the so-called democratic socialists. Because this is the thing. It's the easy way. It's the slow way, but the easy way for them to take the country away from you because they get you to a position where you vote for the things that they're gonna do. So then that you have no recourse to say, hey, what are you doing? So mate, you voted for this. Yeah. So we we can't let that happen. Can't let that happen. We have to start pushing back against so-called social democracy, yeah, or democratic socialism. There's no such thing. No such thing. You vote your way into socialism, but you can't vote your way out of it. You have to fight your way out of it. Okay, so before we get to the point where we have to fight, because of all the reasons that I laid out earlier, before we get to the fighting position, we've got to do everything we can to kick down their rhetoric, to bolster our own numbers, all right, and get the message out there because there are still a lot of people that are not going to hear this kind of thing. You know, they're not gonna hear the realistic approaches that we can take to. Correct the course that this country is on. That's why it's on us, all of us, to get the message out there. So whether it's my podcast that you share, or whether it's somebody else's, whether it's the some of the big ones, you know, the the lotus eaters, people like that, whether it's smaller ones, you know, Thomas Chester Politics, great kid. Again, I'll employ you, go and check him out. All of us, we've got to do our bit, people, and we can save this country. I I'm thinking the entire time I'm speaking this, I'm thinking about my niece, I'm thinking about my best mate's little lad. Right, because they they're the future. Kids like that, they're the future of this country. And we have to do everything we can now to make sure that the world they grow up in is better than the one we currently have. Yeah, because honestly, if you were to have a newborn kid today, yeah, five years down the line, what you you you feel confident sending them to you know, go and p go and play out? Are they safe? Yeah, are they they're gonna go to school and learn and become productive members of society or are they gonna be hey mate, maybe they've got some kind of personality tick that makes them stand out a little bit and before you know it they're being medicated and you know deadened pharmaceutically. Now maybe that's happening. Yeah, or maybe they're getting picked on because they're the only native kid in their class. You know, mate, maybe they're the only non-Muslim in there, and it's Ramadan, and they're getting shit thrown at them and being called names because they dare to have their lunch at lunchtime. Things like this, they deserve better than that, and it's down to urge to give it to them. So join the fight, people. Keep the faith, stay strong, keep going, until the next one, goodbye.