Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, and welcome to Good Evening Britain, the Force for
Goods weekly show, coming to you live from our studios
here in the heart of the great British city of Glasgow,
with me your host, Alistair mcconachie. We are broadcasting on
all our digital platforms throughout the United Kingdom and across
the world, and we're bringing you quality pro UK comment
(00:23):
and analysis every Wednesday from seven until eight pm on Facebook,
on YouTube, on x and also when I can get
it sorted, we're going to be on TikTok because you
know how it is on these things, you press the
(00:47):
wrong button and it doesn't work anymore. So this is
perfectly live, folks. We're going to try to get back
onto TikTok and if it doesn't work, I'm going to
just have to discard it. But we're going to do
our best. Here we go live, put it back up
and fire it on again, go live, and we're on TikTok.
(01:13):
Sorry about that, folks, No, we're not on TikTok. Do
you know what, We're just going to have to stop
TikTok tonight. What a pity, never mind too much hassle,
So folks, tell us what's on your mind this evening. Okay,
we've been away for a couple of weeks and quite
a bit to speak about as far as that's concerned.
(01:35):
When we say away, what we mean has been away
from broadcasting on Wednesday evenings because we have been getting
our head down and getting on with volume two of
a big book for the Union. And I can't announce
it's official subtitle, which will be Protect our Country Policies
(02:01):
to Stop Mass Immigration. And it's going to be a
cracking book. It's going to be round about the same size,
maybe a little bit bigger than our first one, which
was one big Country. This one's going to be called
Protect our Country, which follows on from having a country
in the first place, and it's going to be addressing
(02:26):
the open border crisis that we are facing. And I'm
glad to say it's going to have a lot of
original thought in it, a lot of original thinking and
a lot of things that will make you go hmm,
that's interesting. Never thought of that before. And it does
represent a kind of accumulation of our thoughts on the matter,
(02:50):
which we've been thinking about since nineteen eighty eight, basically
nineteen eighty eight when this began to form as an
issue in our consciousness when we lived down at the
time in the South of England. I used to live
in Well I went to Reading University for three years
(03:10):
and then I stayed down there for about another three
and a half years or thereabouts before I came back
up to Scotland and lived in Edinburgh until nineteen ninety
nine when I moved to Glasgow. However, back in nineteen
(03:32):
eighty eight, when I lived down in the South of England,
I used to go into London a lot every weekend
almost and between nineteen eighty for and nineteen eighty eight
I saw it very slowly changing, but I mean it
was still overwhelmingly London is from the old picture postcards,
(03:52):
but it was slowly getting busier and it was becoming
definitely more foreign even then, and that was before nineteen
ninety seven, when of course Tony Blayer got in and
he just changed it completely. And then we've been going
on and on as the years have passed, and the
issue has never been getting properly dealt with, and it's
(04:14):
getting what has been getting made much worse by the
people who misgovern us. The absolutely useless British establishment utterly
useless British establishment that misgoverns US and has been doing
so for for a very long time now. Anyway, we're
(04:37):
not going to be touching on that as such in
our book. We're not going to be going about going
on about the problems. We're just going to be giving
you the solutions. So chapter after chapter dealing with legal immigration, asylum,
illegal immigration, and deportation. And these are the four main
sections which we're going to be looking at and proposing policies,
(05:01):
common sense policies, all workable policies. And we did we
did another article which may appear in the book, I
don't know, but we published that, published that yesterday. We'll
talk about that in a moment, But in the meantime, folks,
tell us what's on your mind, anything politically that you
(05:24):
want to be speaking about tonight. Debbie's first in says
good evening everyone, Good evening to you, Debbie. Osannah is
in says hi all, hi to you, Oxanna. Derek says
good to everyone, good to see everyone, Good to see
you back, Alista, but didn't get the usual feed prior
to the start of the show. That was that was
(05:47):
just unfortunate, Derek. But glad that you noticed. Hi to Catherine.
And by the way, Derek, have you noticed I'm wearing
this blue T shirt. Derek knows what that's about. That
was a gift from Derek to the show, which we
must must much appreciate. Dan tags is good evening. Phellow
(06:10):
terms is that are the T bombs ready? And that's
a relation. That's in relation to the Prevent Organization, which
says that people who are concerned about the cultural history
of Britain and the continuation of Britain in a cultural, social,
(06:33):
and historic sense blah blah blah are the big tea words.
And they do that because they have to find people
who are not the usual teas in order to arrest
them so they can say that they're equal opportunity policing.
(06:57):
So they arrest a whole people who are genuine big teas.
I can't say the word on these platforms, and then
they arrest all the little people who just read history
books and they lump them all in and they say, well,
we're equal opportunity policing because look at all the white
(07:18):
people over there that we arrested for cultural teaism. Terrible
terrible stuff, nonsense, really Christophus Lunt says London got more
and more foreign and spoilt in the nineteen eighties, a
total disaster imposed by the useless political classes. Absolutely, Budge says,
(07:40):
politicians are just managers. They rule, control and decide nothing. Well,
that then means who is in charge, Budgy, if not
the politicians. Alan says, good evening everyone, So let me
just briefly talk about why I've got this flag in
(08:01):
the background. This is the the royal standard of the
United Kingdom when used in Scotland. So it is quartered
with two lion rampants, an Irish harp and the English
(08:22):
three lions. Very nice flag. Each Wednesday, I wonder what
kind of flag should have put up today, what happened
in British history that I could maybe allude to as
a consequence. And on this day it's a little bit random,
but on this day the first King of Great Britain
(08:45):
and Ireland passed away. That was George the first. Now
of course that's not correct, Oh yes, it is, it is,
it is, It is correct. It is correct. The first
King of Great Britain and Ireland, not the first King
of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, but
(09:08):
the first King of Great Britain in one way and
Ireland secondly George the First, who passed away in seventeen
twenty seven, and he wasn't meant to be king because
the queen who had died previously was Queen Anne, and
(09:28):
she died without any children and her her relation, Sophia,
was going to become the new queen. But Sophia died
before Queen Anne, and so when Queen Anne died, it
had to pass to Sophia's son, who was George the First,
(09:51):
who was a German, who was a German, and nevertheless
he did quite a bit for Britain and the history
and Lucy Worsley, who does occasional programs, have said that
he's set Britain on the path to becoming truly great.
(10:11):
And so he was a kind of new Broom, as
it were. He was a new king from abroad as well,
but in direct a direct descendant of Queen Anne, in
fact the Great I'm not going to attempt it. I'm
not going to attempt it, but he was directly related
(10:33):
back to James the seventh, and he is remembered in Britain,
especially in the painted Hall in Greenwich, and I just
want to put up a picture here that will go
through the Painted Hall if you haven't been in it,
if you're a British patriot, and if you're down in
(10:54):
London and you want to get away from the madding crowd,
go here now that sits down on the Thames. You
can get a Thames boat, you know, one of these
Thames Thames Runners or whatever they call them. Get jump
on one at Westminster at the Houses of Parliament. It
will take you down to the an official stop which
(11:15):
is here outside what's called the Royal Naval College in Greenwich.
And if you go into the building on the right
hand side there you go up steps and you go
into what's called the Painted Hall. And the Painted Hall
is this tribute to the British Union, tribute to Britain,
(11:38):
tribute to the British monarchy, especially the Hanaverians. It's astonishing
and it's easily easily rivals as Sistine Chapel. I've got
one or two pictures here that will show you now.
So that's that's you standing in the lower Main Hall,
(11:59):
which has got a massive ceiling which will show you
in a minute. But then you can go up those
steps and that big picture at the back there. Let's
move to the next picture. That's that's a close up
of it, and that's George the first sitting there in
(12:19):
the middle of the steps in a kind of blue
tunic with a wee boy beside him, and that's his
extended family around him. And the Latin words up there
at the top, which I'm not going to attempt to pronounce,
but it translates as quote, now a new generation descends
(12:45):
from heaven. And Wikipedia tells us that it's used to
quote represent the arrival of a new divinely ordained era
or the beginning of a new cycle. And so that
must be what was felt by the great and the
(13:06):
good that this coming of George, the first Hanaverian king,
was a new beginning for Britain, a new cycle beginning,
and in many ways it certainly was that, for better
or for worse. Let's look at the next picture. That's
like just taking a step back. So that's called the
upper Main Hall. Now that's the ceiling, a sideway shot
(13:30):
of the ceiling of the lower Main Hall, and an
awful lot going on there, and you'd need to be
looking at it for ages. But bang, slap in the
middle is William and Mary, the famous King and Queen
of the Glorious Revolution. And on both sides there are
(13:52):
two big battleships, which we can imagine one of them
perhaps well, just two big battleships in a way to
represent Britain's command of the seas, which was beginning at
that time. And this was painted, I should say, between them.
I was finished in seventeen twenty seven. I'm going to say,
(14:14):
let me just check. Yeah, the whole thing was painted
between seventeen oh eight and seventeen twenty seven by Sir
James Thornhill, who made some job of it. I have
to say, now just take the pictures off for the moment.
And I was there. I think it was maybe twenty eighteen.
(14:36):
Between twenty sixteen and twenty nineteen, the whole thing has
been renovated and they were renovating the ceiling, and so
they're scaffolding up and because they were like cleaning all
the paint work and so on, and so you could
go up the scaffolding and you can actually stand and
you could literally touch the ceiling, which you weren't meant
(14:56):
to do. But I did touch. I did touch William
and Mary just for old times sake, and so I
can say that I've actually touched that ceiling, which is something.
And next photograph, yeah, that's taken at the time of
the renovation, so you could get up there and walk
(15:17):
about as you can see there on the right, right
in the center of what's going on there. And it
apparently it was painted that way. It was painted by
putting up a scaffolding platform, no doubt, not as safe
as that one was, and took a good twenty years
(15:38):
to do the whole thing, so a labor of love
that was. Okay, that's just a little bit of British
history for you. But if you are looking for something
to do in London, I definitely do recommend checking out
the Painted Hall, especially if you're into that kind of stuff,
if you're into history, if you're into British culture, and
it's one of these things it's like so much to
(16:01):
look at. It's like, this is incredible. You could just
They do have sofas as it were kind of padded
padded seats that you can lie back on. They encourage
you to just like lie back on it so you
can look up at the roof and and take photographs
of the roof the Great a greater, a great thing
that not many people know about. They don't know that
(16:22):
that's that, that's there. So I always like to to
just to mention that. So that's that's today, that's this
is the day when George the First died in seventeen
twenty seven, and when George the Second was proclaimed king.
(16:43):
And you often find as wealth with some historians today.
They don't like those kings three Georgi's, and they're always
trying to do them down or portray them as deficient
in some way and playing up the personal foibos and
their personal problems and so on to an unfair extent,
(17:05):
because there is a political opposition to those three guys
still today in the country and especially among some of
the so called great and the good. So that leads
me on as opposed to talking about Prince King Charles
knighting Sadik Khan, what do we think of that? Right?
(17:28):
I would say that you just have to kind of
grin and bear it, because that wasn't Prince Charles's idea. Okay,
Prince Charles doesn't get to decide who gets all these
mbes and OBEs and CBEs and surs and dame hoods
and all that kind of stuff. It's not up to him.
(17:50):
He just gets presented with a list by the ruling
political elite of the day, and I don't know if
he has the opportunity to see, no way, I'm not
doing that. I'm not giving him a knighthood. I would
very much doubt it. I would very much doubt it.
And also Charles himself has got to be careful to
(18:13):
do something like that, because you know, he's subject to
the political power of the day as well. And so
if his ministers come to him and say, you've got
to give Sadik Khan a knighthood, no doubt maybe he
wanted to. But even if he didn't want to, how
(18:34):
much opposition could he really make? How much of a
fuss could he really kick up? I'm not sure he
could do very much really without upsetting a lot of
people who might not forgive him. So he's got an
awkward line to tread at all times. So people who say,
(18:54):
and I see it on Twitter today, oh, we can't
have a monarchy anymore because they knighted Sadik Khan. Now
that's that's short termism. You've got to see the long
term and everything, See the long term and everything, and
realize that, okay, so united Sidik can today Tomorrow he'll
knight somebody that you like, or he'll knite somebody a
(19:16):
lot better, or he'll knite somebody that all the people
who dislike Sadik can like and support. So to try
to just bring down or say I've had enough of
this British institution because it's done something that I don't
(19:39):
like it. There's no consistency there, and you've got to
be consistent and try as much as you can to
be to have to hold on to a particular thing
rather than just like throwing the baby out with the
bath water every time you get annoyed, because believe me,
you could get annoyed every single day. So it's all
(20:01):
about it's all about trying to keep these traditions and
institutions alive and vibrant as much as possible, because what
at the end of the day is going to replace them.
You can get rid of it and there'll be nothing
there and you'd have to like take down the painted
hall in Greenwich. You'd need to level all the history,
(20:23):
and no doubt some people want to do that, but
once you start like saying I've had enough of an institution,
then where's the end of that? Where does that end?
So I don't like the fact that he knighted Sadik Cahan.
I find that absurd, totally absurd. But I'm not going
(20:46):
to say, oh, we have to destroy the precious British tradition,
which is the monarchy as a consequence of Sadiq Cahan
being knighted. Should Sadiq Cahn being knighted be the person
that brings down the British monarchy? Should Sadik can bring
down the British monarchy because he got united because he
got knighted. You know that's you could look at it
(21:09):
that way as well. So, of course not. I'm afraid
you are just going to have to go in and
bear it a lot of the times, as far as
some of the things that we might see are concerned,
because we just got to keep an eye on on
the value of the overall institution and realize that nothing's perfect.
(21:30):
Nothing's perfect, Not even a president or somebody else will
ever be perfect either. There's always going to be huge
numbers of people who like them and huge numbers of
people who dislike them. Whether you've got a king, a queen,
a president, a prime minister or whatever. So Derek says,
looks amazing the painted Hall. Need to go there, as
(21:52):
have been so many times in London, so something extra
new place to go. Well, you really enjoy it, and
especially if you get a Thames Clipper, that's what they're called.
Get a Thames Clipper up from from wherever it stops
at lots of different points and get off at Greenwich
and beautiful, A beautiful day out, A beautiful day out.
(22:15):
And Axana is correct. I mean Nikan has ruined London,
there's no question about it. Crime has just exploded under
his premiership. It's terrible. I mean it's terrible. He certainly
shouldn't have been knighted. But I'm not going to bring
down the British monarchy as a consequence. As I say, well, yeah,
(22:36):
Dan Tegsa's Knights of Old makes them look overworked and underpaid.
If you get a knighthood these days, you get it
by failing on every level. So it seems people fail upwards. Yes,
the idea, as Christopher says, is the king is above
all these political considerations. That is at the heart of
(22:58):
monarchy and that's what we should be abolishing the mayoral tea.
I'm up for that. I mean, that's not an institution
of any great length of time, is it. I mean
when did that begin? That would be under Tony Blair.
I think he devolved London, Wales, Scotland and possibly Northern Ireland. No, no,
(23:20):
Northern Ireland had been kind of semi devolved before then,
but he certainly devolved London around about the same time
as he devolved Scotland and Wales. Hey, that can't hope
you will. So let's talk about some of the material
that we've been writing for our book. Yesterday yesterday we
(23:47):
put together another new article which is on the website.
It's called Homeless Refugees in Glasgow. And we've been told
heavily that there's a lot of refugees in Glasgow and
there's a lot of homeless people in Glasgow. But what
(24:08):
they never like to do is to marry up the
two figures and say, well, which of these how many
homeless people are refugees? And actually we discovered yesterday it's
seventy two percent of the so called homeless in Glasgow
are actually refugees. Now, let me just very briefly explain
(24:32):
how this works, and there's the article. Just go to
a Force for Good dot UK, go to the blog
and it's the first it's the first article up there. Now,
if you come across on the boat to Dover you
are an asylum seeker. You get put into a hotel,
and that hotel is paid for by the Home Office,
(24:55):
which is to say, it's paid for by the wider
British taxpayer. And your case will go through the system
and it might take months, might take years. But if
you get given if your claim is accepted, you get
given refugee status. So there is a difference between an
asylum seeker, and there's a and a refugee. A refugee
(25:19):
is somebody who has been given asylum status, given refugee status,
given leave to remain. So what happens then if you're
in your hotel, Well, the government says you've got eight
weeks to find accommodation in society. Well, if you're a
(25:43):
man who's come across on the boat, you barely speak English,
you're culturally incompatible and you've got no skills, I should
imagine it's kind of difficult actually finding accommodation. I mean
it's pretty difficult finding accommodation if you're an English speaking
naturalized British citizen, you know, it's very difficult with the
(26:08):
price of with the price of rent these days. So
these unemployable, largely asylum refugees now they go into a
big city and they've got to find something to stay
and it's it's it's absurd to put them in that
situation really when you think about it. However, don't feel
(26:29):
too sorry for them. They do have a massive number
of NGOs and charities who are all watching their case
and trying to get them social housing, with various councils
throughout the country. So if you rock up in Glasgow,
for example, you'll be able to speak to the Refugee Council,
(26:52):
You'll be able to get you you'll be automatically funneled
into all of these charities and NGOs that will be
that will be fighting for your case to get you accommodation.
And in that effort you are competing with the natural
born indigenous British people for accommodation, which is you know,
(27:13):
which is not, which is finite. There's only so many
flats and houses to go around, and now bear in
mind that these refugees are not going to be finding
accommodation in the private sector. I mean they're unemployed. Many
of them are unemployable, and they don't have jobs, and
they probably don't have a bank account and so on
(27:34):
and so forth. So they're not going to get into
the private sector, are they. So they have to be
getting something in this social housing public sector now if
they turn up at Glasgow City count So Glasgow City
Council has an obligation, a legal obligation to house people
who are officially homeless. Before they house you who may
(28:00):
be living with your parents, or before the house girl
let's get several children and she's living in overcrowded accommodation,
they have an obligation to give any available accommodation to
the person who literally does not have a roof over
their head. So what we're finding now is with these
(28:23):
hundreds and hundreds and thousands and thousands of refugees needing accommodation,
they are naturally going to be put first because otherwise
they would be homeless. And so if there's any flats going,
if there are any kind of bigger housing that a
(28:51):
refugee family needs, if they've got lots of children, they'll
get that accommodation before everybody else because they would be
homeless otherwise. That's how the council would see it. And
so what's that saying is as long as we continue
to have this ridiculous asylum system that's churning out endless
(29:12):
numbers of refugees, then the indigenous population is never going
to be getting housing. The Indigenous population is always going
to be falling further and further and further down the
housing list. It's completely unfair. Now, if you speak to
the politically correct people at Glasgow City Council, they'll say,
(29:33):
we're not prioritizing the refugees, we're prioritizing the homeless. Okay.
That's a clever way of putting it, because in effect
the refugees are homeless. Okay. So they don't look at
it from the kind of nationalistic point of view, or
(29:55):
they don't look on it as like the refugees and
the indigenous population in their politically correct world. They're only
looking at it as who are the homeless people. Oh,
there's another two hundred homeless people have just rocked up today.
We have to find accommodation for them. And so what
it also means, of course, is that there's not accommodation
(30:18):
for them. There's certainly not the flats being built to
accommodate them, because you cannot build flats, even small flats,
at the rate at which these people are coming in
hundreds a day. So what the council has to do
is find hotel or b and be accommodation for them
(30:40):
if there are any who they can't find flats for.
And that's that's a lot of people. And that's seventy
two percent of the people identifying or presenting as homeless,
seventy two percent of them in Glasgow at the last
count this last month. Seventy two percent of them are
(31:02):
official refugees, people who have been given refugee status. Now
that's absolutely that's absolutely crazy when you think about it,
and it shouldn't be. It shouldn't be, it shouldn't be allowed.
Now we've written this article, as I say, homeless refugees
(31:25):
in Glasgow and I'll just see if I can bring
it up here. So yeah, here it is homeless refugees
are creating an utterly untenable situation for Glasgow City Council.
We look at why this is and how the outdated
refugee system is working against the best interests of the
(31:45):
native population. The refugees are always destined to be top
of the housing list, and we propose the obvious solutions
and we take it. We take it from the top.
Because there's so many people confuse the terms, and one
(32:08):
of the confusing terms is illegal immigrants. We tend to
look on everybody who crosses the channel as illegal, but
that's a confusion of terms because they are actually legal.
They are exercising their legal rights under Britain's membership of
the UN Refugee Convention. That's why we need to leave
(32:30):
the UN Refugee Convention so that we can make them
genuinely illegal. But so long as we remain part of
the UN Refugee Convention, then these immigrants are to be considered,
to all intents and purposes, by every single lawyer and
court and politician in Britain. They have to be considered
(32:50):
legal asylum seekers. They then go to the hotels, as
I say, if their claim is granted, they then become
an official refuge which again is another legal status. And
we would argue that there should be very very very
very very few people ever getting to the refugee status,
(33:14):
because most of them should be turned away, but we
don't turn them away because it's extremely difficult to turn
them away so long as we are members of the
UN refuge Convention. But if we come out of the
UN Refugee Convention, then we will be free to criminalize
(33:34):
the Channel traffic. We will be free to criminalize that
and say, if you cross on a little dinghy, you're
getting picked up and you're getting taken to a detention
camp where you will stay until you self deport or
until you agree to be officially deported. And that's the
(33:56):
only way that we're going to stop the channel traffic,
and was known by us since twenty eighteen, but it's
time now to make that better known. And we explain
here how a refugee must find their own accommodation and
how that is of course very very difficult for somebody
that speaks no English and doesn't have a job or
a bank account. In fact, it's an absurd thing to
(34:17):
ask somebody to do. So they end up living at
our expense in social housing, destined probably forever to remain
there at our expense. We explain how councils will prioritize
the homeless over those on the housing list, and then
(34:38):
we explain where the figures, where we got the figures
that refugees are over seventy percent of the homeless in Glasgow,
and how we've discovered that they're getting half the new
social housing flats in Glasgow as well, and we give
chapter in verse here where it's all been ed and
(35:02):
we point out that, for example, Glasgow City Council won't
address the source of the problem, the never ending supply
of asylum seekers into the UK, who, if their claims
are accepted, then turn up in Glasgow as official refugees,
and we point out the solution. A. Firstly, we need
to leave the UN Refugee Convention, which requires us to
give refugees access to the benefits system on the same
(35:26):
terms as British citizens. Once we leave the UN Refugee Convention,
we will be free to ensure that refugees are not
able to access benefits and social housing, at least not
on the same terms as the indigenous British, and that
they will be required to pay their own way, and
(35:48):
if they cannot, which most of them will not be
able to do, then they must go somewhere else which
will accommodate them. But what we'll find also when we
remove access to benefits social housing is that many of
them will no longer want to climb asylum after all.
That in itself will disincentivize a lot of people from
(36:10):
coming here. And thirdly, refugee status should never be a
pathway to indefinite leave to remain. It should never be
a pathway to citizenship, never be a pathway to any
kind of permanent settlement, and removing the asylum refuge pathway
(36:32):
to permanent settlement will also disincentivize many from climbing asylum
in the first place. Far far fewer people will want
to come over if we do that. So it's all there,
it's all very good. We might include this as a
chapter in the new book, but it's there for anybody
(36:55):
with the desire to find out what is is actually
going on. But it is. It is an absurd It
is an absurd situation because so long as we're tied
up into the system, so long as we're literally churning
out official legal refugees into society every single day, then
(37:18):
we are ensuring that the British people on the housing
list will have to be put second, third, fourth, fifth,
and ultimately one millionth last, because the councils will prioritize
those people who are presenting as homeless and largely helpless
(37:40):
as well due to the fact that they can't speak
the language, they have no skills, and they're got very
little really to to very little in the way of
being able to remedy those things. Well we go, there,
(38:00):
we go, Oxana says, loads of them in private housing
in England. Well, yes, that must be paid for though
by by the state. That can't be them paying the
going rate for a private rent out their own pocket though, candidates,
(38:23):
I mean, what's your thoughts on that, Oxanna. Just because
they're in private housing that, yeah, that's it isn't It's
the state is just paying the private landlords. And yeah,
the private landlords are raking it in, raking it in,
and the hotels are raking it in as well. In
that article which I just alluded to there, which I
(38:45):
just was reading out, Glasgow hotels are bringing in forty
five million pounds from the council to put up these
these refugees. The fugees forty five million in twelve month
period they got from US gubbins the council taxpayers loads
(39:09):
working in the car washes. Well it's true, isn't it,
Christopher says, quite rightly, they should all be in camps
and underguard. In fact, they should have been turned back
at the border in the first place. Well, that's the
problem with our border because our border is a CEA border,
So it's a lot easier to turn them back in
(39:30):
Poland or Hungary when it's a land border and they
just have to turn around and walk in the opposite direction,
whereas our border, you'd think it would be harder, but
it makes it Actually, you'd think it would be easier
for us to defend it, but in the modern world,
it actually makes it harder for us to defend it
because we literally can't reasonably, legally speaking, push them back
(39:52):
out to sea again, whereas we could turn them away
at the border. For example, there are a lot of
asylums seekers coming up cross from the Republic of Ireland
ireland land border across to Northern Ireland and claiming asylum
in Northern Ireland. But that's the where we know all
about that land border. That's that's also a virtually open one. Well,
(40:15):
see this is where Edwin, I am totally with you.
You can call them criminal illegal immigrants, but the law
that we are trying to change does not see them
like that. The law sees them as which they are,
legally speaking, legal refugees. Now criminal illegal immigrants. We could
(40:36):
we could make the people who cross the channel criminal illegals,
but we're going to need to leave the UN Refugee
Convention to do that. Right now they're crossing the channel.
They are legal. That's the problem. That's the problem. The
UN Convention requires us to see them as legal, and
that's why we can't deport them, because they're literally legal.
(41:00):
Requires us to have to go through their case one
by one, follow all the paperwork, do all that carry on,
decide whether or not they are genuine refugees, et cetera,
et cetera. Whereas what we need to do is we
need to make them illegal. But right now they are legal.
That's the problem. So it is important to get those
(41:21):
terms or not these terms correct, Otherwise you won't solve
the problem if you think they are if you think
the law looks on them as illegals right now, you're wrong.
The law looks on them as illegal, and that's the problem,
So we have to work from where the law is
to find out the root of the problem. It's basically illegal.
(41:45):
People have been given legality by the system. Now we
do have some news which I'll just get to in
a moment, looking at any other common and say that
I want to read out before I get on to
announcing that we are beginning our British summertime crowdfunder tonight.
(42:10):
Now the link is up and I'm going to just
bring the link up here. Let me just write it up.
It's just launched. I noticed it launched fifteen minutes ago.
It's at crowdfunder dot co dot uk. Here we go
(42:32):
crowdfunder dot co dot uk forwards Lash Summer twenty twenty five.
Now we find that we have to do a British
summertime crowdfund. If we don't make enough during our YO
Britannia crowdfunder, then we have to do a summertime crowdfunder
to get us through the next six months. So we're
(42:53):
calling this one protect our country, stop mass immigration, and
we need to raise two four hundred pounds and we
need to raise it for four main things. The main
thing that we need to raise it for is just
to continue being able to operate until the next crowdfunder,
(43:14):
because every day we have expenses. That's the main expense.
The second main expense is to get our book published.
We do have to hire a very good graphic designer
who do another tremendous job. I'm absolutely sure of it.
We also need money for a big event which is
coming up in July. We're going to launch the book
(43:37):
Wait for This on Dover Beach. We're going to launch
the book on Dover Beach or perhaps if they won't
let us onto the beach outside Dover Castle or wherever,
but we're going to launch it down in Dover and
we're also going to have a very big banner that
says Asylum Frauds Out. And so that's going to be
(44:00):
a really good piece of activism which we're going to
be doing during this summer, so please check it out now.
If you notice above me there there is a QR code.
Let's flash the QR code up and I think if
(44:21):
you if you hold your phone up to that, it
should take you to the crowd funder. If anybody wants
to try that and tell us if it works, that
would be that would be great. If it doesn't work,
tell us it doesn't work as well. But that should
(44:44):
take you to crowdfunder dot co dot uk forward slash
Summer twenty twenty five, which is a British summertime crowdfunder,
and we'll see how much how much we can raise. Okay,
let's uh, let's have that banner. Actually, let's circulate that
(45:05):
banner along the bottom. Let's turn it into our turn
it into a ticker. There we go, good, good, and
as usual, feel free to give us a fiver and
give us a tenor We do have rewards, quite a
(45:25):
few rewards up there, one or two new rewards. But
the main reward that we're hoping people will just lap
up is the badge. It's normally it's normally six pounds
cost us about a pound fifty to send, but for
a straight I think it's twenty five pounds, we'll pop
(45:48):
in a free badge for you. You don't need to
claim any rewards, of course, you can just make a
donation of your choice. But if you'd like to, say,
make a donation of twenty five quid and you'd also
like a we reward, then you can get the badge.
You can get a wee book. One of the rewards
(46:12):
also is both of these as a combination. You can
climb a pack of Ease as a reward if you want,
or a pack of Ease or also these as a combo.
(46:33):
We've also got one or two T shirts up there.
We're going to put more T shirts up there, but
for now you can get the T shirts either in
the shop or you can get this one. Let's get
rid of that shop hyphen. You can get this one
British and Proud as a reward on at the crowdfunder.
(46:58):
And we've only got one of these, so when this
one's gone, it's gone. This is a small it's a
small one and it's seventeen inches from underarm to under
arm if that helps your measurements at all. Also got
one or two other old favorites up there as well.
(47:20):
Please do check it out. It's going to run until
the ninth of July. If we do raise the sufficient funds,
then we'll take a team of probably four of us
down to Dover for a day to launch the book,
and that'll be some time around the middle of July.
(47:43):
Dan Tag says, don't you think it's crazy. You have
to do crowdfunders to survive as an advocate for the UK,
you think tanks that sit and sup tea while discussing
the breakup of the UK get government funding. Absolutely. Let
me tell you if you there is no money in
trying to save the country, other than, of course the
money that our wonderful supporters do do contribute. But as
(48:06):
far as big money is concerned, the big money that
the NGOs and the charities run on, there's not a
single there's not a single organization in Britain that was
that would get money for that, for for for saving
the country. And it is it's appalling, and it's it's
(48:29):
it's it's it's why that side wins. They We've gone
into this before, but they have since post war. They've
created a system in Britain where the tax payers pay
millions and millions of pounds to NGOs and charities whose
(48:49):
sole purpose is to destroy the country. We pay million
billions to lawyers for legal aid who represent and never
do wells and people who shouldn't be in the country.
If you want to have a career in messing up Britain,
(49:10):
you'll have a very easy career, a very easy career
and there'll be no shortage of people giving you millions
of pounds. But if you want to, if you want
to save the country, then I'm afraid you do need
to make other sacrifices because you simply won't get any
(49:32):
of the taxpayer's money that the others get. But a
very good point. Sometimes I've wondered that, and I've thought
it was pretty crazy because the amount of money that
we tried to raise as well, it's a lot, of
course to our supporters, and we do very much value that,
but I mean, we don't ask for very much really
in the grand scheme of things, and it's certainly not
(49:54):
enough to pay anybody a living wage naturally. But I
raise twenty four hundred that should get us through to December.
It should cover all the fixed costs and the running
costs and the occasional payments that we have to make
to various helpers. It should cost, it should cover it,
(50:16):
I calculate anyway, because we've also got a small scheme
which is our union supporters, which is our monthly donors,
and they're the other they're the other main funding stream
that we rely upon. And people who give up to
maybe three pounds five pounds ten pounds a month. Some
people are very generous, they give a little bit more
(50:38):
than that as well, and that really does keep us
going and we're very very grateful to them as well.
That's our Union supporters link which we'll just just put
up as well for you at the top here Union
Supporters a Force for Good dot UK foward slash Union
hyphen supporters. That's the monthly donors upon whom we upon
(51:01):
whom we do rely and very much appreciate as well.
And sometimes what we find is that the union supporters
are the same people who donate to the crowdfunder. So
these are the really committed people and we do thank you,
We do thank you so much for everything that you
do in that regard. Derek says, the links working, well,
(51:23):
that's that's that's good, that's good. Yep. Christopher says, we
fund those who destabilize our country and culture, people who
are destabilizing it. Absolutely, we do fund it. And one
of the chapters in our new book is going to
be about defunding, defunding the what we call the immigration
(51:48):
invasion sector. The immigration invasion sector, we've got to defund
them because so long as they're getting millions and millions
of our money, and we can't beat them. We cannot
beat them. That's the fact. We cannot beat them. If
we're paying them to oppose us, then we cannot beat them.
(52:09):
If so fact, so we cannot beat them. So we
have to defund them. And that's going to cause eruption.
And so you're going to need men and women in
power who are not going to be intimidated. And that's
when it gets difficult because a lot of politicians will
just choose the easy path. But if you're going to
(52:29):
turn around to the legal industry and say we're taking
your legal aid off you, you cannot anymore get legal
aid to represent asylums because they will scream. Oh they
will scream. They'll write storylines into EastEnders about a lawyer
who's now struggling because he can't pay his rent because
(52:50):
the government has defunded his asylum seeking legal aid money.
You know, they'll do everything they can. The system will
come out full guns blazing. They'll be putting up signs
on buses. You'll be standing at seven o'clock in the
morning waiting for your bus seeing a digital sign right
next to you about how you've got to like refund
the lawyers because the poor lawyers are losing millions. You know,
(53:12):
you'll see it will just be you'll be you'll be
just battered by by messaging, anti British messaging. But you've
got we're going to have to just like push through it,
push through it and just defund the lawyers, defund that
legal system, defund the engineers, defund the charities. And if
(53:32):
they don't like it, too bad, they're going to have
to get a proper job. That's coming. It's not coming tomorrow,
it's probably not going to be coming during the Kure
Starmer government. But our job right now is to move
the conversation in that way. Our job is to create
the new narrative, to move the conversation to the position
(53:55):
where people will accept defunding lawyers, where they will accept
funding the NGOs, where they will accept defunding the charities
that attack our country, that push the mass immigration into
the country. We've got to get that conversation going. It's
going to annoy a lot of people, but it's got
to be done and we're going to win it because
(54:17):
we have to because our country depends upon it. Dan
Teg says that he feels for a lot of those
who are union supporters, union members rather whether money is
being misused, the union members whose money is being you've
misused to fund wokeery rather than protect them when necessary. Well, absolutely,
(54:39):
absolutely good. Okay, folks, it's the top of the hour.
Let's just remind you of the crowdfunder address. It is
crowdfunder dot co dot UK. The banner is right at
the bottom. That's the QR code. Absolutely, that's the QR code.
(55:04):
And we'll get the let's see if there's been any
any fund's gone in. We're still at zero. Well we've
only been going for fifteen minutes, but I'm sure we've
got twenty eight days left and I'm sure we'll get
something go in there. Let me write the thing. It's
crowdfund up code dot UK board slash Summer twenty twenty five.
(55:33):
There we go. Okay, folks, we'll be back next week,
hopefully with more news for you, and it just remains
for me to say until then, thank you very much
for watching. Please do share, please do repost, please do
give us a thumbs up and a like. You know,
the score really helps. And until next week, God bless
(55:58):
the United Kingdom and God Save the King. See you
next time.