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August 21, 2025 56 mins
Alistair McConnachie of pro-UK unionist campaign group and think tank, A Force For Good (AFFG), guest Missus Kent, and viewers discuss:
- Welcome
- Falkirk Rally on 16th August.
- Our Street Stall on 16th August.
- Our upcoming "Enough is Enough" rally outside Holyrood, Sat 6th Sept 2025, 12 for 12.30pm.
- Why are refugees "homeless" in Glasgow?
- Some politicians only want to mop the floor, not turn off the tap!
- Missus Kent - introduction.
- GUEST: Missus Kent: Topics include: Dover performance; "eyes opened" in 2020; musical past; Sat 23 Aug "Missus Kent's Patriotic Picnic", Mote Park, Maidstone, at noon: celebrating who we are; convincing the opposition; next day, Sun 24 Aug "United We Stand" outside Downing Street, at noon; the govt has put us in danger; technology takes the message to many more; flags are essential for identity; Britain's excessive "tolerance"; take heart because the true British patriots are still here; follow Missus Kent on her Socials, links below.
- Please support us by purchasing a copy of our new book, link below.

"Protect our Country: Policies to Stop Mass Immigration" can be purchased at
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0FJ2GWMD4

LINKS FOR GUEST
https://www.tiktok.com/@missuskent 
https://www.instagram.com/missuskent
https://www.facebook.com/missuskent
https://www.x.com/missuskent
https://www.youtube.com/@UCWIbv9HuxIEmk1pdk3TmDSA 

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This is the 150th episode of "Good Evening Britain" broadcast on Wednesday 20th August 2025.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
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

(00:50):
the world. We're bringing you quality pro UK comment and
analysis every Wednesday from seven untill eight. And folks, what
a fantastic show we've got lined up for you tonight. Firstly,
this is our one hundred and fiftieth weekly Good Evening

(01:15):
Britain and as we always say, that's got to be
worth something, right, one hundred and fifty one hour episodes
of this cracking show. Thank you so much to you
the viewers who have stick stuck with us all these
years and no doubt will continue to support us. And

(01:36):
thanks of course to the team behind this, without whom
none of this happens. One hundred and fifty. Here's to
the second, the second hundred, the two hundredth anniversary as well.
But we'll certainly be here and we're going to keep
doing it because this is such an important program to

(01:59):
get out there and one of the reasons why it's
important is we interview people who don't always get heard
on the other channels and we help to raise their
profile as well. And tonight we have a fantastic guest
in the shape of a lady who goes by the
stage name Missus Kent. And those of you who follow

(02:23):
our Facebook and our TikTok will remember that this was
the artist who performed on Dover Beach, gave several songs
when we were down there launching our book on Saturday,
the nineteenth of July, and the video that we took
of her song entitled No War has had as a consequence.

Speaker 2 (02:50):
Of our.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Video has had over a million views, just that we
know about as a consequence of our plant forms. Okay,
a million views, over a million views. Incredible stuff. So
Missus Kent will be coming on at seven point thirty
and if you can't recall exactly who it was, we've

(03:15):
got a video, a one minute song that just lined
up for you now. So let's just play that.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Sitting and we.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Gonna about down to no, and we.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Gonna about down to no.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
No this way on the line, because it's been too long,
so many it's saying, so I wrote this song We've
got all come together. It sounds a five ye now
never number number, so pick on that flag and made

(04:07):
them remembers England.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
A gonna about down to know.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Fantastic. This is England is the name of that song.
And goodness me that's relevant this week because those of
us who are on social media will be aware that
there is a campaign in some parts of England at
the moment which seems to be quite successful called Raise
the Colors, which is about putting up English and British

(04:51):
I Saint George and Union Jack flags on largely lampposts
in various streets and areas of England really just to
annoy the council that doesn't approve of that. So we
totally like that idea. And so this is a perfect
evening to have on a great British patriot in missus Kent.

(05:13):
So she'll be coming on at seven point thirty talking
to us about her musical career so far good stuff.
In addition to that, let's just what's been happening. Actually,
where do I begin. Let's begin with the Falkirk rally

(05:35):
which was last Saturday the sixteenth. Now nothing to do
with the Force for good. We weren't involved or organizing
it at all. It was simply a local group that
had taken it upon themselves to campaign regarding the asylum

(05:56):
hotel in that area, and my goodness made they did
get a big crowd to come out and oppose to
oppose it. As you see there, that's a very good picture.
That was last Saturday, as I say, the sixteenth of

(06:16):
August in Falkirk. Maybe some of you watching were there.
If you were there, tell us tell us how big
you think the crowd was. I've seen some very big
estimate's going up into like fifteen hundred people, but certainly
it certainly it seems to have been between at least
a thousand anyway, with some people saying it definitely fell

(06:38):
between the thousand and fifteen hundred marks. So please tell
us if you were at that and what you thought
of it. Now, while that was happening, a Force for
Good actually had another street stall here in the heart
of the great British city of Glasgow, and oh my,
it was a successful stall. We had six of the team,

(07:01):
including myself as a photograph of the table team looking
very colorful as well, and as you can see, busy
stall busy stall. Goodness me. We needed the people behind
the table. We needed several people behind the table to

(07:22):
deal with everybody who was signing our petition and speaking
to us and as usual telling us to keep up
the good work. So that was a very good day, Okay,
And there you go. That's a shockingly colorful pick of
our affg emblazoned caps and T shirts. Brilliant stuff. Good good,

(07:56):
good good. So that that was Saturday, actually in fall Kirk,
local action, that is. And as far as we're concerned,
we had our table outside in the center of Glasgow.
Now some of you will also know that we are

(08:19):
having a rally. More about that in a minute, but
let's just say hello to people who have come in.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
Good.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
Well, let's talk about the event now. We after the
fall Kirk effort, we realized that we needed to keep
the momentum going. And as far as a Force for
Good is concerned, we leave the local hotel campaigning to

(08:50):
the local groups. We're more as an organization. We're more
about the big, the big events, big staged events in
George Square or elsewhere. And last year, on the seventh
of September, we had our first enough is Enough rally

(09:14):
and it was in George Square on the seventh of
September and we had five hundred people at it, and
on the other side of the square was the same
amount of the opposing side shall we call them, who
were just standing shouting at us. Anyway, we had a
great event and it really upset the people who ought

(09:36):
to be upset about it. And this year we're thinking, well,
we would like to do another one, but we can't
do it in George Square because they've shut down George
Square and they're renovating it and it's not going to
be reopened until autumn next year. So it occurred to us,
because there is a Scottish election next May, why don't

(10:03):
we hold it in Edinburgh? Why don't we hold it
outside the Scottish Parliament one year on on the sixth
of September this year. Now it just so happens that
that's also the day that they all under one banner.
People are having their yearly wander down the Royal Mile

(10:30):
and they're going to end up outside Hollywood as well.
So as they say, the more the merrier, I think
that's a good idea that we can be there. Also,
we can have two rallies. They can hold their rally
and we can hold our rally, and we can invite
them to consider our sensible points of view on how

(10:54):
best to control mass immigration, an issue which they either
don't touch or when they touch it they really muck
it up and make it worse. So that's what we're
going to do. And we're calling it again. We're calling
it enough is enough, and we have a great graphic there.

(11:18):
Let's remove the line. Enough is enough. Rally outside Hollyrood Saturday,
sixth September twenty twenty five, twelve for a twelve thirty
start protect our country, protect our kids, burnesson housing homes
for Scott's, stop the boat's asylum frauds, out raise the colors,

(11:45):
British aisles flags only. Speakers to be announced, Okay, and
that's important. I'll get to the house in a minute
because that's a big crisis which is being exacerbated by

(12:05):
mass immigration. But I just want to clarify the bottom line.
The British iOS flags only, which is to say flags
of the British isoles only. We do not want to
see any foreign flags. Okay, leave the foreign flags to
the other side. Don't be bringing any flags of any
opposing foreign countries. If you do, you will be asked

(12:27):
to remove those flags. This is Britain, it's not the
Middle East. Do not be bringing your Middle Eastern conflicts
into our rallies. Okay, that's very clear about this. We
have nothing to do with this. We don't want to
see any Israel flags, we don't want to see any
Ukrainian flags, we don't want to see any Iranian monarchy flags.

(12:52):
Believe it or not, you see some of those at
rallies in England. So we're going to enforce that and
it's going to be is going to be a great day,
as we say, and we're doing it in association with
our good friend Nick Mitchell from the We Say It podcast,
and Nick says people better be ready for this one. Absolutely,

(13:18):
Derek watching from Armadale, We're going to be superb, says Anthony. Absolutely,
we're going to be superb and it's going to be
a fantastic event, and we're going to have speakers, lots
of speakers, and it's going to upset all the right people.

(13:42):
All my is going to upset all the right people.
And we are going to be normalizing the immigration restriction
conversation because we have to do that going into the
May election at Hollywood. We have to normalize this and
we have to make sure that the politicians have a

(14:02):
position on it. And if the politicians want more, that's
up to them, but they have to be clear that
they want more of it so that we know we
must not vote for them. So we're polarizing the debate
as it were. It's like what side are the politicians on?
Are you on control or are you for open borders?

(14:24):
And we're going to review the people who are for
the open borders so that people will not vote for them.
And that's going to be most of the SNP, it's
going to be, it's going to be all the Greens,
it's going to be many of the it's going to
be many of the labor people as well. Unfortunately. Good

(14:53):
Now we've got Missus Kent coming up at the bottom
of the hour, before we talk about before we introduced
Missus Kent, though, let's talk about an issue the front
page of the Herald yesterday soaring demand for refugee homes

(15:13):
could cost the city sixty six pounds. Now, what's that about.
This is saying that there's a large number of quote
unquote homeless people in Glasgow who are refugees and it's
costing the city. Now, the leader of the council, Susan Aitkin,

(15:35):
gave her explanation here as well. This is yesterday's Herald.
Now let me just explain how this comes about and
why Susan Aitkin is complete is talking complete mints. Now,
what happens is if you are an asylum seeker, you
come in, you're fresh off the boat. You get put
into a hotel and you stay there usually for as

(15:57):
long as it takes for your blame to be processed.
Now that's likely to be months. Now. If you get
found that, if you get accepted, if your claim gets accepted,
then you become what's called an official refugee. You're no
longer just an asylum seeker. You are now granted asylum.

(16:18):
You're now called a refuge And here's the crazy thing.
The government will then say to you you have to
leave the hotel accommodation and find your own accommodation and
you've got fifty six days to do that. Now, if

(16:38):
you don't speak the language, you've got no skills, you're
not really very useful to anybody. How on Earth. Are
you going to find your own accommodation? Okay, you can't. However,
as we always say, don't feel too sorry for them.
They have an army of NGOs who will step in
and try to get them placed throughout Britain in council accommodation.

(17:04):
Here in Glasgow we have Glasgow has set itself up
as particular Glasgow City Council that has set itself up
as particularly welcoming to these refugees. So many of them
come from all over Britain to get council accommodation in Glasgow. Now,

(17:24):
of course there's only so much council accommodation, but the
council does have a staturetory duty that if you present
as homeless, they do have to put you somewhere. So
when they talk about homeless refugees, they're talking about these
people who have been put out of the hotels, who've
got nowhere to stay, and the NGOs are trying to
find them accommodation. And what happens is they that the

(17:51):
council will put them up in B and B accommodation
largely or maybe back into some kind of hotel accommodation
or they'll find some way to ensure that they're not
sleeping under a bridge. However, what we're told here in
yesterday's Herald is that what they did have a statistic

(18:14):
of the actual overall numbers who are refugees. Now, what
we do know anyway, is that forty four percent of
the applicant applications from those granted refugee status in Glasgow
come from people who got that decision while living in

(18:37):
the rest of the UK. So I mean there's lots
coming in from all over the United Kingdom to take
advantage of Glasgow's particularly generous housing provisions for refugees. And
this is costing and millions of pounds for Glasgow's City Council,
millions of pounds which it doesn't have, millions of pounds

(18:59):
which it can only get from you and I by
putting up the council tax or by cutting services. So
that's what's happening. So you look at Susan Aiken, who's
now the leader of Glasgow City Council, and you're like,
can we get any common sense here from her as
to her solution to this? And this is what's the

(19:21):
crazy thing is because when people like you and I
look at that will say, well, do you know what,
there's a problem here. The tap is overflowing. What we
need to do is turn off the tap. However, the
way that people like Susan A can look at it is,
do you know what, it's not a problem that the
kitchen's flooded. It would be wrong to mop it would

(19:46):
be wrong to turn off the tap. That would be
cruel to the water that's got a perfect right to
come through the tap and flood the kitchen floor. So
we're going simply to accept that the kitchen floor is
always going to be flooded, and in fact it should
be flooded, and that we don't have a right to
turn off the tap, that that would be prejudicial to

(20:06):
this poor water that is flooding the kitchen floor. So
we're not going to turn off the tap because that
would be water risks, you know, that would be against water.
We're just going to let the tap flow and we're
going to let the kitchen flood. And what we're going
to try to do, though, is to make the best
of this flooded floor. That's the approach that people like

(20:26):
Susan ake and will always take. And the answer is
literally in and she's written it here. She says that
what needs to happen is that the UK government needs

(20:48):
to give better support to the refugees at the point
where they are given the right to live in the UK.
Now that's code for we need more taxpayers money to
be given to thesengos so that they can find more
places for these people to live. And also more taxpayers
money to be given to Glasgow City Council so we

(21:09):
can find more expensive flats and homes for them to
live in. So that's our first thing, more money from
the taxpayer. Second thing is to fund house building. Well,
you can't build houses at the rate at which the
people are coming in. There's hundreds of people coming in
every day. You cannot build houses at the rate that

(21:30):
will suffice for that. And thirdly, she says here home
acquisition programs are necessary. Well, it's like compulsory purchase of
other people's homes. Nobody's brought her up on what exactly
and how exactly she's going to do that. And then
of course the fourth thing is don't bring them to Glasgow,

(21:51):
disperse them throughout Scotland. Okay, So in Susan eight, can
we see the mentality that is alive in so many
council leaders and so many politicians throughout the United Kingdom,
and that mentality just has to go because it's a
completely chaotic mentality that doesn't want to address what is happening,

(22:16):
what is the problem in the first place, and just
wants to find as many possible sticking plaster solutions, of
sticking plaster answers to the situation. The flooded floor is
just going to stay flooded. There's nothing we can do
about it. There's nothing that we should do about it.
It would be wrong, it would be wrong to turn
off the tap. Let's just make the best of this situation.

(22:38):
That will always be her attitude. And what needs to
happen in our democracy is that these people need to
be democratically voted out, and that mentality just has to go.
And we have a chance next May to get some
people into the Scottish Parliament who will at least say

(22:59):
these things because right now the politicians are scared to
say these things, or because they actually believe the Susan
Aitkins of this world, people who should never in one
hundred years have been near any kind of political lever
of power. One hundred years ago they would have been
laughed out of the room, but for some reason today

(23:22):
they're able to be running our lives. And we're conscious
that there might be a problem with Facebook and there's
nothing that we can do about it at this precise moment.
I'm afraid. Now, let me see comments. We've got Missus

(23:46):
Kent coming up in two minutes time, folks, two minutes time. Well,
we should certainly be angry at the Home Office, and
we certainly are angry at the Home Office Geo Carlo.
We're also angry of course at the at the Devolved

(24:08):
Parliament and also at the councils who could be putting
pressure on the Home Office. You know, Susan Aiken needs
to say to the Home Office, we're not taking anymore.
You have to stop the channel traffic. That's what Susan
Aitken has to do. She's not going to do that.
She's going to double down and say keep that tap flowing. Hey,

(24:32):
we will have our country back. And I know somebody
who believes that we will have our country back, and
indeed who sings about we will have our country back,
and that's Missus Kent. And we first became aware of
Missus Kent when we went down to the Great British

(24:56):
National Protest event on Saturday the nineteenth outside on I
should say Dover Beach Iconic and missus Kent gave a
few songs and one of our people took a video
of missus Kent singing her No War song and we

(25:18):
cut it and we put it up on our TikTok
and it got three hundred and twenty five thousand views.
We put it on our Instagram, it got one hundred
and eighty two thousand views. We put it on our Facebook,
it got one hundred and twenty thousand views. And somebody
took it from our TikTok and put it on their

(25:41):
x page and it got They got three hundred and
twenty five thousand views. Our TikTok got four hundred and
thirty thousand views all together over one million views from
miss Kent's No War song, which for me put her
on the map. And so folks please do say hello.

(26:04):
I'm bringing in Missus Kent right now. Hello, hi Yah,
great to see you. Great to see you, Miss Kent.
You will have heard me just talking there about your
performance on Dover Beach. Had you been performing before in
front of an audience, not like that.

Speaker 2 (26:25):
No, prior to that, really it was like in a
pub and then really just in my bedroom.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
Well, I mean nobody would have thought that. Nobody would
have thought that. And how did you How did you
feel after the performance?

Speaker 2 (26:45):
I was glad, like I got it done and out
away with because it was like a massive fear of mine.
It's something like I've always wanted to do. But then
it was just I didn't really have the courage. But
that day I just posted myself. I was like, right,
we're going to do this. And even though because I
did mess up my second song, but I was still
so glad that I did it. I was like, do
you know what, it doesn't matter though, Like I was
just I was so nervous. I was like, but I

(27:06):
knew I had to do it, Like no matter what
I was, I'm going to.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Do it right right. Well, I mean that's the way,
that's the way that you do it. It's always the
first time. But what the first time? As I say,
you're no war song got over just on our platforms
and related platforms, got over a million views. I know
it's got many just as many on your platforms and
on other people's platforms, so it really hit home.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Yeah. Yeah, I think it's because of like obviously it's
very true and a lot of people can relate to
the lyrics and obviously there's there's some comedy in there
as well. So yeah, I think I think that's what
it was really for people.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Yes, absolutely, absolutely so. I mean, are you have you
always been like a political person? Would you say?

Speaker 3 (27:54):
No? Not so? Not so?

Speaker 2 (27:56):
No, it was really after kind of it was just
before Labor got in. It was all through TikTok, to
be honest, because TikTok is actually like my main platform.
And then I just see loads of videos and it's
really opened my eyes for everything. And then it's likely
to sort of fell into it. I like sort of
woke up or whatever you want to call it during
twenty twenty, during the whole pandemic and everything else, Like

(28:19):
my eyes are just opened. And then yeah, I just
I don't know, I just I just came across all
these videos and they just blew my mind. I just
fell into it. It's literally the only word and describe it.
And then but I knew it was going to be
a really negative thing for Labor to come in, and
I actually thought reform very positively might win, and they didn't,
and I was just devastated and I was like, oh, yeah,

(28:41):
this is not going to be good. But I think
everyone just really wanted the Tories out and then yeah,
but also I think it was a lack of votes
as well that did it. So just not enough people
are voting and stuff like that. But anyway, I think
everyone sees the bigger picture now, everyone can see what
labor really are and what their intentions and their agenda
really years. So I think a lot of eyes have

(29:02):
opened now, thank god.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
So yeah, well you mentioned the are twenty twenty, and
that was a period I think when quite a few
people will copp as it were, or at least I mean,
what was it for you that kind of shifted your
consciousness during that period.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
Well, I was actually a care worker. I worked in
a care home, coaster I lived, and I believe they
all I really did. At the beginning, I was so scared,
you know, I was petrified, and actually it was meant
to be really bad in the home I was in,
and like we was even considering like sleeping in the
home and everything, like we didn't want to go home
to our families and then again TikTok I was on there,

(29:50):
and then there was a lot of truth speakers and
they had given me this, they had given me this
perspective that I've never seen before, and I was like, whoa,
and these people were just talking about things I've never
heard of, and I just again, I have my mind blown,
and I just I can't believe I was hearing. But
my mind is very open, So yeah, I just couldn't
believe it. And then yeah, I had them, I had

(30:12):
them try and force me to have these vaccines and
everything else, and I just felt confused. I was pregnant
as well at the time, so yeah, it was a
very strange, stressful time. I remember saying to my colleagues like,
have you even thought about this? And they were just like, no,
I don't want to lose my job and stuff like that.
But they hadn't actually really thought about it, do you
know what I mean? And I know that there's a
lot of people now that regret having it, but I

(30:34):
don't know anyone that regrets, you know, not having it.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
No, Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. It's funny you should mention TikTok
there because for me as well, some of them and
I won't go into the stuff, but just kind of
stuff about history and stuff about the nature of the
world and stuff like that. And you suddenly seen these

(30:58):
extremely convincing material that you hadn't really ever considered before,
and it moved It moved quite a few people into thinking, craaky,
Maybe the world isn't quite what I imagined imagined it
it was, but that asade back to reality as it were.

(31:21):
Have you I mentioned have you always been political? You
said no? Have you always been musical?

Speaker 2 (31:27):
Yes, yes, I have. So I've actually written songs since
I was a child. I literally learn piano when I
was really really little, and then I got I started
playing guitar when I was a young teenager. I think
I got thirteen fourteen. My cousin Steve, he taught me
how to play guitar, and then after that brought myself

(31:49):
an acoustic and then I would just sit in my
bedroom and I've watched YouTube and I've learned songs off YouTube.
And then yeah, like I'd always written songs, like I
remember being really little and sitting on a piano just
writing out with songs myself. Yeah, So yeah, I've always
been musical.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Good, good, Well, that's that explains it. That explains it certainly.
But no, I think it's absolutely fantastic what you're doing.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
Now.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
You've got a couple of events coming up this weekend,
which is also one of the reasons why we wanted
to have you on today. We had another guest on
last week, or we would have had you on a
week bit earlier. But tell us about what's happening on
Saturday first.

Speaker 2 (32:35):
Sure, So, yeah, it's Saturday. Come in. We're holding a
patriotic picnic at Mike Park in Maidstine, Kent, and it's
all about just celebrating being English, really celebrating our culture history,
just being able to be proud of our country and
to be honest, it's like, I think that there are
some people out there that think this is more than

(32:55):
a picnic, and it absolutely is not. I believe that
we deserve to have some sort of happiness and all
this madness, you know. I want it to be a
family day. I want us to just all have an
old traditional English picnic together. And it's also again a
freedom of speech offense, so I would like, you know,
people to if they feel up to it, of course,

(33:16):
maybe come say something or even perform something. I mean,
I'm gonna have my guitar, may amplifier, speakers, you know
that kind of thing. Yeah, I just want us to
feel like well confident in celebrating who we are really
because the way the world is at the moment it
makes you feel like you almost should be ashamed of it.
And I think that's stand right out of ordersday. So yeah,

(33:39):
it's dog friendly, child friendly, so please bring your family.
I'll be bringing my children. Yeah, and let's just have
a jolly good time to give and then it gets
a bit more serious on the Sunday.

Speaker 1 (33:49):
Yes, yes, Well the picnic thing that's this Saturday, twenty
third of August at nunn yep and Mote Park in Maidstone,
which is in Kent. So if you're down in that
neck of the woods, please do take a wander into

(34:10):
the park at twelve noon on Saturday, hopefully it will
be a lovely day and just go up to the
to the great crowd that are that are been hosted
by missus Kent's patriotic picnic. I like I like the
the sound of that. It's got a good it's got
a good good ring to it. An old sort of

(34:33):
old English, old British tone, missus Kent's patriotic picnic and
bring your own everything I should imagine and have a
good time and what you see as the value of
that sort of thing bringing people together in that casual,
casual way.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
Yeah, I just think it would be really like I
think people need it to be honest for right now,
just something positive and all this negativity that's going on.
You know, we can just a a lovely day together
a lot. There's no and obviously, I mean there is
always risk of the left turning up or whatever, you know,
but if they do, then more for them, because it's
literally just a big neck. And so then I say,

(35:11):
do you know what, come an have a sandwich? Do
you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (35:14):
Like it?

Speaker 2 (35:15):
It's not that kind of thing. It's literally just in
the partments, have a nice day together, let's celebrate being English,
listen to some English music. You know, it's it's just
going to be a nice day.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
Really, absolutely, I think I don't. I don't think the
opposition is that it could be called would would turn
up to something like that, But if they did, they
would look complete twits because they would certainly you you
guys would make sure you advertised their foolishness arm on
social media, and it would just be a complete self own,

(35:51):
as they say these days, if anybody tried to try
to do that, so I doubt that's the case. And
if they did, as you said, just bring along say hey,
have a have a sandwich, because some of these people,
you know, some of these people are just genuinely confused
and and they will understand your some of them, not
all of them, not your Susan Aikins of this world,

(36:13):
not the people who actually want the council, who are
just who are ideologues and who are embedded in their foolishness,
but just some, especially a lot of the younger people
that's just looking for a cause and can be can
be convinced otherwise, or at least can see the point
that you guys, you guys have got.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
I mean, I've had a bit of height and stuff
in regards to it. I've been telling it's a righteous picnic,
a picnic. I was like, bro, it's just a picnic,
Like seriously, it's just yeah, it's so funny. Yeah, I
actually it's quite funny because there was a lady I

(36:54):
just made a song out of her video, So yeah,
thank you Helen for the inspiration. There's a She's on take.
But if you made a whole video about me saying
you're trying to bring racists remote Park and all this,
I thought I'm gonna make a song out of that.
That's what I'm going to do with that, and that's
what I did. I'm not sure if you're seeing that.
If you haven't, I well for that over to you.
But yeah, man, I'm just going to turn that negative

(37:15):
energy into positive. That's what I'm gonna do.

Speaker 1 (37:19):
Absolutely celebrate being British, says Stephen here. Christopher says this
sounds absolutely brilliant.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
Mm hm.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
Para Normal says superb. I wish I could go, but
I'm from up north in Lancashire. What would you say
to people who would like to be at a picnic.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
I'm going to say to them, I am going to
be moving it around to try and make it a
bit fair and hopefully what I'm hyping for in the
future is that people got to jump on board. Obviously
me being missus Ken. I'm called missus Ken because I'm
from Kent, you see. So I'm hoping that other areas
will claim their title and then start having picnic scenarios

(37:59):
because know what, that'd be great, that would just be brilliant,
and then we can all have maybe have our events
on the same day but in different locations. And I
just think it's a really positive thing and people need it,
and you know, if it come together with like minded people,
it's just going to be lovely.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Like it really is, absolutely absolutely, and it gives you
time to relax for the big effort on Sunday, which
is more political, and what's happening on the very next day,
the twenty fourth.

Speaker 2 (38:28):
Yeah, so on Sunday basically, yeah, win the head downs
down the three obviously, just get our voices out there. Again.
It's just more because I've had people facing me, Oh
why don't you just wait till September the thirteenth, But
I'm going, don't worry, I'll be there, darlings. But it's
just I think we just need to keep doing things. Obviously.
I just feel like the more we do, the better.
And obviously you've got everyone elseide these hotels. There's literally

(38:50):
like daily protests, weekendly protests, and it's just another protest basically,
But yeah, that's really it. We're just going to go
there boys are peacefully voice our opinions, and people keep
sending to me bank holiday they're not going to be there,
and I'm like, I know, but this is twenty twenty five.
We have technology. They are going to hear and see us.

(39:10):
Don't you worry about that. It doesn't matter where they are,
they all hear and see us.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
You know.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
It's just yeah. I got very very passionate one day
and I was like, do you know what that's it?
Because originally my picnic was on the twenty fourth, and
then at the time I was like, fuck the picnic,
We're going down down the street. And then I was
like someone someone went, look, Jody, right, a lot of
people are looking forward to picn that you can't do that.
I was like, right, okay, you are right, absolutely right,
let's good. I was like, okay, right, this is what

(39:38):
I'm going to do. I'm going to have the process
on the Sunday and the picnic on the Saturday. There
we go. We have a patriotic weekend. And it was
sort like that really.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
Oh absolutely, And as your as your poster here says, divided,
we stand united, we stand divided, we fall This tyrannical
government does not care about the people of this country
and it's put us all in danger. Time to stand up.
And that's such an important thing that it is literally
we are in danger of the first requirement of a

(40:10):
government is to protect its people, and it is failing
miserably in that. And so that's this Sunday, the twenty
fourth of August again at noun outside Downing Street. If
you're in London, folks, please do go along to Downing
Street at twelve noun and please say hello to missus
Kent and her team. And you're so right about You're

(40:35):
so right about this idea that although there's only going
to be maybe a few people watching at the actual time,
the fact of the matter is that, because of modern technology,
it's going to be seen by potentially hundreds of thousands
of people.

Speaker 3 (40:54):
So you.

Speaker 1 (40:57):
The that's almost the larger part of it is the
propaganda that you're able to take from that event and
remote to the rest of the world, and it multiplies
the effect exponentially. Yeah, so yeah, do you do you
have like are you going to be cutting in a

(41:17):
big speaker behind you or do you have a smaller
speaker system at what I do have a speaker?

Speaker 2 (41:23):
Yes, I will be taking that. I'll be probably writing
some speeches down. I think that's what we need to
do this time. I think we need to get some
powerful speeches going because it's about empowering the people, and
I know it is working the more every day I'm
seeing more and more people standing up, whether it's outside
these hotels, whether it's posting online. I mean, we've got
these Raise the colors. Is it Raise the Colors? I

(41:45):
think it's the hashtag is or whatever it's trending at
the moment. Everyone's displaying all their flags everywhere. It's fantastic.
So in whatever way you're doing this, you know it's effective,
So don't doubt that it isn't. I mean, we've we've
had success with the Eppin Hotel now well being closed
down and the Margaret's being moved, so you know, the
about there's like, oh, this isn't going to work. Well

(42:07):
it clearly is. It really is. What I'm doing say
is that the more we do, the better, and the
more of an effect is going to have.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
You know, yeah, yeah, And everybody can do something at
the end of the day, even if it is just
coming along to support and if you can't come along
to support, maybe finding another way to support, you know,
through ensuring somebody can do it in the first place. Yeah, yeah, exactly, Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Well,

(42:41):
I'm quite impressed with this raise your colors idea, which
is taken off in some in some parts. I don't
know where how widespread it is, but certainly it's getting
a lot of publicity on on x and also on TikTok,
and it's really just kind of it's taking a claim,

(43:02):
I think, to this is our country, as it were,
and we you're alluded to it earlier. We do have
an identity that that it seems sometimes we're not being
allowed or expected to express. So I think that that's
that's that's a factor there, and a flag is a

(43:24):
good way of expressing an identity. Some people are a
bit snobbish about flags. They go, oh, that's you know,
how else are you going to express your identity? And
and some people try to smear it as well, with
that association, which has never really been correct. Even when

(43:46):
it might have seemed correct, it wasn't even correct because
everybody the idea that it should be so called far
right to fly the flag of your own country. That's
completely bonkers.

Speaker 2 (43:59):
An, that's our flags of our country, and I think
it's down right disrespectful to be disrespecting our flags that way.
And I also think, you know, we need to remind
people where they are. They seem to be forgotten and
you know that these people that are not looking to
integrate into our country properly. It seems to be these
that are having the issue, and obviously the strange far

(44:20):
left as well. Yeah, but it's our flags, and you know, like, yeah,
just remember where you are. This is our country, this
is our homeland. Don't you dare come here and come
here and disrespect our flag. Honestly, who do you think
you are? Really? I would never go to someone to
another country and start trying to tell them how to
live or while they should be or they shouldn't be displaying

(44:42):
their flags, because I find it offensive. Oh. I just
can't believe we've gotten to a place like this. It's
mind boggling, It really is.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
Absolutely, Absolutely it's been just a complete British model from
the very beginning, and we have been so tolerant, so
tolerant to the point that we have accepted well I
couldn't be how far back do you go? But I

(45:15):
mean I think here in Scotland, for example, Scotland used
to be like a totally Christian country. I'm going back
to like the sixteen hundreds and it would be like
nobody would even conceive of not even being Christian, but
certainly the idea of people with a foreign religion coming
in it would just be like, that's not our country

(45:38):
at all. And then it all got liberalized into the
seventeen hundreds and eighteen hundreds, and then it would just
come one, come all, and now it's every religion under
the sun, every way of looking at things.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
Yeah, I think it's a crimely unbalanced. I think that's
what's happened. The balance is just way off at the moment.
And it's not okay, you know what I mean, Look
what's happening. It's like we're sacrificing sacrifice in our countries.
I don't why, so, I mean, why is this happening?
When did this start happening? You know what I mean?
And it's happened so slowly over time, and only now

(46:16):
that we're seeing that it's on that on the you know,
its three men, like it's like, okay, this is bad.
You know, we shouldn't be losing capitals and things like that.

Speaker 1 (46:29):
I can't go over it. It really kicked in after
World War Two, I think, and then it after World
War two, like into the sixties and seventies and eighties.
There were some people who could see the direction that
was going and they were saying this could really turn out,
you know, badly as it were, and they just got

(46:51):
smeared or marginalized. And the politicians are very few politicians
who tried to warn about it were just seen us
at the time, was seen as cranky I'm thinking about
you know, for example, and we're otherwise punished politically for
it in there in some ways. And then it's suddenly
everything that was predicted is now coming to a head,

(47:13):
and it's increasing that it's like the speeding it up
now in in the hope that that those of us
will be unable to respond. But what they don't see
is the the what they misunderstand is the the resilience

(47:33):
of the British people who will who will take their
country in a good direction again, shall we shall would
put it that way. It's the idea that all all
is lost, we've got to give up, we've got to
immigrate to some other country where it's just going to
be just as bad.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:53):
Yeah, that's that's just negativity. So that's why I'm so
heartened when I see people like you who are not
only organizing events but also putting ideas into into music.
I mean, do you do any writing on politics or
is it just songwriting.

Speaker 2 (48:15):
To songwriting currently? Yeah, I didn't know, as I didn't
expect to write any being political, and I literally just
thought I'm going to give it a go, and yeah,
it worked out, so I guess I can do it.
But I think better putting it into my lyrics than
into like words. Did that make sense? But I've always
been like that. I've always managed to express myself better
through lyrics in music, in songwriting. That makes sense?

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Oh yeah, absolutely, That's probably just the way your brain
is wired.

Speaker 3 (48:44):
You know.

Speaker 1 (48:45):
People who are songwriters can be very good in a
way that people who can write essays couldn't even begin
to do. So it just depends what were your talent,
as it were, where your talent lies. Good well, folks.

(49:05):
Before I remind you once more of the two events,
missus Kent is on all the socials on TikTok dot com,
forward slash at missus Kent. Now that's m I S
s U s k E n T or one word.
Also on x dot com forward slash missus Kent. Also

(49:29):
on Instagram dot com forward slash missus Kent. So please
do if you're on those socials. Are there any others
that you're on?

Speaker 2 (49:39):
Facebook? I'm very much on all of them now, I think.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
Right, Facebook, dot Com, forward slash missus Kent. Do you
have a YouTube page?

Speaker 2 (49:50):
I do, Yeah, it's it was meant to be just
for my music, but yeah, it's fine to follow that.
That's fine. I mean, you know, if I'm like anymore
brifical music, that's.

Speaker 1 (50:00):
What we what's your most successful social.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
I'd say TikTok. Well, TikTok at the moment, but I
do think I'm going to be banned very soon. I'm
sending one thousand followers and yeah I've got some some
what do you call it warnings? So yeah, I've been
banned so many times on TikTok so, but I mean
I've got ten thousand on Facebook, ten thousand on Instagram.

(50:28):
So it's just wherever.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
You like really good, good good, well, we follow you
on Instagram, TikTok and also on X and would advise
everybody else please do that now. Just to remind you
again this Saturday, if you're down in the Kent area,
down in the Garden of England, Missus Kent will be

(50:52):
having her patriotic picnic. Let me just remove that. On
Saturday at non in Moat Park in Maidstone, please go along.
And if you're in the London area the very next day,
Sunday the twenty fourth, please go down to Downing Street

(51:14):
at twelve noon again for Missus Kent's United We stand divided,
we fall. What do you plan on saying to mister
Starmer behind the gates.

Speaker 2 (51:27):
May?

Speaker 1 (51:28):
Yes, what you plan on saying to him?

Speaker 2 (51:31):
Well, I'm going to have to sit down and write something.
That's what I'm gonna have to do. I don't know yet.
I'm not quite prepared. So I think it's because I'm
so far used on the picnic, because that's coming up first.
Oh yeah, yeah, I get all of that organized and
then I'll have to sit down and have to really
think about what I'm going to write. But I want
to write a speech, so everything is what I'm going
to be saying, good.

Speaker 1 (51:50):
Good, good that he needs to hear it absolutely and
he needs to basically protect our country. Stop the boat,
protect our country, protect our kids, and do the job
of government, which is the first duty of government, which
is to defend, is to ensure the safety and security
of all its people.

Speaker 2 (52:10):
I don't think he's going to I think he's a puppet.
I think they're just putting his he's having his strings pulled.
I don't believe he makes any of the decisions, is
my personal opinion on it. I think it's the powers
that be, and I think that's why he's there. I mean,
just watching his time with Trump recently, and Trump saying
all these things to him, and it was just like
his brain was empty. He just didn't know what to say,

(52:33):
and he looked worried on his face, and yeah, I
just see it. Oh, I read body language and stuff,
you know. But as long as they all hear it
as an entire government, that's kind of the idea, really,
you know.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
Oh, absolutely. And sometimes you're not really even speaking to him,
you're just speaking to those other politicians who are taking
note and thinking hm hmm. That's something that I should
maybe be aware of, even from my own self interested
point of view. If the people are taking this point
of view, then i'd maybe better get with the program.

(53:06):
You know, and and and and and change things. But
time change, change is coming, and it may take a
little longer than we expect, or it could speed up
and be very quick. But it's good to know that
there's still people like you left down there in the
in the garden of England along with your fellow patriots.

(53:30):
Good okay, missus Kent. It's been really good to see
you and to speak with you. And all power to
your to your vocal cords and to your brain and
your your work that you're doing.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
Thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (53:53):
Very welcome. We must have you back on again.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
Take care, take care, see you guys everyone. Thanks having me.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Can Ius. Fantastic Missus Kent from Kent telling us there
about her work. Wonderful, wonderful stuff. Good good, I said.
Protect our Country there the name of our new book,

(54:23):
three hundred and fifteen pages of common sense about how
to stop mass immigration. You just need to go to search,
just need to go to Amazon and search for Protect
our Country and you'll get this book and it has

(54:43):
all the answers that you need, written in very clear,
easily accessible language, lovely manner, in which it's been like
out protect our country. Please go to Amazon and get it.
That's the way you can support the work that we're

(55:05):
doing here, which is going to include, as I mentioned
earlier in the program, a fantastic rally on the sixth
of September, the Enough Is Enough Rally. We're going to
be outside Holyrood Parliament twelve for twelve thirty start. Please
come along and bring your flags of the British Isles

(55:28):
so we can have a really good raise the Colors
event and stand up for the safety and the security
of our country and for fairness for the people of Scotland.
Good stuff. We shall be back next week. Folks. Please

(55:51):
give this Twitter a repost, Please give it a share
on Facebook, Please give it a like on YouTube it
thanks for all the comments that I've come in tonight.
Thanks for a fantastic guest, missus Kent. What a lovely
young lady, says Debbie. Dan Tagg says, I'm a Sussex

(56:14):
lad grew up in Kent. They are lovely folks. Christopher says,
best of luck, missus Kent. Great stuff. It just remains
for me to say, God Bless the United Kingdom and
God save the King, see you next week.
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