BudPod with Phil Wang & Pierre Novellie - Episode 2 - Most Authoritarian, Most Libertarian
Episode Date: March 6, 2019Welcome back! Phil Wang and Pierre Novellie discuss their Most Authoritarian thoughts and Least Authoritarian thoughts, also including:. Pervert or Japanese? Blimptons Unrefined Oats, Most Authoritari...an and Most Libertarian, Legal Blackmail, Sugar Eagle, F*cking Idiot Registration, Murdertown, Speeding North, Speeding Common, Marjorie Returns! Email us at thebudpod@gmail.com or tweet us @thebudpod and don't forget to rate us on iTunes and like and subscribe! Get bonus BudPod on Patreon! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, it's the second episode.
It's number two of Budpod.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you for coming back.
Yes, I hope you've been all right.
Thank you for returning to our bosoms.
And thank you for liking the first one enough to try the second one
or being strange enough to try the second one first.
Or not understanding your podcast app yes it can be
confusing sometimes they order them like it starts at the big they've really fucked it up yeah
especially recently i swear every time i go on the podcast app on on my iphone it's they've changed
the order of most recent first yes or most recent last and it wants you to have subscribed to everything or it will refuse to show you anything past 2016.
Sometimes.
It's dog shit.
Yeah, so...
So thank you for negotiating that.
Or maybe you're listening to this on accident
because you're trying to play a different podcast.
In which case,
stick around.
You've made a great choice.
Or thank you for being weird enough
if you're listening to the second episode after hating the first one,
that is you are the kind of person who is almost too scrupulous
in giving things a fair old go.
Hey, the audio masochism is a big dollar out there.
Ooh, that's the opposite of ASMR.
Yeah.
Listen to stuff that just makes you sick.
Just nails on blackboards, polystyrene squeaking, balloons.
I bet that's big in Germany.
Yeah, Germany and one other country that is like weird,
that comes up a lot.
Where was that?
Japan.
Japan.
It's Japan.
If you lost the Second World War, your sex is weird.
That's a rule.
I was saying last night that this gig, it's funny to me that the only two types of people on earth who speak Japanese are Japanese people and perverts.
Right?
It's like the Bitcoin of languages.
You're either very competent or you're in you're a
pedophile yeah yeah it's and like somewhere in the intersection between those two is someone
who's like desperately trying to get their hands on a firearm an untraceable firearm you go
you could be competent and a pervert. I don't know.
Yeah, there's some skills that are inherently suspect.
Yeah, Japanese is unfortunately one of them.
If you're a white guy who knows Japanese, I'm not taking my eyes off you.
Yeah, if you're a white guy and you're fluent in Japanese,
every aspect of your personal appearance will be found weird by me.
Because it's like that thing where everyone's mugshot makes them look like a criminal.
Because it's like passport photos are bad, you know?
So, like, okay, so can we imagine,
can you and I imagine a white guy
who can speak fluent Japanese
who we can't find suspicious from looking at him?
Because, okay, obviously,
the archetype that we'd be the most suspicious of,
white guy, in his 30s, fluent in Japanese,
long, greasy ponytail.
Always.
Dark, dark hair.
Dark hair.
He's got...
His t-shirt's either heavy metal or anime.
Or like heavy metal anime.
Or something sort of like a meme.
A weird little t-shirt.
One piercing.
Yeah, and not a very good...
I reckon like lip.
Yeah, or eyebrow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Cargo pants.
Cargo pants.
Those, maybe in the earlobe, one of those tunnels.
Tunnel hair.
Yes.
And a couple of leather wristbands.
And he hasn't decided if he wants a fucking beard or not.
Yes.
Yeah.
It's that thing of like no one should have facial hair where the hair is just.
Yeah.
What is it about liking East Asia that makes you grow facial hair like an East Asian?
It's not a coincidence, isn't it?
They've absorbed it so much.
I can't, I don't have, my facial hair exists in the Goldilocks, the hellish Goldilocks
point of it grows enough that I have to shave it,
but not enough that if I leave it, it will come to anything.
That's the worst.
It grows just enough to be a blemish on my face, but no more.
So I do shave, but I don't have the choice of leaving it to grow.
Yeah.
You've got 100% of the effort.
It's maintenance, not choice, my shaving. You've got 100% of the effort. It's maintenance, not choice. Yeah.
My shaving.
You've got 100% of the effort with none of the benefit.
It's like if someone just said, by the way, every morning you have to shower like normal.
You know, you shampoo your hair and you shower gel on your body or whatever.
And then you also just have to shower this mannequin.
What happens if I don't shower the mannequin?
Whether you have a moldy,
disgusting mannequin in your house.
There's no gain to this.
This is just an extra thing to do.
Yeah, this is another job.
Bad, bad, bad.
Well, when I was out in Japan,
there's a name,
they're aware of this.
Are they?
There's a name for...
Oh, that's so embarrassing.
For white guys who've come over
and speak Japanese.
Oh, that's so embarrassing.
They're called LBHs.
Really? Losers back home.
Japan!
That is brutal.
And that's like by native Japanese people.
I'm not sure. I think, I feel like
it's a joint effort between the expats
there and the Japanese people. Right, we've joined forces to
categorize these people.
Yeah.
That's fascinating.
Yeah, because there must be a lot of confused Japanese people.
If you're Japanese and you don't live in a major urban area,
you just live somewhere quite rural in Osaka or whatever,
and you're just like, you and your buddies are hanging out,
and you're like, you know how we get those young white backpackers
and stuff through here sometimes?
And they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Why do they smell so bad?
And they're always wanking.
And they bow a lot.
If you're like a modern Japanese person, they'll be like, I mean, I bow,
but these guys really bow.
And they speak in this formal, fluent Japanese.
I don't know where they learned it.
Yeah, exactly.
They address me as like honorable farmer, peasant or whatever.
And it's like, well, I guess.
Like, it must be super strange.
Like, imagine if you just lived in Derby or whatever in England
and you're constantly beset by a trickle of Japanese people
who dress like Bertie Wooster.
Like waistcoat pocket watchers.
And they say, I say, my dear fellow, in like perfect English,
but it's like, I say, my dear fellow, I've come here from Tokyo,
from the Far East.
Do you know of a public house I could refresh myself in this afternoon?
You're like, what the fuck is happening?
We'll meet.
We'll meet, my fine fellow.
It is a pleasure to meet you.
What is happening?
They have a monocle and a top hat and stuff.
It's so weird.
I really like your punch cartoons.
I'm an avid reader.
I saw a caricature of Lloyd George.
It was most cutting.
You'd be baffled by it.
Are you a member of any clubs?
Point me to your nearest pornography.
I've come to sample your pornography.
We're big fans where I come from of your pornography.
So is there a way a guy can look that you wouldn't be like,
why does he speak Japanese?
Japanese, I guess.
Oh, no.
I was out drinking coffee or tea or hot drink that requires extra sugar,
but I was foolish enough to choose the veranda.
I chose the veranda, and now I can't get the attention of the waiter inside. He's busy with a woman's thrown up, and I can't get it.
There's no sugar.
They forgot to put sugar in the bowls of sugar on the veranda tables.
And now I'm stuck out here with an unsweetened, bitter, hot drink.
What am I going to do?
Sugar Eagle.
Sugar Eagle is the new sugar-based aerial solution, or aerial-based sugar solution,
for the guy on the go.
Sugar Eagle.
Sugar Eagle.
If you are outdoors on the veranda having a hot drink
and there's no sweetener available
and you can't get the attention of the waiter
because he's comforting a woman who's thrown up,
is that bad? I don't know.
The glass is kind of darkened,
so it's hard to see inside this cafe.
It's one of those.
The Sugar Eagle, a trained handler,
follows you on a rooftop level, much like Batman,
and with an eagle on one enormous leather glove and a pocket
full of sugar lumps that he can
sellotape to the eagle's claw.
The eagle has been trained to deploy the sugar
directly above, or as close
as it can get to above, your hot drink
mid-sip.
There are
plans to replace the eagles with
drones, but don't let that happen.
Support your local Sugar Eagle trainer.
Sugar Eagle.
And do not allow the mechanization
of this once proud industry.
Sugar Eagle.
Sugar Eagle.
When you want to avoid sugar from every angle,
except from above.
Ground sugar is only deployed by Falcons.
Sugar Eagle.
by Falcons.
Sugar is good.
We reach our weekly segment
that doesn't happen
every week.
Our fortnightly segment.
Maybe.
A lot of...
It's a regular segment.
It's a regular feature.
And just like on my favorite podcast, stuff's going to happen,
and it's going to be stuff that you recognize as being a feature,
but it's not always going to happen.
Sure.
So get on board, everyone.
And in this segment in particular,
it will be the most authoritarian and most libertarian thoughts that Phil and I have been having.
Initially, we were considering doing a sort of left-wing, right-wing thing to try and
represent how people have left-wing, right-wing, you know, different feelings.
But left-wing and right-wing don't really mean anything anymore.
So authoritarian versus libertarian is the spectrum that we'd rather have.
Also, the most left-wing thing and the most right-wing thing,
if you're actually treating those as going to the actual extremes,
you end up doing the same thing.
People I don't like should be in camps.
Well, okay, that could be a lot of countries.
Exactly.
You get the rhetorical equivalent of those scenes in Paris
of the two different yellow vested gangs fighting each other
yeah on the far left and the far right and you literally can't you genuinely can't tell
they've literally turned up wearing the same color they've they've they've they've made a visual
metaphor for their own politics and also not not it's quite funny now, because normally people used to say things like,
brown is red.
Because, like, the brown shirts are the fascists in Germany.
And red is obviously, you know, hard communist.
Oh, right.
So they'd be like, oh, it doesn't matter if they're wearing brown scarves
or brown neckerchiefs or red neckerchiefs kind of thing.
And I was just like, if they're wearing a yellow vest, they're a cunt.
That's essentially what it boils down to.
Or they're just trying to help you
park at a festival. Yeah. Either way,
they're frustrating and they cause a lot
more problems than they're trying to solve.
So,
the most authoritarian thought I had
is inspired by
Singapore. And I thought
to myself the other day, yeah,
we should ban chewing gum. we should ban chewing gum.
We should ban chewing gum. I will say
it was when I was sat next to
a person on the tube
who was wearing massive
noise-canceling headphones and was chewing
chewing gum the way a terrorist
would chew chewing gum.
You really hate mouth sounds.
It's especially bad for you.
I hate mouth sounds and chewing.
But even, I would say, this person's chewing was so egregious
that even a normal person would look up and be like,
what the hell are you doing?
Like, you'd worry about your dog if it chewed like this.
You'd be like, I'm taking him to the vet,
because even from a dog, that level of noise is weird.
It's like he's trying to chew around his own teeth.
And then I just thought, ban it.
And then I thought, oh, no, but chewing gum is like a nice thing.
And I thought, no, it's not.
Yeah, I never remember really enjoying a bit of chewing gum.
You just enjoy sugar.
It's shit.
Yeah, because it's great for like the first 10 seconds.
And then you go, there's rubbery garbage in my mouth.
Also, after, like you say, 10 seconds, then you just go, this is like if I wanted to, this is like I want a stronger jaw.
Yeah, it's like training.
Why am I rehearsing for food?
Yeah.
This is a rehearsal for when I can actually eat food.
Make sure I can chew right.
Bootcamp.
Lunch.
I was about to call it a mouth audition,
but that sounds like a horrible euphemism.
Mouth audition.
I think that's a Pornhub category.
Coming for a mouth audition.
So, complete ban, no imports.
Just ban, don't even make it, can't even make it.
Because it's like fake...
Will you be able to stand pressure from Big Wrigley?
Big Wrigley?
Will you be able to take... I mean, that's? Big Wrigley? Will you be able to take...
I mean, that's...
Big Wrigley is going to come for you.
He's a very famous jazz musician.
And on the xylophone, it's Big Wrigley.
Big Wrigley can fuck off.
It's a waste of...
Hey, you don't know what you're saying.
Hey, hey, hey.
It's a waste of resources.
It's literally food that's designed to give you no nutrition
and then be put in a bin
it's like the most decadent
unbelievably
wasteful thing
and the food has to come in paper made from
a packet made from paper and metal
this is an outrageous
throw it in the bin
after you've been chewing it
it's gross and weird
yeah it's quite a synthesis of dietary in the bin after you've been chewing it. It's gross and weird.
Yeah, it's kind of,
it's quite a synthesis of dietary supplement almost.
Like you could see it going to
like burger flavored ones.
Like when you want a burger
instead of just having
burger flavored chewing gum
and see how it tastes.
Like a Willy Wonka thing.
Kardashians sell that
on Instagram, right?
Like these lollipops.
Food gum.
No, they're like appetite.
Suppressing lollies.
Yes. Yeah, they were trying to suppressing lollies. Yes.
Yeah, they were trying to sell those, weren't they?
Because it's amazing to me how much people, like with the Kardashians
selling stuff or anyone selling stuff on Instagram,
people are so desperate to be
scammed.
They're just like, oh God, I hope they scam me.
It's so strange. I think it was
a tweet in some very
well-observed, someone said Instagram is just, is now just QVC for millennials. It's so strange. I think it was a tweet and something very well observed.
Someone said Instagram is now just QVC for millennials.
That's great.
I saw that.
That's perfect, isn't it?
It is.
And also it's so strange because if it's a new product,
that's some kind of fucking horrible astronaut food compressed into a lolly or whatever.
And the Kardashians are like, this is great.
You know that that product is not how they got to be how they are now.
Yeah, exactly.
You know that.
Whereas if...
Because it didn't exist.
Exactly.
Whereas if like an Olympian was like,
hey, did you know the secret to my marathon running,
having enough energy, was like really like unrefined oats.
Yeah.
And Blimpton's unrefined oats
thank you for sponsoring the podcast by the way uh blimpton's unrefined oats is a wonderful source
of that then you'd go oh conceivably that's unrefined oats for the refined gentleman
well you know like they asked usain bolt um what his diet was. Yeah. His training diet. And he just said Jamaican food.
Just eats plantains.
Yeah.
And fucking rice and peas.
He just eats.
He carb loads.
He eats loads of food, protein and carbohydrates.
Like there's no secret formula to it.
What secret food do you eat?
I eat food.
Yeah.
That's the secret.
Eat some fucking food.
I mean, in the Olympics, everyone just eats loads of pasta.
Yeah.
That's what they eat, obviously.
Of course.
And it's the thing of like, hey, did you know that you can lose weight by eating less?
I did know that.
Because I'm aware of Newtonian physics, thanks to physics GCSE, energy in, energy out.
It doesn't matter what the energy is.
There was that American professor who lost weight on Oreos.
Okay.
He was just trying to prove, like, look, I'm eating Oreos and broccoli for fiber so he
didn't clog himself up and die of just Oreo poo.
Oreo poo, of course, comes in three distinct layers.
This isn't brown poo.
People break the poo apart and they...
They don't get in the toilet.
They eat the middle. the middle of the poo is
people's favorite you can't have just one um what's your most authoritarian i'm starting to
get really annoyed by advertising and not in the boring Bill Hicks kind of...
Wasn't it easy to be radical in the 90s?
You know adverts, yeah?
Well, I don't like them.
Who is this renegade cowboy?
They're trying to sell you things.
And everyone's like, oh my God, they are.
And every advert I've seen has been trying to sell me something.
This guy's a genius.
This guy's seeing through the bullshit, man.
This brilliant, smart guy knows the answer to everything
and yet managed to drink himself to death.
Yep.
Anyway, that's very alcoholic shaming.
Yes, don't shame Bill Hicks for his alcoholism.
Shame him for his filthy, disgusting smoking.
Well, that's the thing.
He was smoking to keep off the alcohol.
He died of cancer.
People would assume he died of smoking.
It was bowel cancer from the alcohol.
Or was it pancreatic?
I suppose bowel cancer.
But it was from the booze.
Yeah.
You never think of booze as giving you cancer.
You don't, but it sure will, apparently.
I guess it's that thing of like,
would you like a pint of sadness chemicals?
For some reason, yes. I was thinking like if something gives you cancer, it's going in your that thing of like, would you like a pint of sadness chemicals? And you go, I would for some reason, yes.
I was thinking like if something gives you cancer, it's going in your body and like literally like scratching.
Like fizzing.
I guess it's the bubbles in beer.
Maybe it's just the bubbles.
If you drink wine and vodka, you're fine.
It seems to make more sense with something with bubbles.
But because I've been thinking a lot about self-obsession.
I read a couple of good books about it and writing a stand-up show about it.
And so I've become ironically obsessed with self-obsession, the idea of self-obsession.
And when you start to become aware of it, when you start to become aware of our general mass obsession with ourselves, you can't unsee it.
You see it in everything.
You see it in advertising especially.
with ourselves.
You can't unsee it.
You see it in everything.
You see it in advertising especially.
And our adverts over the last couple of decades
have really honed in
on appealing to the individual.
And of course,
the internet's made that
especially easy now
because you just have a profile
that you're building
for advertisers online.
You can live in your own little world.
But like adverts that say,
this is your gym.
It's like, no.
Everyone has to use the same gym.
It's not like you can just walk in at any time
and if the weights are in use, you go, no, this is my weight.
This is my gym.
The advert said so.
But it's such an illogical, ridiculous extreme.
I saw an advert on a bus, a tourism advert.
It was like this big picture of a beautiful island
in the Mediterranean
yeah
and it said
discover
your Italy
your Italy
I don't have an Italy
I just want to discover
the Italy
there's one Italy
you either like it
or you don't
it's not like
you've not found my oh this pasta's not like you've not found my
oh this pasta sucks.
I guess I've not found
my Italy yet.
Where's my
maybe it's
But also whenever
anyone says like
whenever anyone
takes a place
and brings it down
to the level of the individual
it's always because
it's shit.
So it's like
if someone goes
oh my god
England is so green
and lovely
and whatever
and someone goes
well I'm from Coventry
that's terrible.
That's an advert aimed at the kind of people who are surprised that
different bits of different places are different
well yeah, so it's
it's a dishonest advert
they should say discover
the ideal version of Italy
which is the tourism places and not
the slums and the poor parts
of Rome
because that's no one's Italy it's not like you're going to which is the tourism places and not sort of the slums and the poor parts of Rome.
Because that's no one's Italy.
It's not like you're going to... I mean, I guess for some people.
But you'd even then, you'd want to go to the bits
that are excitingly shit, like,
oh, it's full of Sicilian bandits.
You wouldn't just be like, yeah, it's kind of quite a dull
sort of middle-class suburb of Milan
where there's not a lot of amenities.
And it's actually quite rainy. It actually rains quite a lot.
Yeah, unemployment's a bit of a problem.
Wow, wow! Tuscany!
The schools aren't great. They're my
Italy! Delicious! This is my Italy.
It's boring and it's all
about the local mayors trying to
incentivize
people to purchase new housing.
Yeah, that's not a...
But I have a real bugbear with adverts phrasing things badly in general.
I like this idea of the nounification of verbs or adjectives.
Find your amazing.
Ugh.
You know?
We sell delicious.
Oh, God.
We do yummy.
Just buy a box of yum-yums.
Oh, God. It's so infantilizing.
So it's like you're an individual,
but you're still a little baby.
Yeah.
You're an individual,
but you're fucking three years old.
Which I guess is the sinister undercurrent
of all advertising.
But if you're skilled at it,
you hide it.
You hide the infantilcurrent of all advertising. But if you're skilled at it, you hide it. You hide the infantilization of your audience.
But this is what I've always said about, like,
when a dictator fixes an election.
Don't tell me you got 99.9% of the vote.
Like, show me some fucking respect.
Like, I'm not an idiot.
I know I live in a dictatorship.
61%.
Show me some class.
That's why Putin is clever.
Putin always wins. He doesn't even
probably need to fake the elections, to be honest.
But even if he did fake them, he wouldn't
do a Zimbabwe.
Just show me some
respect. Itzu, I think, is
eat beautiful. Yeah!
And you just go,
what does that mean? Because first of all,
the actual
grammatically correct way of phrasing that would be
eat beautifully.
And you say, okay, so I should look
resplendent as I'm eating
anything. Or eat beautiful food.
Yeah.
And even if they mean eat beautiful food,
what a shit
selling point
for a restaurant
it is also quite a sinister
tagline when
all their
artwork and imagery
has no food on it
and instead
women in bikinis
on beaches
and just sort of
so then it's like
it becomes a silence
of the lambs thing
it's beautiful
what you call that woman
yeah
eat beautiful
eat beautiful
hi beautiful
eat beautiful eat beautiful only eat Hi beautiful. Hi beautiful.
Can you eat beautiful?
Eat beautiful.
Only eat the beautiful things.
Put them in the...
Only beauty can touch my tongue.
Yeah, then it becomes a scribbled note at the scene of a fucking slaying.
It's super unnerving.
I have to eat beautiful.
I have been commanded to eat beautiful.
Like a hideous ghoul. What was the other one? Eat beautiful. I have been commanded to eat beautiful. Like a hideous ghoul.
What was the other one?
Eat beautiful.
It's something from fucking Seven
when he saws the lady's nose off.
It's because I was beautiful.
He made me eat beautiful.
It's so gross.
There was a...
Oh, I saw one the other day.
It's eat beautiful.
Live good.
You know, things like that.
We're losing adverbs in general because Americans don't use them.
Right, yeah, yeah.
He ran so quick.
Yeah, yeah.
He did good.
He ran quickly.
He did good.
He behaved very professional.
Oh, did they say that?
Yeah.
He was very professional. He behaved very professional. Oh, did they say that? Yeah. He was very professional
or he behaved very professionally.
But they just go,
he behaved very professional
and he ran very quick.
And you're just like...
And I get annoyed with people who go like,
hey man, language changes and evolves.
Yeah, I know that.
But like,
there's a level at which
you need to be taught specific words and strict grammar for things like, you know, the rule of law.
All of society is based on a clear, very, very clear, specific understanding of language. All
the contracts you pretend to read before you just click accept. The point of grammar is to
remove ambiguity, right? Yes. And so if the language you're using is ungrammatical but unambiguous
as well, then fine. Yeah.
But eat beautiful is certainly not
unambiguous. Eat beautiful
is so weird and
badly phrased and clunky in your
head that it's kind of
like a kind of psychic attack.
But you have remembered it, Pierre.
You've given them exactly what they wanted.
You've remembered it. It's worked. We're talking about it now. It's like that, let me You've given them exactly what they wanted. You've remembered it.
It's worked.
We're talking about it now.
It's like that Lemmy sketch.
Give me exactly what he wanted.
You got a reaction out of you.
You got to give him that.
It's awful.
But it seems like a bunch of coked up advertising executives of some kind got together and went,
okay, what are the buzzwords for sushi, right?
What is sushi?
I think it's quite beautiful.
Good, good, good.
And they wrote beautiful.
You eat it.
And they wrote eating.
Why don't we just send this in?
I actually think advertisers don't take coke anymore,
and that's why advertising sucks now.
Oh, like a reverse Mad Men theory.
Yeah.
It's like if they were battered on whiskey in the daytime like they should be.
And just coke up to the eyeballs.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We wouldn't be going all...
That's my most libertarian and authoritarian thing,
is that Coke should be illegal
except for advertisers where it should be compulsory
and forced upon them.
So it's like people can only work in advertising
for like five years.
Like they're...
Because otherwise they just...
Like they've been human trafficked.
Fed drugs to do their jobs right
until they're too old
and have to be left out of the pasture.
It's like in America
where they drug test their employees
but to make sure they've been doing their drugs.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's this version of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah. Discover your Italy is yeah. That's this version of it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Discover your Italy is gross.
It's gross.
What do you think?
Tell us what you think.
Tweet in.
Yeah, yeah.
That kind of thing.
How about no?
But they're doing like tweet in
and it's like quite an involved,
complicated diplomatic news story.
And you just think, why are you?
Or like even on question time,
it's like, and please let us know
what you think at home. It's like, no,
we've got enough fucking nutters in this studio.
We have enough
uneducated
garbage going on
now. We have too much, actually. You just said
you don't have time. Yeah.
Don't add extra time for all the
digital versions of the lunatics in this room.
The lunatics that couldn't even get it
together to get a ticket for the studio.
Yeah, they were too visibly smeared with the blood
of others to be let in.
And now you're letting them get in touch remotely through their phone.
But yes, the relentless tide
of individualism will drown us both, Phil.
Can't wait. I'll drown better.
I'll drown better than you.
Find your way of drowning.
Find your...
Drown beautiful.
Hi.
Remember, the 28th of February is the final deadline for registering as a fucking idiot.
final deadline for registering as a fucking idiot.
You need to send in your forms to register
as a fucking idiot
to HMRC
for some reason.
So make sure, if you don't register
as a fucking idiot, you won't be able
to be a fucking idiot for the next year.
So remember, send in your form
to the government, apply
for status as a fucking idiot.
But, okay. 28th of February.
Fucking idiot.
So what is your most libertarian thought you've had?
I think it would be fine if you had a heavily regulated hallucinogen bar.
And I don't mean like a full vial of LSD straight to the eyeballs or something.
I mean like, can you imagine how cool it would be
if in London somewhere you had like the Shroom Bar
and it had like a lot of security.
Like you couldn't just run into the Shroom Bar
dressed as Dracula and fuck with people.
Yeah.
You know, but it was like a lovely,
it was almost like the chill out room at a festival.
It was all like nice music and waterfalls
and sort of lovely, you know, ambient.
The thing about mushrooms is it's meant to be,
you're meant to do it in nature.
You're meant to do it inside.
Garden center.
Okay.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Like a big garden center.
Like a theme park.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It could be pretty big.
Really slow roller coasters.
Really slow roller coasters.
A small, small world would be great on Loaves of Mushroom.
Oh, my God.
Can you imagine?
Or maybe the mannequins would remind you of some kind of death.
It's quite dark in a lot of the tunnels as well.
We can figure it out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the point is, I think that would be fine.
I don't think that would.
And do you, is it BYOD?
No, it's all very like.
It's all on site.
It's like getting.
It's like bowling shoes.
It's just like a rack of them, right?
I would say that it's like there's a desk and it's like a pharmacy.
Okay, that's fine.
And you have a little bit of paper.
And also they can see what you've done before.
Okay.
So that stops some dipshit coming in age 19 and being like,
I want all the LSD you have in my eyes right now because I'm a big man.
I'm going to play the big man.
It stops that.
They go, no, you can't.
Yeah, you've got to build it.
Legally, you have to start with little baby steps.
Okay.
On like a little one mushroom or whatever it is.
And then they'll be fine.
And you can sort of lead through and it's all like,
it's expensive because of all this overhead or whatever.
Okay.
You know, you can't be doing it every Friday night or something.
But Pierre, you're actually excluding a lot of poorer people and a lot of people of lower means.
Yeah.
So maybe you can devise some sort of...
There'd be a Wetherspoons of shroom pups.
God, can you fucking imagine how depressing it would be?
What would the equivalent be?
Oh, you know, it opens at 7am,
people have a fry-up and a big pint of mushroom tea
and sit there freaking out all day.
But it's cheap.
And you know what?
They take good care of the cinemas that they take over
and the old listed buildings.
Very popular with regulars,
the elderly people on a budget
who want to freak the fuck out.
For a lot of people,
it's a meeting point.
It's a communal hub.
Look, if you are old, Phil,
and you're living on a pension,
and you want to get absolutely out of your nut
and see unicorns on a budget,
it is often your only option.
What was that conversation we had
at a Wetherspoons
in Holloway Road
where we were just
loving the Wetherspoons
we were loving it
and you said
it was just you
me
I think Finn Taylor
maybe
yes
Matt Ewins
couple of comedians
and Ian Sterling
voice of Love Island
in a Wetherspoon
yeah
we were all hanging out
oh that was it
yeah I remember this now
yeah it was like £2.50 for a pint of Brew Dog it was great of Love Island in a Wetherspoon. Yeah, we were all hanging out. Oh, that was it. Yeah, I remember this now.
It was like £2.50 for a pint of BrewDog. It was great.
So cheap. And then we started ordering food
and it was like, wow, I've just ordered like a tall
burger. And we just ended up being there for like two, three
hours. Yeah.
And we were just going around
the table going, this is great. Why don't we come
to Wetherspoons more often? It's so good.
And then you said... And I said, this is great. Why don't we come to Wetherspoons more often? It's so good. And then you said... And I said,
this is how it starts.
You said, you know when you look around at Wetherspoons
and you see a bunch of old fucks
staring blankly
into their pints and you think, I wonder
how they started doing that.
This is it. This is the
moment. This is what we've
just started down a slippery slope.
Yeah, I think that's
definitely it. Also, for the purposes
of balance, the guy who runs Wetherspoons is a
fucking idiot. He's an idiot
and a loon.
Okay, so yours is
a... So I think shroom pubs, that'd
be fine. But like highly
regulated, like you
want the kind of culture of regulation
and discipline that you'd have in, like, Switzerland.
But hallucinogens are rarely a problem drug.
People high on hallucinogens don't really kill each other over shrooms and LSD.
Yeah.
The only time hallucinogens are a problem drug when it's like someone gave this homeless guy a pint of angel dust and gave him a knife and let him loose in America.
Yeah, okay.
Maybe you have a point then.
So that's,
no, but that's a problem,
but that's not going to happen
with this fucking
heavily regulated
playground,
you know?
It's going to be heavily taxed,
so, you know,
it's going to be more expensive
than smoking,
but
it's going to be
a good news
for the exchequer,
feel me?
At the end of the day,
it's going to be
a good news for the exchequer.
Well, my most libertarian thought is,
and I've thought,
believed this for a while,
I think blackmail should be legal.
I don't,
I really don't,
I honestly don't understand.
When I found out blackmail was illegal,
I was honestly surprised.
What?
What are you talking about?
If you have something on someone else,
that's between you two
to figure out.
Why should the state come in to say i know
that person did a naughty thing but it's not to you to use that to your advantage wait wait but
what if it's not something illegal like what well okay so are you imagining that it's like oh they
shot someone uh i know you shot bill yeah okay give me a thousand dollars a month yeah okay ever yeah i
think i should be allowed to do that but what if it's i know that you haven't had an affair uh-huh
it's not legal no it's not legal but it is immoral and that person who's had an affair
should pay for their moral act so you're seeing you're seeing blackmailers in this scenario as kind of arbitrarily assigned
agents of cosmic justice.
Yeah, like vigilantes.
Like Robin Hood style vigilantes. We get money
for
punishing the unjust.
Okay, so it's kind of like a
freelance gig economy
punisher.
Yeah, yeah, that's it, that's it, that's it.
I think this all stems from your love of Batman.
Oh, maybe you're right, actually.
You sort of imagine these people as like a Batman that seeks to keep things between them and the villain.
Yeah, yeah.
But what if it's something else?
Can you convince me that blackmail is right, that blackmail is legal?
What if it's just that someone's gay?
Well, they shouldn't be so self-homophobic that they can't come out and admit it.
So you're punishing them for their internalized homophobia.
But what if they're gay and their family are like, they'd be in danger.
Their family are like super hard right or super religious lunatics. They need to come to terms with their own homophobia and they need to accept this person as…
But the blackmailer is not helping them do that.
The blackmailer just wants to profit from their desire to not deal with it.
But the blackmailer is still punishing the accused for not handling their situation in the best possible way.
Okay, but what about, right,
someone really mean and cruel
blackmails someone who's actually just really unfortunate, right?
So let's say it's someone who is either like secretly gay
but it has to be secret through no fault of their own
and it's really like a problem for them
and they'd be in danger if they admitted it.
Okay, so let's say this person comes from a very hardline religious family they're 16 yeah they're uh vulnerable
yeah they are gay yeah they can't let people and their family know that not because of their own
immaturity but because they'll be in physical they'll be in danger. Yeah. And this is like some, for some reason,
a captain of industry,
like a really rich man,
decided to eke out a few more pounds a month.
To just ruin someone's life.
Okay.
Mr. Burns.
I think that is actually a very valuable kick up the old ass for the 16 year old
to get out of their home and make a new life.
That's not the family for them. That's not the family for them.
That's not the community for them.
I think I have it.
I think I have it.
So would you agree that it's also, therefore, an acceptable thing for –
okay, so let's say that's happening, right?
Evil, you know, the Monopoly man is blackmailing this kid.
Then someone blackmails the Monopoly man, is blackmailing this kid. Mm-hmm. Then someone blackmails the Monopoly man.
With what?
They're doing a terrible, immoral piece of blackmail.
So they're blackmailing them with the blackmail?
Yeah.
Okay.
And they're saying,
I'll tell everyone that you spend your free time
fucking harassing vulnerable gay 16-year-olds,
you old lunatic.
He loses the time for that. You lose yourolds, you old lunatic. He likes to type as well.
You lose your investors, you lose all your advertising.
But the only way that that can be,
the only way that the blackmailer can be blackmailed
is if blackmail is illegal.
And is taboo, right?
Taboo, not illegal.
But then if we made it legal.
If you blackmail someone for being gay, being gay is not illegal.
But then if we made it legal, I if we made it legal I put it to you
that it would be really hard to blackmail people for doing blackmail
because everyone would just be like well tell people
I don't care fair enough
but just because blackmail is legal does not
mean there will be no social repercussions
to being found out to be blackmailing
an innocent gay teenager
there will still be social repercussions to that,
just not legal.
I mean, I don't,
obviously I don't think
it should be legal.
I don't know,
it's sounding like
you're coming around.
No, I'm just interested
in your perspective of like,
it is very libertarian
because it does
what a lot of libertarian stuff does
and it implicitly trusts
the public to self-regulate.
Yeah, which I don't.
I don't trust the public at all.
No, of course not.
But I still, for some reason, I still think that's between you.
But would you be happy to be blackmailed?
Of course not.
But I should have been more careful.
I should have been more careful, and I'm mature enough to...
That is such a disciplined, you know...
You can tell you did a hard science at university kind
of thing you can tell you're just like you know what it's bigger than me pierre if only more
people thought this way that's true it's bigger than this is greater than myself it's very it's
very like uh communitarian in its own way weirdly it's a very libertarian idea but it's quite
communitarian in the sense that like...
It's egalitarian in a way.
Yeah, society will regulate itself and benefit from this.
Even if I am personally damaged by it.
I'm willing to sacrifice my own love of,
I don't know what you'd be blackmailed for,
whatever it is,
blackmailing gay teenagers in your spare time.
Yeah, interesting. Yeah.
Interesting.
Interesting.
I'm going to blackmail you for going to all these mushroom bars.
Yeah. Ever since they banned chewing gum, you've replaced it with mushrooms, and I'm going to blackmail you over it.
Because then you have to decide for yourself what is worth blackmailing and what isn't.
And you could overvalue your blackmail.
what is worth blackmailing and what isn't.
And you could overvalue your blackmail.
You know, you could go in and say,
I'm going to blackmail you for...
I know that you are a man,
but you wear women's underwear.
Yeah.
And I'm going to blackmail you for that.
And the other person goes,
people are actually fine with that.
No one cares.
I'm going to blackmail you,
and I'm going to tell everyone you thought that was a good blackmail.
Unless you give me.
So you can counter blackmail.
It'd be so fun.
But this is now going to be like,
everyone is essentially going to be living the same life
as a high-ranking member of a one-party state.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
That's what life's going to be like now.
It's going to be the death of Stalin for all the time.
So it's like, I'm going to blackmail you for having an affair.
Well, why were you in that hotel? I know your wife it's like, I'm going to blackmail you for having an affair. Well, why were you in that hotel?
I know your wife is at home.
I'm going to blackmail you.
I'm going to blackmail you for being the kind of guy who puts cameras in people's rooms.
So essentially life becomes this harrowing game of higher or lower.
You know what?
Just from that as an economic argument,
how much time would waste
and how much the economy would slow down
with people being busy blackmailing each other,
I can now see why blackmail is illegal.
But maybe it would be a really effective system of wealth transfer
because no one would bother blackmailing a hobo.
Maybe that's why communists love it so much.
Because it's like...
Because it's the great equalizer.
Shame is this great equalizer that...
Yeah.
The richer you are, the more likely you are to be blackmailable successfully.
Yeah, that's a good point.
So it's like taxes.
It's like stratified taxes.
Interesting.
It's like the second that it was announced that I had to sold my company,
everyone was very interested in my porn habits, you know.
That's the society we live in.
Here in blackmail City.
Maybe that would be quite funny,
a series of sequels,
because you know,
Sin City?
Yeah.
Then like,
every city has its own sin.
But otherwise,
everyone's really well paid.
Like smaller hamlets and towns,
like Blackmailsville.
Blackmailsville.
Yeah.
Obviously there's Sin City,
but it's fed by all the commuter towns,
Blackmailsville,
and Bezeltton, Murderton.
It's written Murdertown, but it's pronounced Murderton.
Yeah, Speeding North.
Speeding North and Speeding Central.
Speeding Common is where you get off.
And, of course, grievous bodily harm on the river.
It's all hyphenated.
Hello. No one is available to take your call.
Please leave a message after the tone.
Oh, yes. Hello.
Hello. I'm just calling the IKEA helpline.
Hello, IKEA. Could you help me, please?
I know you're not here, not just because of the answering machine,
but because it is so late at night.
I'm calling because I'm stuck in IKEA,
and that's the other reason I know that you're not available.
Because I can see the help desk is empty because it's three in the morning,
and I can hear the rats.
not, because I can see the help desk is empty because there's three in the morning, and I can hear the rats. Anyway, I only came here to buy some mugs, because I don't know where
to buy mugs normally, because where I live, there's not a lot of shops. There's a pizza
hut, and a Chiquitos, and an Odeon Cinema, and none of them sell mugs, but they're around
a parking lot, and that's it. So I came to the IKEA to buy the mugs but they are around a parking lot and that's it
so I came to the Ikea to buy the
mugs and I've got them
but the problem is that
you've designed it to
I have a condition where I don't understand
arrows, I've never known where they
point because if you think about
an arrow it actually has five
points and I'm not sure which one is
the main one so So, I've been
lost in Ikea all day.
Anyway, I think I'm
going to die here, because
there's a long back holiday weekend,
and that's going to be shut for a while.
And I just want you to,
I thought I'd use this to record my will.
I want to leave my glass
eye
to Alan.
He's always hated it, and I've always hated him.
And so I would like it, he would have to come and pick it up in a little envelope, or perhaps the jar.
In fact, I'll use one of these jars, just take it off my card,
and I'll leave my house to the church down the road.
Not the church. I want to become a part of the church down the road. Not the church. I want you to become a part of the church down the road.
I want the vicar to have to
perhaps go to my house briefly in between things
or something like that. And I leave all
of my food to my cat. And I leave
all of my cat to my food.
Okay, thank you. Goodbye.
Thank you for listening to the
second episode. Really appreciate
it. Please, as
we always say,
like and subscribe to the podcast
and just give really high ratings.
Just a five out of five stars.
At this point, honesty doesn't
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We don't think enough people are listening to two men talk
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About nothing. About nothing in particular.
We don't want your particular. We want you,
we don't want your honesty,
we want your loyalty.
Hmm.
Hmm.
We're like a one-party state.
Absolutely.
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Thank you for listening.
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And let us know your thoughts, your most uncool cool thing, your most libertarian thought of the week, your most authoritarian thought of the week, or just any thought you have on...
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