PBD Podcast - "Facts Create Chaos" - Douglas Murray: UK Riots, Mass Migration, Israel, & The Fall of The West
Episode Date: September 11, 2024Patrick Bet-David sits down with Douglas Murray, a renowned British author and political commentator known for his bestselling books The Strange Death of Europe and The War on the West. ? Murray disc...usses key global issues, focusing on the challenges facing Western societies, particularly in terms of mass migration, cultural identity, and the geopolitical landscape. 📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3Zn2Moj 👕 VT "2024 ELECTION COLLECTION": https://bit.ly/3XD7Bsm 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/3XC5ftN 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/3ze3RUM 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/47iOGGx 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4e0FgCe 📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/3MGK5EE 📕 CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: https://bit.ly/3XnEpo0 👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/4d5nYlU 🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3XC8L7k 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/3XjSSRK 💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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The world is not focused day in, day out on these stories.
The world is not focused day in, day out on these stories.
We don't know how many people are in our countries. We don't even have numbers.
We round to the nearest million on illegals.
Millions?
We've vastly underestimated our appeal
and the number of people who want to come here.
And if we don't have a sensible policy about this,
this century is going to be a real problem. I want to come here. And if we don't have a sensible policy about this, this
century is going to be a real problem. I want to ask you a question.
Please.
Do you think your establishment?
I don't think I'm establishment. I'll explain to you why I don't think I'm establishment.
I'm losing contract. They're playing games. They're making my life a living hell, and
I'm still not caving at them.
The benefit of the migration largely accrues to the migrant, not to the society.
It's not hard to pull up data and say, this is what we're willing to receive.
Well, it actually is hard to pull up data because nobody collects that data.
If I was to pull up right now...
You're not allowed to collect that data in most countries.
Why is that? Logically, none of this makes sense.
America is the most important country in the world.
If Trump gets elected, what do you think happens with those two wars?
He has a clever strategy on this.
Today on the PVD Podcast, I'm excited to sit down with Douglas Murray,
a renowned British author and political commentator best known for his research into the biggest issues facing Western civilization. We talked riots in the UK, Europe's immigration
crisis and the rise of antisemitism and also debated whether the establishment really exists.
Things got really intense. This is an episode you won't want to miss, so let's get right into it. All right, so today we have with us Douglas Murray, New York Times bestseller.
He wrote a book called War on the West.
He's written many other books that have done very, very well that a lot of people talk
about.
They say this is the gold standard for XYZ topic, but then also at the same time, you know my guest today
For whatever reason pisses off guys like Malcolm Gladwell
I mean I can't give you a lot of names that they just get upset when they're around him
I don't know why we'll cover a lot of issues
You know, we were preparing for the issues right before we got on and he doesn't want to talk basketball
I'm disappointed doesn't want to talk hockey nor doesn't want to talk back. I mean, but maybe a little bit about UK
Israel you you know us
Do some cricket yeah
That's what I'll walk out
About it, but it's great to have you here man. We've been trying to do this for a while
I'm glad we finally able to do it
And you know most people who watch you they obviously know who you are what you stand for but I want to get right into it
There's an article that came out.
You said, riots in Britain should be a warning to the US.
And this is about a month ago, August 8th.
And you were talking about in one of the interviews when you gave a stat, and I thought it was
absolutely appalling.
You said since 2008, of the jobs created by the British government since 08
74 percent have gone to people not born in the Britain right in Britain
So one why is this a warning to us and how did Britain get here? It's a very good question the
the issue of
That I touched on that there were these riots recently in Britain, which I predicted
for many years would happen.
One of the reasons they happened, there are lots of reasons, one is that Britain, like
America, has lost control of its borders.
And on top of that, legal migration in the UK is at a historic high, legal net migration.
You just to give some historic context, in the 1990s, legal net migration per year was
in the tens of thousands. When the Conservative government left office earlier this year,
it was a three quarters of a million. And that's net migration.
Legal.
Legal.
Okay.
Plus tens of thousands of people coming illegally on boats and through other means, possibly
in the hundreds of thousands of that one as well.
I mean, I've written about this a lot in the past.
I wrote in my book, The Strange Death of Europe in 2017, about the integration challenges,
the cultural challenges that come when you have migration at this kind of speed.
But what you mentioned there, the piece I wrote in the Spectator and also in the New York Post about that, was
people tend to find that the easiest bit to talk about in a way is the illegal migration.
But what I was showing in that piece was that even if you take the legal migration in a country like Britain, which is very similar to all other Western
European countries, you get this situation where it's got a benefit that's very clear
to the government because the migrants, of course, do add. They add financially, but not in the ways that everybody thinks. So in this particular
case the government can say, we've added X number of jobs into the workforce. But what
they don't say is most of them have gone to people who were not born here. And my view
is it kind of breaks one of the pacts between the electorate and the elected,
which is the electorate vote generally for something they think will make their lives better.
They don't vote for something to make the lives of people who don't yet live in the country better.
And so one of the points I've made for many years about this is if you grow the pie, but you give
the pie to people who
haven't been there for the baking, as it were, you break part of the pact.
And the British electorate are pretty mad about this subject.
And some of them, as I showed last month, are very mad indeed about it.
I think that's a perfectly, it's a problem that's perfectly possible to deal with.
There's no reason why a country like Britain or America cannot have a migration, an immigration
system that brings in talented people who are not going to be any kind of burden on
the welfare state and for whom the benefit of their migration doesn't just accrue to
them.
And that's one of the other things in this area that's very important is that the benefit of the migration
largely accrues to the migrant, not to the society,
in terms of the finance.
The benefit of is more towards a migrant than the society.
So meaning people come in and are winning more than the people
that have been loyal to that country all these years.
So how does that logically make any sense?
How does that logically make any sense to,
not treat your kids as good as you treat someone else's.
I mean, you have to treat everybody equally,
but it's your kids, it's your community, it's your people. Someone has to be sold that idea logically to say,
yeah, that's the right thing we're doing.
I don't think they do actually. I think you can fall into it from habit. Um, there are
lots of things that can make you feel better in the short term as people that are just
not good for us, but they can make you feel better. If, if, if you'd laced my coffee with cocaine or MDMA, I would feel better,
but it wouldn't be good for me.
Well, I wouldn't drink it if I were you because that's what they told me they
were doing that to make you fired up. So just be careful with that. Yeah.
It was a little bit, so it shouldn't be too much of it.
But there are lots of things in the short term could make you feel better,
but not good for you longterm.
Mass migration like that can make you feel better in the short term.
As I say, it does grow the pie a little bit.
It's just that people don't get a share in it.
And the problem with the migration question, this is a problem that the Republicans will
have to deal with here if they win in November, is that none of the answers to this are easy.
I mean, again, it's like a drug.
It's very easy to get into and quite hard to get off.
In fact, very hard to get off.
Take things like in Italy, it's a country I know pretty well.
They had several years ago an election in which the main conservative running said that he was going to deport the one million illegals
Which was estimated there were in Italy. I
Was never clear even if he won the election how he could do that
I don't have to deport a million people later on 11 to 20 million in the u.s
Right, and I have not I have asked politicians in this country exactly same question. How exactly do you do that?
I mean, the government in America, like everywhere, is not that great at doing a lot of things.
How on earth would you pull something like that off?
My point is that when it comes to the issue of migration, what actually happens is it's just so hard
to fix after you've opened the door, but basically nobody
does. I don't yet know of a Western country that has lost control of its immigration like
America has or like Britain has, that has any idea of how to correct it. And I'm not
against immigration per se. I believe that a society should have a sane immigration policy. Allow talented
people in, allow a certain number of people in for humanitarian reasons, in exceptional
circumstances. This benefits the society. But it doesn't benefit it if instead of being
a sort of trickle of a tributary into the society as a whole, it's a flood, which you
then can't do anything about. The reason,
I mean, I haven't written about this that much since the strange death of Europe. One
reason was that I had said almost everything I could say about it, but in terms of warning.
And although a lot of politicians in America and Europe read the book, I was under the
impression that they didn't know what to do about it.
One politician said to me on the continent in Europe,
this is a very depressing book for me to read.
I said, you should have tried writing it.
These are really big problems in the 21st century.
And as you know, they're made particularly big,
not just by the inability of Western leaders
to do anything about it, but by the fact that 50 years ago it was hard to get to America
from Venezuela.
50 years ago it was hard to get to Europe from Sub-Saharan Africa.
Today travel is cheaper and easier than it's ever been and everybody knows how other people
in the world are living.
I mean, that's one of the things
that these devices we all have, we've underestimated.
Everywhere I go in the world,
you mean the poorest township in South Africa,
like everyone's got a device in their hands
and they can see what life could be like.
And even if it's a life that we might not regard
as being great ourselves,
it's a lot better than a lot of the world.
So I think in general, the liberal democracies, the capitalist countries, we've vastly underestimated
our appeal and the number of people who want to come here.
And if we don't have a sensible policy about this, this century is going to be a real problem.
Well, let me let me ask this question. This is the part that's kind of confusing to me because when you're recruiting people
to a company, the way you filter them out is either by a degree, right?
And you'll say, okay, let me see what level of education you got.
I went to Harvard.
All right.
I went to UC Berkeley.
I don't know if I'm going to touch Berkeley right now.
I went to Stanford. I went to Penn. I want to Duke. I want to USC. I want to UCLA.
Okay, you did a four-year program. Yeah, I got my MBA. Where'd you get your MBA from?
I got it from Michigan. I got it from, you know, Penn. You filter based on who you think
is gonna be most productive for your company and you offer the benefits and you welcome
them in, right? If you are interviewing somebody for CFO and you offer the benefits and you welcome them in.
If you're interviewing somebody for CFO, you're going to discriminate against somebody that
doesn't have a college degree, doesn't have a high school degree.
You don't care what skin color that person is, you don't care what their religion is,
you care the fact that this person is not the most qualified person to be a CFO of a
company.
And I'm willing to pay you $250,000 a year
for the CFO job, whatever it is, if you're experienced,
but you don't have it.
No one's offended.
It's very much a good, we have no issues with that, right?
I may say, so Douglas, you're applying to be the CTO
of our company, yes.
What makes you think you're qualified to be the CTO?
Why was a former CTO at Uber?
How long were you there?
Six years.
Wow.
That may overcome even where you got your college degree from
because why would Uber keep you for six years?
So you can still hire based on data, background,
all of that, right?
Why should countries not apply the same method
of research, background, standards,
to bring the best people to their country.
Why wouldn't they use that same logic?
Because it doesn't work at scale.
That's my view.
I mean, it should be able to work,
but it doesn't at the moment.
The work you would put in to research somebody
for a major position in your company
is simply not the work that any government can do
about the number of people coming into a country
like America at the moment.
Most people think the size of the state
is a little bloated at the moment.
Can you imagine how much bigger the state would have to be
to do that kind of background research
on everyone walking across the southern border?
I don't think you could do it.
So, okay, so one you're saying is bandwidth. Okay, fine. But let me ask you this. Could
I not with all the data that I have, statistics that I have, for example, I had Dominik Tarczynski
here three weeks ago. Okay. And I don't know if you know who he is. He's with the EU parliament
two term and he's with the Polish, Poland Parliament two terms.
That's who he is, maybe you recognize the face.
Yeah, yeah, of course he's in law and justice.
Yes, he is.
And we sat there, we spoke.
He's from Poland and he comes in and he's the guy that once he was being interviewed,
he says, we will not let one, not one.
It was with Kathy Newman.
Yes, it was.
It was with Kathy Newman.
She says, a lot of people call you a racist, right?
They call you a racist for X, Y, Z, Rob.
I don't know if you have the clips.
If the audience doesn't know which one it is,
I'm sure you know which one it is.
You know, he says, I'm not gonna let not one person in.
Not one person can come in here, right?
Okay, great.
And he's sitting here.
I said, so tell me statistics about Poland.
And he says, lowest unemployment rate out of all the EU countries,
27, lowest in crime, lowest in rape,
and lowest Muslim population, okay?
Out of everybody.
And this was the clip, if you want to play it
so the audience can know which one we're talking about.
Go ahead, Rob.
How many refugees has Poland taken?
Zero.
And you're proud of that?
If you are asking me,
if you're asking me about Muslims illegal immigration,
none, not even one will come to Poland,
not even one if it's illegal.
We took over 2 million Ukrainians who are working,
who are peaceful in Poland.
We will not receive even
one Muslim because this is what we promised.
But I asked not about illegal immigrants, I asked about refugees. And Junko, the Commission
President, says that you're racist. You sound proud of the fact that you haven't taken any
refugees.
Of course, because this is what our people are expecting from our government.
That's number one.
This is why our government was elected.
But this is why Poland is so safe.
This is the reason why we had not even one terrorist attack.
Look at the streets in Poland and we can be called populists, nationalists, racists.
I don't care.
I care about my family and about my country.
So you watch that, right? So a country can say statistically from what region gives me the
least amount of crime. Any country can pull up data and say, okay, Muslims that come from XYZ
country, they're civil, they're great, we'll welcome them. Muslims that come from here, no. Our most crime comes from here. Christians from this place, Jews from this
place, Buddhists from this place. It's not hard to pull up data and say this is what
we're willing to receive.
Well, it actually is hard to pull up data because nobody collects that data.
If I was to pull up right now-
You're not allowed to collect that data in most countries.
Why?
In the US we can.
You're saying in Europe most countries you can't?
In most countries you're not allowed to collect that data.
Why?
Is that considered discrimination?
Because the facts would be what Kathy Newman would call racist.
I mean, for instance, I was in Poland probably last about 18 months ago and they had a huge
influx of course of Ukrainians, Ukrainian women, primarily since the beginning of the war.
Now, I can't remember how many it is,
it's more than a million, two million I think.
That's a lot of people from relatively small,
well, relatively small by American standards,
country like Poland to deal with.
How is it not led to suicide bombings, outbreaks of rapes and so on and so forth?
Because Ukraine to Poland is not that big of a leap in cultural terms.
And the Polish are, you know, happy to, relatively happy to welcome in their neighbors in this distress
because they are their neighbors and the Poles know that this could happen to them. And they'd hope that if this happened to them, their neighbors and the polls know that this could happen to them
and they'd hope that if this happened to them, their neighbors would help them.
That's quite different to say Sweden taking in large numbers of people from Somalia,
because we know that, I mean, Somalia which has had terrible, terrible civil wars and violence
for many years now, this is not the fault of the people in that benighted country, but
it's inevitable that if a large number of people from Somalia, particularly young men,
land in your country, they will bring a certain level of violence which the Ukrainian women
moving into Poland will not bring. Now that's common sense, but it's also difficult. And the desire, as Kathy Newman shows there, to simply say, well, that's racist, or the
facts are racist, is overwhelming.
And at the moment, that still works in terms of shutting down any of this discussion.
I mean, I always say there are only three things with immigration that really matter.
Speed, numbers, and identity. I always say there are only three things with immigration that really matter.
Speed, numbers, and identity.
Speed, numbers, and identity.
You can integrate large numbers of people relatively fast if the identity is pretty close.
You can integrate a small number of people with a very different identity if
it's a small number and the speed is slow. If you do fast large numbers with a very different
identity you've not got a hope of integrating. You've just not got a hope. Why would they?
They can live in communities with other people who are like them, and they don't need to
be part of your society. And if you have no punishment, as it were, for not integrating,
then yeah, there's no incentive. And one other thing, so remember what we're dealing with
in the 21st century is a lot of people leaving very benighted countries where the standard
of living is just horrific by
our standards, and when they come into societies like this one, Western societies in general,
you know, even, you know, particularly with welfare state, you can have a much better
standard of living you could dream of in the country you've been from, you've come from.
We don't know what to do about that. We just don't know what to do about it.
America in particular, but Western Europe as well, is too attractive.
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Of course it's too attractive.
I mean, but that doesn't mean she's for everyone, right?
You know, a woman can be too attractive,
but that doesn't mean she needs to have 50 husbands.
You know what I'm saying?
This is true.
A building can be too attractive,
but you know, only one family gets to buy it and live
in it.
You know, so we can do that part and allow certain people to come in.
But again, the background goes to finding a way to identify a pattern of what produces
kind of like back in the days, you know how they used to say, you know, kids who used
to come to college in US in the 80s or the 90s, they would stay.
Then it flipped. They used to come here,
come to college and then go back home. Why are they leaving? After we educated them with our system,
why are we letting these guys go? Let's find a way to keep them here, right? So retention went down.
Well, who do we want to keep? If we just educated you, why are we giving you back to your country?
Well, if the person has paid their way in it, then you can argue that a lot of the university
education system in the West is a sort of money- then you can argue that a lot of the university education system
in the West is a sort of money-making scheme.
There are a lot of universities that just make money from foreign students, charge them
absolute top whack and they don't care.
So how do you solve this?
How do you solve this?
I mean, in Europe, you're saying you can't get the data, right?
When I'm looking at some of the numbers, Rob, if you want to pull up like, you know, even with Tommy Robinson, he's talking about
what's going on in UK, walking around,
getting into fights left and right.
I typed in Europe's largest Muslim population.
Pew Research, okay?
And let me see what year this is.
So this is, I think this is as recent,
oh, this is super old.
Rob, type in Europe's Muslim population what
it looks like see if we have one from 2024 on what the largest you won't have
accurate data for 2024 but what's the most recent one you'll get accurate is
it the 2015 one from peer research or well if you if you take oh well there's
one thing I'd like to see how you break that one down. 50.3, like where it's at?
Take the UK census, it happens every 10 years.
The last one was eeked out bit by bit because the authorities were rather worried that the public would leap to certain conclusions about the data.
So the data had to be... Rob, I just sent just send it to you Rob if you can pull that up. So this one I see this is from 2015
Okay, so we're talking nine years ago because if you're saying
This is at the start. This is at the start of migration crisis. I wrote about in strange stuff of Europe
Yeah, so this one number one. Germany was number one
4.76 million if you want to zoom in
France's second, 4.71.
UK third, 2.96.
This is pre-Brexit.
Italy 2.2, Bulgaria 1 million,
Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Greece, Austria, right?
That are coming in.
You know, if you see the numbers, is there a pattern,
I guess you wouldn't be able to pull that off
if you can't specify, is there a pattern, I guess you wouldn't be able to pull that off if you can't specify, is there a pattern of trying to see any kind of trend or data of what types of migrants
coming in or creating a positive, net positive valuation tool?
No, nobody wants to do that.
Why wouldn't you want to do that?
Because then you might get some results you don't want.
I mean, for instance, why don't we have crime stats for Germany, for instance, which is one of the countries that taken the largest number of migrants in the last decade.
There's no crime stats for Germany?
You can't break them down by demographic.
Who thinks that's a good idea?
Do it for France. That's a really interesting one.
Crime Stats for France.
Okay.
Buy demos is what you're asking.
Can you see if you can find that Rob?
Number of violent crime offenses in France 2016 to 2023.
Okay.
Damn.
So it shows the growth but it doesn't show.
Rob, I have it from Statista.
I just sent you the link if you can pull that up.
And you'll notice a good amount of climb, almost 100% in the last eight years.
Okay, if you have that right there, Rob.
That's what it's shown to 2023.
Something happened.
What did happen?
Well, we don't know because we don't have the facts.
Are you trying to tell me that no one on the conservative side
has the brass or the ability to get in there and find ways to get the data not even independently research organizations extremely hard to do I mean there are there are groups of migration watch in the UK has tried to do some of it
You can't collect it's very hard to collect crime stats
particularly when as in most countries on the continent the identities of the
The accused are kind of hidden from the public. There's a tent
There's a trend in in the reporting for instance in Germany of any crime that you don't give the name of the accused are kind of hidden from the public. There's a trend in the reporting,
for instance, in Germany of any crime that you don't give the name of the person. You
do first name and then letter. Same thing in the Netherlands. Now, of course, you can
tell a certain amount quite a lot from the first name. By the way, this is, well, that's
just lingered on this for a second. There is a reason for this. That's my point.
There's a reason why you can't drill down into this.
Look at, if you, I don't know, if you want to do one that's been very controversial and
very obvious in recent years, which is the increase in rapes in Sweden.
This is an enormously toxic issue. There you go. Increased from 21.
Increased from 20.
It went up from 16,000 to 24,000.
This is in an area which people should really care about.
I mean, rape stats is something that is very important to collect properly.
It's one of the most under reported crimes.
A lot of women don't feel able to come forward.
You should have a society in which people can come forward.
You should have a society in which people can come forward.
You should have a society in which people can come forward.
You should have a society in which people can come forward. You should have a society in which people can come forward. thing that is very important to collect properly. It's one of the most under-reported crimes.
A lot of women don't feel able to come forward. You should have a society in which people
are willing to come forward, and you should have a society in which when an increase in
rape happens or sexual assault, the society worries about it because something's going
wrong. For instance, if it's that the men who are already in the society are suddenly
really getting into raping, you would want to find out what was causing them to do that.
But it's possible that that's not the explanation.
But you can't really know because we don't have data, it won't be collected,
and it probably never will be.
Who in their right mind thinks that's a good idea to not pull up data?
That's one second.
Why aren't the guys on the opposite side doing their part to pull up, you know?
We don't know how many people are in our countries.
We don't even have numbers.
We round to the nearest million on illegals in relatively small countries.
To millions?
We round to millions in countries about illegals, never mind on to legals.
About the best, most reliable data you can get on I think any Western country on this
is the census that happens every 10 years in the UK.
Even that is not that easy to trust because it's massively under reporting people in very high density immigrant areas,
who I do not believe in their entirety respond to the form from the US data authorities,
the UK data authorities that comes every 10 years. I'm pointing out that this is just
information we don't have. And when you say, well, why wouldn't we have that data? I'm saying because the data could be dangerous. It could be dangerous for the society. It would be used by some
bad people for sure in a bad way. There would definitely be bigots and racists and pot stirrers
who would, you know, as with all dangerous things, pick it up and run with it.
You might also say it's the right of the public to know, but my view is that for a long time,
the view has been the public can't be trusted with the facts, so don't give them the facts.
Public cannot be trusted with the facts if they don't give them the facts?
The public cannot be trusted with the facts, so don't give them the facts? The public cannot be trusted with the facts, so don't give them the facts.
Why? If you give it to them, what do they do with it?
They make the general argument, they kind of expose the lie.
We don't know, they could do anything. I mean, we've made, I made this point after
the recent riots in Britain. I said, when you have mass legal and illegal migration
at this speed and at this rate and with people from such a different identity.
One of the things you do is you move a very, what was a very high trust society into a very low trust society.
Okay.
And that can happen from stats like this or it can simply happen on who do you give a pound to when they're begging on the streets.
So if I look at this here, number of illegal crossings between border crossings
This is the one I just sent in the EU from nine 2009 to 2022. Mm-hmm. You'll see that
Mm-hmm
You know where the 1.8 million in 2015. Yeah
By the way, which was vastly undercounted in 2015. I was touring around all the places that the migrants were coming in, and the
camps and refugee camps in southern Europe, and the Greek islands and Italian islands
south of Italy, and so on.
I followed all this firsthand.
I saw the boats all coming in, and the authorities greeted the boats and helped them in.
It was partly, I mean, there was partly a humanitarian catastrophe, of course, coming
from the Syrian civil war.
But the beginning it was we should allow in Syrian refugees, which there's an argument
for for sure.
But very soon, as I saw with my own eyes, people were coming from all over Africa, the
Middle East, the Far East.
I met people who were from Asia, who were from relatively
well off backgrounds, but they saw that the borders were open and so they came. And of
course, they're still in Europe. None of them have been removed.
Okay, let me ask you a crazy question. So who has more power and influence, UK or the
entire Jewish community?
What the entire Jewish community in the UK?
No, worldwide.
Well, the British government, I thought,
I mean, if you take out the Israeli government,
because they've gotten all the benefits of a state,
but sure, I mean, the British government is a-
Okay, who is-
It's the largest economy in the world.
So fifth largest economy in the world.
So they, so who, who, okay.
Because this is where it kind of takes me.
You know how in the Middle East, Iran had, you know,
the Shah, Shah of Iran, and they succumbed
to the puppet of the West, right?
Until they realized he's a big boy now.
He's no longer a puppet.
You can't control him.
And he became his own man. Then when he did, they found
a way to get a guy who was living in France.
When you say they found a guy.
Whoever the establishment may be, whether it's US, UK, they found a guy that is living
in France, Khomeini. Khomeini goes to Iran, the Shah falls.
Sure. Iran's been a mess for 45 years since the fall.
But that wasn't Britain and France.
That wasn't America and France that did that.
I wouldn't know. I didn't say no. He lived in France.
He lived in France and Khomeini very, very unwisely.
The French authorities allowed him to fly to Tehran.
That, by the way, is one of the flights I most wish had never taken off.
Yeah, you and I both.
But where I'm going with it is, did that happen intentionally
because they were getting too scared of Iran becoming too powerful and they wanted to kind
of cause a fall? And this was their way of saying, here you go, kind of like, go to Russia, right? The argument that is made where when the Tsar, Nicholas II, he's in Russia, he has the power,
generation, family, can't be controlled.
You can't tell him what to do.
He wasn't a puppet of anybody.
But then, hey, maybe Lenin could be a puppet.
So let's bring the Bolshevik in. Some of the arguments that are made. What? Who makes that argument?
Hear me out with the argument. I make it here for you. This is where I'm trying to
go with this. Who in the right mind think this is a good argument to have this
happen to EU? Who would allow so many migrants coming into EU for it to lose
its identity? On what Richter scale, on what argument is that a good idea?
Like even the financial guys, the money guys, Wall Street.
A lot of times you say, who has the most power in the world, right?
Well, it's really, you know, billionaires.
Okay.
It's really the virtual governments.
Okay.
It's really the presidents.
Presidents?
All right, maybe. But let's go to the guys that have the money,
who everybody criticizes that gets to buy people go to the people of money.
Why would they let this happen to you?
Well, first of all,
well I think we might have a disagreement of the history of the shahs fall and
of indeed the Roman office fall.
I don't think anyone orchestrated that, as
it were. Revolutions happen. Just like I said, I wish that the plane had not...
So you don't think anybody was welcome to follow you around?
No, no, hang on. Just as I said that I'd wish that the plane had not taken off from Paris
with Romania and landed safely, I wish that the train had not left the Finland station
carrying Lenin.
It was a very big mistake to allow Lenin,
obviously to get back to Russia.
Historic mistake.
I mean, there is always a simple explanation of history,
which is somebody is guiding it.
And that is, and I don't, generally speaking, I don't believe that. I might just as a historian having
written about very complicated events in the past, my observation is, you know,
would that there were a guiding hand that was able to do everything but that
there isn't? If I don't want that to be. But there just isn't. There is no one
force that's capable of doing something like that. The Romanovs had problems that have been growing for two centuries at least.
The Shah had problems have been growing for decades.
And then they meet the revolutionary force of somebody as evil as Lenin or Khomeini.
And as you know, I mean both of these men were,, I mean, they were death forces, but they were,
they were forces of nature, extraordinary evil men, but they had followings, and they could get people to follow them. And they could do these terrible things and turn over a whole country
into civilization. They were able to do that. I don't think that happened because of anyone in
I don't think that happened because of anyone in Washington, D.C. Really?
Yeah, I don't.
I mean, of course, there's always an argument about Mossadegh earlier on.
But no, I mean, I think it's consoling to people.
I think there's a consolation to thinking that when these things happen, they happen because somebody always in the West, by the way,
orchestrated that to happen. I think it's a thing of consolation. For instance, if the Western countries wanted
endless access to Iranian oil supplies,
wasn't a good idea to let Homanian.
If wasn't a good idea to let Homanian. If people thought that the Romanovs were a problem,
who on earth would have thought the Bolsheviks were the solution? Churchill famously said
that this was like allowing a basilisk to be released in the society. But going back
to what you asked about Europe, again, when you say where power resides, power
resides in lots of different places, and it oscillates.
Sometimes a parliament, for instance, has a lot of power.
Sometimes a single member of parliament has a lot of power.
Sometimes they don't.
Sometimes the parliament doesn't have power.
Sometimes like in the age of social media, social media has power and overtakes the power of politicians and politicians have to cower from the social
media. At other times, it's the other way around. Social media companies can be very
vulnerable to legislation from government. So there's never a fixed, I don't think there's
ever a fixed-
Do you think that's a naive way of thinking?
Well, obviously, I don't think my own way of thinking is naive.
Well, listen, I'm having this conversation with you because I'm curious to know
how you process this part because logically none of this makes sense. Uh,
let me go back to when you're saying, do you believe there's such a thing as an
establishment, a non anti establishment? Do you believe there's such a thing as,
you know,
the groups of people of money and power behind closed doors that, you know, are the puppet masters who feel they can control and influence elections, societies, countries, wars.
I think I think it's a low resolution way of thinking.
Very low.
I think that again, it comes down to the nature of the world being extremely complex always, much more complex in this era where we get insight into things we would never have got
insight into before. The ability on our devices to find out information we would never have
been allowed to find out before. And to hear opinions we could never have heard before.
There is, in my view, a temptation, there are many temptations in this era, but
one of them is to see specific guiding hands in certain places because it is a consolation
to us to help us through what otherwise looks like something too close to chaos. So let
me just take one of the words you use, establishment.
Do I believe there is an establishment? No, there are lots of establishments. Lots. There
are financial establishments, for sure. There are political establishments, for sure. There's
a Democrat establishment, there's a Republican establishment, there are different establishments
within each of these parties.
For sure, but when you say an
establishment, I want to like, which one, what, who are we talking about? Do we think
that Donald Trump and Bill Clinton get together with Bill Gates and agree
on anything? No. No, I don't think that's the community. But you think about in
a company, take a 5050 billion company, right?
You could be a director in doing the work
and you're doing your part.
Then you could have VPs that are newer VPs that have come,
they're hungry, they're doing their things, right?
Then you got C-suite executives
that have been with the company for 28 years.
Quite frankly, they don't wanna fricking work anymore.
I mean, I've worked with a company called AIG,
and I did business with them for many years,
great experience, loved it,
but the more and more I got in, the more I realized
there was an establishment C-suite executives
that they didn't wanna work as hard as the others,
but they had been around so much
and they knew the dead bodies everywhere,
that they knew how to control some people,
to scare the shit out of them, to say,
hey man, if you talk about that to anybody, you're going to hurt me and because
of that, I'm going to make sure XYZ said about you.
And the establishment of executives in a company much smaller have a lot of control for that
company to expand.
So you'll see a lot of big companies getting smaller because of the establishment C-suites
at the top who have been around for 30 years that no longer want the startups to grow they
no longer want to hear about the shit about dreams and what if one day and
what if one day and imagine one day and I'm gonna move up the corporate ladder
I'm gonna one day be the CTO the CEO I'll be quiet already dude let me just
freaking go golf three days a week that is the establishment of a company filled
with executives that can prevent this company
from growing.
This is why new companies come out, startups, and they destroy the establishment because
they establish C-suite executives.
That's what I mean as the establishment on a smaller scale.
But that C-suite establishment could, there are many ways to look at it, but there are
at least two ways to see it,
which is one, maybe that C-suite establishment does exist, and it does in lots of companies,
it can. And also, maybe they're very vulnerable. And I can think of lots of cases where the
people who, as you say, are basically checked out, are very vulnerable. They may know where
the bodies are buried, but that doesn't but that doesn't protect you for all time.
Or they're at the top of the C-suite in their company, but then the whole company is eaten
by somebody else who comes along.
I mean, you must have seen that plenty of times as well.
But that happens because of the establishment.
So that's one of the points I'm trying to make to you is, for example, in Congress,
okay, we don't have term limits in America. New guy comes out, he says, I'm going to be a
congressman and I want to make some change. And he goes in, oh shit, that guy just scared the crap
out of me. I don't care. I'm going to stand up to him and her. Nancy doesn't scare me. Chuck doesn't
scare me. McConnell doesn't scare me. Oh my God, I just lost and I didn't get re-elected. Hey, I'm so sorry.
But can that, yeah, but again, that can happen and the opposite can happen.
It does happen though. It's not about it can happen. It does happen.
Okay, let's say it does happen.
The establishment does do that and control it. So all I'm saying is, where I'm going
with this is the following. Do some people in the establishment, okay.
I don't like this use of the word the establishment.
Well, I'll use it. You can use a different word for it. I'll use it. Do some people in the establishment, okay? I don't like this use of the word the establishment. Well, I'll use it.
You can use a different word for it.
I'll use it.
Do some people who are the establishments who are using their tenure for being around
and they know where the bodies bury, can they sometimes make some decisions that they think
is the right decision that end up destroying what they once built
or what they once helped grow?
Can they negatively impact a society, a country, a company?
Before I answer, I want to ask you a question.
Please.
Do you think you're establishment?
I don't think I'm establishment.
I'll explain to you why I don't think I'm establishment.
I'll give you my, who I was, my background.
I know your background.
I just say, where you are now. Why aren't you establishment? I'm not at you my, who I was. My background. I know your background. I just say, where you are now?
Why aren't you establishment?
I'm not at all part of establishment.
I don't take money from anybody.
I don't take sponsorship.
Sure.
I don't have to, now hear me out.
Hear me out, let me tell you this.
So I got a call from a guy.
So, and I won't give the name,
but you know who this guy is.
Maybe you would know who this guy is.
In the game of agents, managers, representatives,
he's at the top, okay?
So hey, listen, if there's ever an interest
in wanting to have us represent in the sale
or in the partnership of the podcast
being with XYZ company to get a hundred million here,
a couple hundred million here, whatever it is,
you gotta kinda be careful to not have those types
of guests on anymore.
I got this call.
I'm just telling you, I got this call.
Here's how the call went.
I said, here's the difference.
I'm a self-made guy.
I made my own money.
I came up, had a 1.8 GPA. I don't have a four-year, I don't have a two-year. I'm an own money. I came up, had a 1.8 GPA.
I don't have a four year, I don't have a two year.
I'm an army guy.
I love numbers.
I'm very good with numbers and I love people.
I got into financial services.
Somehow someway in the insurance industry they couldn't stand me because I was not a
golfer.
I'm in an insurance industry.
I've golfed 18 holes in my life maybe five times.
I can't stand golf.
I'm not that guy. I'm not that guy. I don't have the patience for golf. So I will carry
for you and we can have a nice cigar, but I'm not going to sit there and golf with you.
That's not me. So nothing about my profile of being in the financial industry was the
ideal guy. Then there is disruption. Then we have market share then we grow now we have enemies behind closed doors
I'm losing insurance carriers. I'm losing contract
They're playing games the guys that have been around for 30 years who have a nice sweet little business
Don't like a guy like me coming in
They're making my life a living hell and I'm still not caving at them
And then eventually we sold the business and then I came to start my own company now.
We're media consulting, all the stuff that we're doing.
Yesterday we had an event, Palm Beach Convention Center,
we had nearly 6,000 people in the room.
We had Dwayne DeRocque Johnson,
people showing up from 100 plus countries,
executives, founders, private equity guys, VCs,
and they're coming in and we're not sitting there saying,
hey, I owe this guy, he better do this
or else that guy, I don't do well with this.
All I'm saying is, you ask me the question, I'm giving you the establishment side, I sit
and I think about who the hell, even with the people that have the money, the only way
this could be happening is because somebody's allowing for this to happen.
Somebody at the top has to be allowing for this to happen because they think it may be a good idea or there's a deceptive idea, reasoning behind it.
Okay, let me first of all, say again, when it comes to your own example, I can imagine
somebody as with me, accusing you of being part of an establishment.
An establishment.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. And the establishment because I what I'm saying is I don't think
that that there is the establishment.
I think there is.
I think there are establishments.
No, no, but I think.
And I know, by the way, what people say about this, oh my God, he's covering up for the
establishment.
I just don't, as I say, I think that there are different establishments and different
gatekeepers in different industries, and you just described your experience with one.
But it'd be perfectly impossible if I was a guy
who was down on his luck somewhere in the US
and I wasn't on the ladder yet and I wasn't doing so well,
I might well look at your CV and think,
oh, he's part of the establishment.
Or an establishment, at least.
An establishment is different than the establishment.
Again, somebody could easily say,
end up pushing you that way.
My point is I just don't think that the parameters on this.
If you're trying to teach me English, you're right.
If you go on the English route to say here's the-
Why I'm going the logic route too.
No, it's not the logic route.
Where I'm going with it is different
than the exact definition.
Yes, this is our building, this is our establishment.
It is.
Yes, this is our restaurant, it's my establishment.
Yes, this is our comedy club, it's our establishment.
Yes, but the establishment is behind closed doors
No, but I'm saying you have power of some kind if we're gonna play that game then you have power
I'm not at that level though. You're talking about of course
There are different levels of power and different levels of influence
What I'm saying is that and you gave the example pre-revolutionary Iran pre-revolutionary Russia
The Romanovs seem to have all the power. They were the establishment. Turned out it didn't do them any good. You don't think US Kissinger, UK MI6 CIA
had a role in causing the Shah to fall
and not send help when he needed it,
when the revolution is happening,
when Kissinger promised him he would?
You don't think anybody played a role in causing the fall?
We can get into the...
I think that you will probably know your history of 79
better than me, although you were also not, um, how old were you in a 70?
I was born in 70, but I was born in, I lived there 11 years, 10 and a half years. Yeah.
Um, and of course in Iran, Iran is of course one of the countries in the world that if
you're British is most flattering because the Iranians still think the British run the
world. It's very nice. Very nice for Britain.
You did for many years. You had British petroleum, you had the oil, the whole contract.
But there's always been a lot of belief in the sort of hidden hand of the power of the
Brits. To this day, a lot of the Iranian press still suggests that America is only doing
what Britain tells it to do. Again, deeply flattering to anyone who's British, but not true. I don't think that, I don't see, I'm trying to get
to is, no, I do not think there is an establishment in the West that is capable of doing the things
that you suggest.
Who is capable of causing mayhem? Which establishment is capable of causing mayhem in EU that is
not just this whole thing happened accidentally?
Again I just resist a sort of low resolution analysis of what is a very complex and potentially
lethal problem. I would love it if it was the case, and I've had so many people who've tried to argue this
to me since Strange Death came out.
I'd love it if it was the case that there was a document from the establishment in the
EU that explained its border policies in the last 60 years, let's say.
There just isn't.
I'll tell you what I think could happen.
Very, very straightforward human explanation.
The borders started to open after the Second World War.
They invited in what were called guest workers, the gastro-biter programming Germany, mainly
people from Turkey.
They asked them in, invited them in, because there was a need to reconstruct Europe after
the war.
There was an assumption, Angela Merkel herself said this in 2010, there was an assumption
that the migrants would go home after they'd arrived.
There was every mistake possible was made, but, and in retrospect, we just say how the hell did they make this mistake?
I mean who could have guessed that a Turkish man moving to Hamburg, Berlin, might want to meet a
nice woman and if he met a nice woman might want to have nice children, if he had nice children
might want a nice house and a nice house and so on, and might not want to go back to Turkey. And that's one of the better countries that people enter Europe
from. They didn't see it coming. They didn't predict that. And they slowly, as the decades
went on, lost control. And every single time, as a famous politician in the UK said, every
single time somebody inherited office, they saw all of these problems they were inheriting, and they could see the problem was getting worse and worse and worse. And
they knew that they were less and less capable of dealing with it. And they knew that they
should leave it for their successors because this was too difficult to deal with today.
Now, tell me that when we come to the case of the US, something similar isn't happening.
What has been the story of illegal migration in recent decades? Always, always
the push to say, look, we're not going to be out, and this is from Reagan, and this
is from everyone, the dreamers. Why was this framed as the dreamers? Because always it
is, look, we've lost control of the border. Millions of people have come in illegally.
Nobody has controlled it. It wasn't that Dr Kissinger or Hillary Clinton or anyone else wanted this to be the case. Although there are some politicians, I should
say, who do like the idea of utter chaos, and we can come back to that if you want.
But every single time it was, these people are in our country already. What do you want
to do? Keep them in the black market? Keep them working illegally, keep them in this shadowy shadow economy,
or should we just say every say 10 years amnesty?
It's so much easier to do the latter.
If we were sitting here and we were talking about amnesty
and you say, why not get these people
into the legal job market?
And why not let's get them paying taxes?
And the easiest thing in the world is to say, that makes sense. Yeah, let's get them into the economy. Of
course, the harder one, the restrictionist argument is every time you do the amnesty,
you give the thumbs up to another X million people to cross the southern border. Look,
it's just easier for them. It is much easier for them than to go back to the example I
gave from Italy,
putting a million people on buses and trains
and sending them back to North Africa
and from North Africa to every country they've come from.
This is just so much bigger than the idea
that there's somebody who wants it to happen
and that's why it happened.
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Okay, so you wrote a book titled The Madness of Crowds, right?
You got gender, race and identity.
We may differ here, but that's the part of conversation.
There's the risk of me being wrong, you know right, and vice versa, or neither one of us
being either one of them, an audience that's there and agrees with you or with me.
Who do you think is more influential?
The loud, screaming, crying, complaining crowd, the mob, or in my case, you're not going to like this word, but I'm going to use
the word and you can define it any way you want and you can say it's elementary, but a powerful
minority of folks who are working behind closed doors to keep control and influence around the
world. Meaning, you got two guys, right?
Say you're a governor, you're a speaker of the house,
you're a senator, you're a president.
What's more scary for you?
Is it 10,000 of us marching in the streets saying,
you're the worst leader, you're an anti,
you're an Islamist, you're a horrible human being,
this guy doesn't deserve to be in office.
Does that have more power? Or the guy from the top and says,
hey Douglas, here's what we need you to do tomorrow. You're going to get in front of the crowd.
You're going to do this, you're going to do that. Or else you're not going to get funded for your
re-election. Nothing's going to happen to you. Who do you think has more power?
It would depend absolutely each time and always on the circumstance. Absolutely each and every time.
absolutely each time and always on the circumstance, absolutely each and every time. Look, sometimes the crowd breaks through, sometimes it fails to break through.
Sometimes if there is anyone in the position you describe, sometimes there are people who
have power.
Sometimes you can, you know, one of the interesting things we've learned in America in recent
years is, you know, sometimes you can pull a lever and it turns out nothing happens. There are lots of situations where the person who is
assumed to have power feels effectively powerless. I mean, one of the reasons I am not a, as
I say, low resolution, there is a explanation for everything, there's always a person or
a document or someone or a secret tape is because my experience of watching politicians and others
in many countries is I'm always struck by the extent to which
they feel incapable of doing things, because there are things
in the system again, left and right, you see the same thing,
things in the system that just don't work, things that are
broken, things that are meant to do one thing and do another.
But when you get to the points, as you say, where the crowd can break through, who knows?
We have lived in recent years through several big things in America where the crowd got
damn close to breaking through and sometimes did.
What happened in the summer of 2020 when Nancy Pelosi, Chuck
Schumer and everyone else at the top of the Democrat Party is on their knees wearing some
Native American shawls staying on their knees for nine minutes or whatever because it's
the same amount of time as George Floyd's death and
They all have to be like winched up afterwards because Nancy's knees locked and Chuck couldn't couldn't get back up. I mean like
What what were they doing there? Now? These are people that we would say
This is an establishment exactly this is an establishment. No, as I say, this is an establishment.
This is a part of the gerontocracy
of the Democrat Party.
Right.
OK.
But what were they doing there?
They were literally kneeling to the crowd.
They were saying, we think the crowd is getting kind of close
to our home.
And so we are going to literally kneel to them. These people at
this point clearly felt incredibly fragile, like wildly fragile. They knew
that there was a kind of revolutionary thing happening in America. You had some
cities burning down, you had people being attacked all over the place, law
and order broke down in many cities. So that's an establishment at a moment of
real worry. I think that happens much more often than people think.
When the crowd wins? When the mob wins?
Both. Both sides are able to be...
Which has more power. Maybe you don't have the...
The point is you can't... As as I say it's all to do with
specific circumstances when riots broke out the other week in the UK okay the authorities lost
control of the streets in certain towns now here's the thing they lost control some of the public
was so angry because of these three girls killed at a Taylor Swift dance party that they just went
out and started just like oh I mean why burn down a police van for God's sake? Why burn down a police
station? Because the crowd was doing stupid and awful things that crowds and mobs can
sometimes do. But here's the thing, the authorities at a time like that, and there are in that
situation is police authorities, political authorities and others, they want to, they
start to feel fragile themselves.
The Prime Minister will start to be thinking, oh hell, we're losing control of the streets.
Now in that situation, are there some moves he can pull?
Yes.
Did he pull them?
Yeah.
The one he mainly pulled was these people on the streets, even the ones who were doing
nothing violent and just objecting to somebody being young girls being stabbed at a Taylor Swift dance party that these
people are all far right and that was what Stammer and the UK government did
and and and establishment and authority in the UK started saying so that that
was the move they were able to pull. But at that moment, it's incredibly fragile.
Every, it can go either way.
We've seen examples in, as I say, in American recent years
where the crowd can break through, January the 6th,
all sorts of things.
And what happens at a time like that?
There's people who do one thing,
then an accusation can be made by these people there
about that, and this is much more fragile than people think.
And as I say, the biggest temptation in our era is to say it's all controlled by
something because it would be so much easier to understand if it was.
Yeah, I don't know if it's all the time, but for example, so one may say, OK,
you know, you guys are both being naive.
Let's just say the audience says that,
which I'm sure you would disagree with.
But what if somebody says,
why are you guys thinking so small?
It's the same.
The two are the same.
What do you mean they're the same?
Let me explain.
The mob is funded by the people at the top, the minority,
and they stoke, they're like, hey, piss these guys off,
blame those guys, create a problem,
identify the enemy and blame him.
You create the problem, you blame him, and then come in and say, let me get on my knees
for nine minutes, but guess what, we did it.
January 6th, we know they're coming, guys, get out the way, okay, let them do it and
then point the fingers and then come in to save, right?
If there's anything the last few years,
Douglas have, and by the way,
that's to me with Iran as well.
The one time with Iran was in 1954,
US, UK, France, I think it's Germany,
signed a 25-year oil contract with the Shah, 1954.
You know when that contract came up?
79.
You know when he fell?
79. So for me he fell? 79.
So for me, and then there's a meeting and- You will not be able to persuade me that
Henry Kissinger wanted Khomeini to take control.
I'm not trying to do that.
I don't think I'm going to be able to persuade you there, although there's plenty of things
you can write to see that as well, whether you're buying to it or not.
It's a different story.
But to me, in that case, US could have helped.
US could have helped. US could have supported. If Jimmy goes December 31st, Carter, and says, you know, Iran is an island of stability,
a year prior to the revolution happening, you go to Iran, you do a toast on December
31st out of all the places you have in the world to be.
You go to Iran 1977 to do a toast and you say, Iran's the island of stability?
And then a year later, you say, oh, we got your back, we got your back, you get out of the way.
That's a form of, hey guys, don't worry about it, these guys are about to fall, Khomeini's
not going to be able to negotiate as much as we are, they're going to be so desperate
because their infrastructure is going to be so messy, they're going to need money, we'll
get it at this counter break.
But why, why, why, why if there is a guiding hand or a guiding group, are they so bad at
it?
Well, because they think they're God and they're not. Well, but if you kept making this number of mistakes, you'd stop thinking you were God.
Are you kidding me? You don't think we continue to make mistakes? Man is a sinner. Man continues
to think they can outdo God. Man continues to think they're smarter than God. I mean,
we're always going to be falling for that trap. No one's ever going to find out. We're going to do
it better than them. Communism, he didn't do it well, but we would do it better. So we would do it better
That's the common right? Oh, that's always come the temptation. But it's a temptation. I'm thinking we we know better
I have four kids right? It's like yeah, stop it, but I'm sharper than you dad when I was 12 years old
Oh, okay, bro. Go ahead. Right? That's the element that we think we won't get caught
By the way, a lot of people ask us,
how the hell do you guys get all this content research AI
for your PBD podcast?
How do you guys pull all this information out?
We worked the last 12 months and hired 15 machine learning guys
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We decided to build that and release it to everybody.
And if you've not seen it, it's called VT news.ai
You can track timelines of stories. You can find out which stories are lopsided
You can find out any story who's reporting it on the left and the right and last but not least
It's the only news site today that you can go to the AI and ask questions
Specific to news and it'll give you the answer back not just picking a few questions that may be the questions you're gonna ask any
Question you want to ask our AI will respond back to you
If you haven't gone to it yet go to VT news that AI or click on the ur code here to learn more get
Registers you can have access to the technology. So that's the part where I think you know, then the challenge becomes
where I think, you know, then the challenge becomes, okay, then the challenge becomes like if I ran for office, which I never will, I'm not born here, so I'm not running for
office.
If I ran for office, I'm pulling data.
And I'm looking at the data saying, hey, who are the best immigrants here that contribute
to society the most?
You can find it in US, it's Indians, number one.
More than anybody else.
You can pull up, I don't know who number two is, but you know this, this data.
Yeah, massive, out-form on median household income
and everything.
That's right, so you kind of be like,
listen guys, how many does Indians have?
Guess what, let's take another 10 million.
Let's take another 3 million.
Let's take another 2 million,
and let's spread them apart by states,
because when they come in, their kids become engineers,
they raise their kids stuff.
Let's take Asians, let's take this, let's take that.
Because your job is to make sure you, and then at the same time, the one part that they've
not been doing, I don't know this part, I'd be curious when I ask you the question.
Actually, I'm going to ask you right now as the next question is, you know, we used to
have a lot of babies.
We used to make a lot of babies.
US is at 1.6.
Japan's at 0.7, sexless society.
Muslim nations, they're not at 1.6. They're not at 0.7.
You know, if this goes the way it's going, you don't have a choice.
You know, if you continue to... Well, that's one of the explanations for why
mass legal and illegal migration is allowed in Western democracies is that it is also able to make up the shortfall like that.
Yeah, there's a demographic problem in most developed countries. and democracies is that it is also able to make up the shortfall like that.
Yeah.
There's a demographic problem in most developed countries.
And I mean, if you speak to the Japanese about this, one of the interesting things about
it is, of course, is that they have this terrible replacement, you know, sub, you know, as you
say, under 1%, 2 to 1 replacement level.
But they have made the decision that they will deal with that shortage in the labor
force and the pension payments and else through various means. But the means they don't want
to do it through is through immigration. They've decided, I mean, because they know there's
what's called the pyramid in immigration, where if you are having to bring in more people
to pay for the pensions of the people who are pensionable age,
you then have to bring in more people underneath them
to pay for those ones' pensions when they go up,
and before you know it, the whole thing has grown all the time.
It's going to eventually collapse.
The math goes against you.
Well, look, that's my view,
and I always cite the famous Herb Stein's law.
You know that one?
Things that cannot go on won't.
Sounds like common sense.
Yeah, except that I've learned in the course of my career,
the number of times I've thought that things
that obviously could not go on, they just do.
Or they do for a very long time.
Or they do much longer than you'd have expected them to.
I can see that.
I mean, I think that about European society.
I think that about the illegal migration in the US.
I think that about the welfare system.
I think that about...
I mean, just take the number of people in the US now who are relying on some form of
housing. New York, where I live, billions of dollars a year being paid
to keep illegal migrants in hotels. How many years can New York keep housing anyone who's
walked across the southern border in the Watson Hotel near Columbus Circle? I don't know.
I just thought not very long. But I bet you the city authorities and Kathy Hokel and
everyone else will try to keep it just as long as they are in office and then they'll
hand it over to their successors and at some point the thing goes bust.
That's how it happens.
Let's talk Israel.
So in the US, something interesting is going on in the US where you know you have this whole October 7th once it
happened and you know reaction cannot believe what took place you know
conversations you Pierce Morgan a lot of different and then got heated and more
heated and more heated and then there was a sect in US that you know became
not necessarily anti-semitic, but hey
You know the the division between Israel and this is them and their causing this is their fault And you know why are they starting it and back and forth?
And you're seeing the protesting in the states that's going on in many different colleges and universities
That's going on here, and I don't know if did you watch the the recent podcast?
What's his name Tucker Carlson did with, what's his name?
It's a very, very good podcast.
Can you zoom in to see what his name is, Rob?
Did you watch his show between the two of them?
Oh yeah, this is this historian no one's heard of.
Yeah, this is the historian you're saying that no one's heard of.
And if this is the clip, Rob, matter of fact, just play this clip.
Is this the one where he says he saw my Churchill and Hitler in this one? Yes, this is that
clip. Play this clip. Play this clip. The reason I resent Churchill so much for it.
Go back a little bit. Go back a little bit so he can hear it. Yeah, go for it. The reason
I resent Churchill so much for it is that he kept this war going when
he had no way, he had no way to go back and fight this war.
All he had were bombers.
He was literally by 1940 sending fire bomb fleets,
sending bomber fleets to go fire bomb the black forest,
just to burn down sections of the black forest, just, just rank terrorism.
You know, the reason I,
if you watch this, if you watch this whole thing,
which I don't know if you have or not. Okay.
If you watch it, now Tucker.
I've read the main points.
Okay, got it.
Why do you think there is a split not even within
the conservative movement about Israel,
where some are taking different positions than you
would think conservatives would typically be supportive of Israel. Why do you think that's
happening? I think it's the same thing. There are splits everywhere. I mean, the splits on the left,
splits on the right, Democrats who agree with Republicans on certain issues, other Republicans
that would agree across the aisle on a different issue. I think there are lots of issues that are not left-right.
Israel was never a left-right issue, particularly.
It's been, you know, suddenly support for Israel has been a left-right consensus in
the US in the early years of Israel, of course, until 67 and 73, partly because of Soviet
support early on and partly because of the Kibbutznik movement.
It was seen as a socialist thing.
All the left supported it.
There was a residue of right-wing anti-Israelism
in that period that never quite went away,
but largely disappeared.
But this, I don't know, I mean,
this guy is on a different strand, isn't he?
But it's quite interesting that this guy's ended up
here. I find anti-Churchillism to be a very interesting, weird diversion. I think I see
this guy's, all of his facts are wrong. If anyone wants to read two very, very good rebuttals of the things this guy says.
They should read the historian Andrew Roberts, whose book, Churchill, Walking with Destiny,
is the best one-volume biography of Churchill done in recent years.
And they can also read Victor Davis Hanson's response to the interview.
Victor Davis Hanson was, of course, author of many great books of history.
This guy, I mean, his of many great books of history. His
timeline was out on absolutely everything. It was embarrassing. He didn't know when Churchill
became prime minister. He blamed things that had happened before Churchill became prime
minister, when Chamberlain was still prime minister. He made complete erroneous claims
about when Churchill was first Lord of the Admiralty and what he did. Made this completely
cuckoo claim about what Churchill did where he wasn't even there and relation to the First World War. He, all of his stuff is off and you've got to... So you did watch it, you paid attention.
I did not watch the whole thing, but what I did was I read every summary I could of it.
Look, if you look at the 1940s and you decide that Churchill's the baddie,
You look at the 1940s and you decide that Churchill's the baddie, you're not in a good place.
The war, to restate something that every elementary school kid should know, the Second World War
started because Hitler invaded Poland.
And then he started invading Western European countries as well.
There was no point in this time when Churchill was causing the war. It's
an astonishing piece of ignorance, but it's just, it's a revisionist type of history,
which we have seen before. Everybody who knows about the Second World War period knows there
is always some kind of, there's always some revisionist,
David Irving did it in the past, always wanted to show that Hitler didn't really mean to do
anything he did. And it wasn't Hitler that was a bad guy. It was just the people around him who
misled him and so on. This stuff is always around. It's like another one of the perennial traps for
people to fall into. How somebody can end up defaming Churchill like
this is extraordinary to me, especially when they're wrong on all of the major facts and
can't even get their timelines right. Britain was in a war to avert complete annihilation on both sides.
This man seems to think, as far as I can understand from the bullet points and summaries I've read of what he's written,
and what I can see from Andrew Roberts and Victor Davis Hanson's very comprehensive rebuttals. He seems to think that the blitz that my grandparents lived through
in London was all Winston Churchill's fault. My grandparents and others would have been very
surprised to hear that in the year 2024 people were making that claim. I find it kind of despicable,
as well as just deeply disingenuous and just factually, as I say, as far as I can see,
factually completely wrong. But I'm interested in why somebody would end up there. I wrote in The War on the West about
the left's hatred of Churchill. And I thought about it a lot because the left in recent years
has really been coming for Winston Churchill, his reputation, everything about him. They accused him
of being responsible for the Bengal famine in 43, absolutely
nothing. It's just another complete piece of fabrication of the evidence. Again, it's
been dealt with by the Churchill biographers, Martin Gilbert, Andrew Roberts, all the others.
But now if a young person knows about Churchill in Britain, a lot of them will only know about
Bengal famine and so on. There has been a
concerted effort on the left to defame Winston Churchill.
We know that. I mean, even with Obama getting into office, taking this, you know.
Right.
But this isn't...
But this is exactly...
This is Tucker.
Right. But why is this coming from another direction now? I'm slightly bemused by it. You can make criticisms of Churchill, of course, and there
are criticisms because, and you can say that, for instance, the grain that arrived from
Australia to Bengal was too slow in 1943, but Churchill didn't cause the typhoon that started the famine. And you know, it is possible that when you are running, you know, the large Navy in the
world and fighting in Africa, in Europe, the Far East, and many other places, and you have
an entirely mobilized citizen population fighting for their survival, that you are likely to
drop some balls for sure.
And is that to be highlighted and mentioned?
Sure, if you want to.
You would also assume that standing alone against fascism would count for something.
Why do you think of Tucker? Tucker is very't, I don't want to get into an
analysis of Tucker because no, no.
Why is it, is it purely for conversation?
Is it pure?
Are you familiar with Anthony C Sutton?
No.
He wrote two books, Wall Street and the Bolshevik revolution, Wall Street and the rise of Hitler.
Don't know.
You've never heard of them?
Okay.
That face, do you recognize that or no?
No.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, his claim was the fact that he, Churchill, had a choice between being
a Zionist or a Bolshevik and which direction to take.
If you've not heard what he has to say, he was an interesting guy back in the day. He passed away in 2002
He said that Churchill had to choose between Zionism and Bolshevism
Well, he's saying the fact that the Wall Street Wall Street had a lot of
Influence over the things that was happening funding they were funding many different things
So they were funding, you know supporting money on this side supporting money on money on the other side. Yeah, that book right there, Wall Street and the rise of Hitler,
where he's saying a lot of the, there's quite a lot of literature on World War II. So you'll
forgive me if I don't know. No, no, it's totally fine. I just think about it when, when you
see a person like Tucker interviewing someone like that, you know, he's given that person
permission to give their argument. And I'm trying to find out what the reason for that would be. I'd have to ask Taka that. I'm just
rather bemused. You've said that this guy, he said that Churchill had to choose between Bolshevism
and Zionism. So again, so going back to it, so when, remember how earlier we were talking about
the Tsar Nicholas II and you have Lenin and Stalin and all these guys, and how they thought maybe Lenin would have been somebody
that they could have controlled as a puppet master, hey, we can help these guys out.
And then they're trying to see how they can...
Who thought that?
How can they cause a fall where this would be one way of causing a fall in Russia?
But anyway, that's it.
Okay, right.
If you've not looked into it and see his interviews, I don't even want to go there because it's
going to throw everybody off.
Okay, so let me ask you another question here for you.
Jews, okay, Israel, sometimes they get, you know, especially nowadays, the power of AIPAC,
how much control AIPAC has, how much influence AIPAC has.
If AIPAC wants to get rid of Cory Bush, they can.
If APAC wants to get rid of a Douglas, they can.
If they wanna get rid of a candidate,
they can't have that kind of influence,
that kind of money, that kind of power.
I think they have influence to be able to do that
if they choose to.
They can put some money behind it.
Is there a reason why it didn't work with Anomar, then?
It doesn't mean that it's gonna happen 100% of the time,
but you have the resources and the influence. That's what some people are making the argument with.
Okay, at the same time, you know, I lived in Iran. I lived around a lot of Muslims. It's a 99%,
I think, Muslim nation. And we were a Christian family being raised there, my mother and my father.
Mother's Armenian, my dad's Assyrian. Assyrian Syrian like I speak Aramaic, I speak Armenian, I speak Farsi, so that was us. And we go to a small little church
and I went to an Armenian school called Gulbegnan and I went to an Assyrian
school called Behnam. And there you go, 99.4% okay of Iran's population is Muslim.
And so it was kind of like you got to be careful what's going on when you're
watching news every night,. US is the enemy
It's the evil Empire, you know, the Shah was a puppet. They owned them. They controlled him
He was doing everything he could to destroy the values and principles that Iran has and this was
Non-stop fit to you with you had a choice
Do you think you have a little residue of that in your mental?
Not at all like residue meaning like a
residue of that in your mental not at all like residue meaning like a
Taking that position. No. No, I just think do you think he's left any traces on your thought of?
Under under what side on what it is to live amongst Muslims. No, no that that kind of having absorbed that when you were growing up
Yeah, my mother was a part of the Communist Party. She was part of the two-day party So she was actually, they escaped. Double danger.
Exactly.
Well my dad was an imperialist.
So you want to talk about they got married and divorced to each other twice.
No, literally.
They married, my sister's born divorced.
Elizabeth Taylor.
They remarried, I'm born divorced to each other.
Like Elizabeth Taylor, yes, for some that follow the history.
Yeah, she was part of this party.
Oh yeah.
Two day party of Iran. They were the ones who were massacred big time in the some that follow the history. Yeah, she was part of this party. Oh, yeah, yeah. Today party of Iran.
They were the ones who massacred big time
in the 80s in the prisons.
Yes.
And so that's-
By the man who was just released
from Sweden in the prisoner swap.
Yes.
It's interesting that you're going back to that.
That was not good.
Yeah, no, that was not good.
But going back to this, your experience.
Jews, 0.2% of US population, 17% of all billionaires in US. Why do they make
so much money and why are they so successful financially?
First thing is that it's a funny one there. Sorry, I laughed just because it's,
I think there are certain tropes that people fall into. We just mentioned one, which is
the Churchill trope, which is a relatively modern one. But if you want to demoralize
a Western population, particularly the British population, you have to come for Churchill.
And it's a concerted effort in my mind. I don't know what's happening with the Tucker
interview, but the left has deliberately come for Churchill because it destroys one of the holy places of the British psyche. It destroys the idea that we have been a force for good in the world.
And it destroys the idea that what did happen, which we stood alone against Adolf Hitler,
and as a result, Western Europe and the rest of the continent, and indeed Britain, did not fall into the hands of Nazi fascism.
But I'm interested when people fall into that.
Likewise, and we mentioned some of it earlier, what I would regard as being not necessarily conspiratorial thinking, but falling into certain ruts.
I think that the Jews are a sort of rut that people can fall into. And
one reason I say that is because it's a very interesting thing in the history of the Jews,
that they can be simultaneously accused of almost everything. You mentioned that they're
disproportionately successful and wealthy.
That's what Jordan Peterson talked about when he did a video explaining the IQ score of Ashkenazi Jews
and explaining the fact that there's a reason why they make more money is because their IQ is above and beyond the average community.
And this is him talking about it.
Sure, sure, sure. I've talked about it. Jordan's a great friend. I know. I've spoken about it, Jordan's a great friend I know, we've spoken about this. But I'll just mention it because historically,
I mean, Jews have been attacked for being poor
as often as they've been attacked for being rich
and sometimes simultaneously.
19th century European antisemitism, for instance,
relied on the simultaneous, the cognitive dissonance
of the Rothschilds and also poor
Eastern European emigre Jews.
It's a fascinating thing about, I mean, why this tiny population in world terms should attract so much attention is because all of these things can be
claimed simultaneously.
Jews used to be attacked for being stateless.
And in our day, they're attacked for having a state.
and in our day they're attacked for having a state. Jews have historically been able to be attacked for being religious and also for being secular. You can be blamed for the
ultra-religious rabbi if you're Jewish and also for Karl Marx. My view is that anti-Semitism
and attitudes towards Jews fall into a very, very interesting
part of the human psyche.
They are the perfect group for people looking for single explanations for things.
They are absolutely perfect for it.
And history has shown this, and all of the literature and the writing on the history of the Jews suggests this.
I find it very interesting in our own day that there is this
deep interest in it. For instance, I mean you mentioned AIPAC, but
what's the obsession with AIPAC compared to, for instance, do you know about the amount of money that Qatar pumps into this country?
Why don't we talk about the Qatari lobby? the amount of money that Qatar pumps into this country.
Why don't we talk about the Qatari lobby?
Why? They have given billions of dollars,
among other things, to Ivy League campuses.
When campuses like Columbia accept millions of dollars
in donation from Qatar, why is that not about
the Qatar lobby? Why don't we hear about that? Because the Qataris seem not to be in the imagination, inherited imagination, of people as a guiding
hand and as a disproportionately visible minority.
But you could do this, I mean,
much more impressive in terms of donations
to American lobbying entities is, I mean,
how much are the Saudis paid in lobbying in recent years?
Why does this question upset you?
I'm curious.
No, no, it doesn't upset me at all.
But I tell you what it does do is it worries me.
And the reason it worries me is because, as I say, I see people falling into a very dangerous
rut.
And I know too much history.
Not, I mean, we always can know more.
I know too much history not to recognize something that's happening at the moment on this question.
It's a very, very strange thing when people with not very much knowledge of a situation
start to pretend to be wildly knowledgeable about it.
And that's what, that's really what I've seen in the last year
in particular in the US on the right as well as on the left.
This was actually a very simple question for you,
to be honest.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, it's not that simple.
It's actually a very complicated question.
But here's what I was asking you.
So I'm having a conversation.
There is no simple question in relation to this subject.
Well, let me unpack it for you
so you kind of know how this came about.
Maybe that'll give you a little bit different insight instead of thinking you're being cornered
right now.
So I'm having a conversation.
I'm a guy that wants to know a little bit of everything.
I want to know what's going on.
I want to hear both sides of the argument.
That's where I'm at.
I want to find that one.
Why a little bit of everything?
I don't have time for every little bit because that's not my. And I'll bring a guy like you because you're well read.
I want to hear your seven. I'll bring the other side. I want, you know,
that's your world you're in. I run eight companies. I got four kids.
I'm business guy. My specialty is different. Yeah, but we're busy,
but you choose what you want to specialize in.
You can't specialize in 50 different stories.
And we're having this debate, we're having this conversation.
It's families.
There is Muslims in the group who are friends,
Christians in the group, and Jews in the front,
in the community.
We're having this conversation.
Won't give names because then people know,
my community will know who I'm talking about.
I say, you guys, you have a choice.
You have a choice between living in a city
that's 100,000, 100% filled with 100,000 Muslim families.
Okay, great.
You can live in another city, it's 100,000,
but they're 100% Jewish.
Or you can live in a city that's 100,000,
but they're 100% Christians.
You got family, you got kids.
Safety and where you want to raise your family, where do you put them?
Rank it from one to three, okay?
One guy who is the Muslim is like, I wouldn't do any of them.
I said, why is that?
He says, because I want my kids to be raised around, you know, everybody.
I don't want it to be just one or the other.
I said, but that's not this exercise.
In this context, with this conversation,
I want you to choose one.
Okay?
He says, okay, I'm gonna go Christians first,
Jew second, and Muslims last.
And this is a Muslim guy.
This is a Muslim guy, okay.
Another guy who's a Jew goes Jew, Christian, Muslim.
Okay.
One other guy who's conflicted,
he says, I don't care,
any one of them I feel safe with
because I've seen good in everybody, right?
One guy saying this.
But to me, statistically,
it's not hard to sit there and study and say,
why does a country
based on Judeo-Christian religion attract everybody?
US attracts Muslims, it attracts Jews, it attracts Buddhists, it attracts...
That's not a hard question to ask.
That's not a hard question to ask.
But why is it that a country that's predominantly Muslim not attract everybody that wants to
come there?
Why is that?
So that's the part where I was asking you the question to say, if Jews are 0.2% of U.S.,
why are they 17% of billionaires?
What values and principles do they teach to their kids and families and communities that
gets them to move up in the financial industry?
This doesn't just happen overnight.
No, I mean, there are lots of explanations for that.
I mean, you could go the route that Jordan did, which is about overperformance.
I think there's lots of other explanations.
I mean, there's, for instance, in banking, the history of Jews in banking is very similar
to the history of my own people in banking, the Scots. Why did the Scots, like the Jews, always overperform
in banking wherever they arrived? Because they were from very high trust, tightly knit
communities, where if you lent and you didn't repay the loan, there was a social price to
pay. That's how, basically after Adam Smith, that's how,
why Scots and banking was so good because the Presbyterian society had a social cost to pay
if things like, for instance, a loan were not repaid. You would not be able to remain in the
community having been dishonest. Is it pure embarrassment?
Is it embarrassment or is it more like...
Well, it's also ethos and ethics.
It's definitely also ethos and ethics.
I mean, if you have a community in which, for instance, I'm not saying there is any
such community, but if there was a community in which lying was totally acceptable, for
instance, you would find it hard to have a mortgage system. Sure. So I think it's partly that. I mean, the history of the Jews in Europe is also partly to do with that,
the existence of the lending markets. And that came about in part from, as I say, a high trust within a small community. So it's bits of that. I'm not at all concerned
about having this discussion, except that I worry about things going into it for this
reason, which is I know the trope that this leads into. And that worries me. You see,
I think that any time when society is febrile,
and maybe we are especially febrile at the moment
because we're living through this second dark age.
So I say the first dark age was the one
where we didn't have access to information
in the middle ages.
The second dark age is this one that we're currently in
where we have access to too much information.
And people find it hard to sieve, as you mentioned,
you've got four kids, you run a successful business
and so on, you've not got time to look into everything.
In this situation, I think that we are disproportionately
likely to be looking for omni-explanations.
And I have certainly worried in the last year
about people falling into this particular trench.
And it's one thing to say, I'm asking the question, and I'm perfectly willing to discuss
it and debate it.
Of course, we're doing that right now.
But I also want to know why?
Why is this back as a subject?
Why do I see people online talking about Talmud and suddenly becoming
experts in the Talmud and they say things like, I've been doing my research. You haven't
picked up a book. Come on. Yeah, you've been reading the commentaries. I mean, you do have
to be rather suspicious about some of the places people fall into in the same way that look if you just asked me
about the Freemasons I
would be kind of
Hmm. I wonder why we're talking about Freemasons. I just talked about it last week with this guy that was a guest of ours
What was it? Carlson Randall Carlson and he was a 32nd degree
Freemason and my drill sergeant in the military was a 32nd
Freemason and we talked about it two weeks ago.
Oh dear.
Yeah, it was actually interesting.
It's not that interesting.
What was the famous phrase on Freemasonry?
It's a bronze key that opens a silver lock and a golden door that opens the room into which
says nothing.
So you're not interested by it for the fact that there's nothing to it.
Nothing to it.
But one could say, we've had what?
13 presidents that were former Freemasons.
Oh God, look, look what I've led you into now.
Jesus, I should not have looked at you.
Why are you doing this to me now? God you're easy to lead. This is, this is surprisingly, this is, this is surprisingly,
surprisingly so if I can say so. You're so funny. So one thing you got to get credit for, you're,
you're a very good shit talker and I don't know how that happened. I don't know whether that's a
compliment or not. What is it? What is shit talker are a compliment of mine. Okay. But let me go back to it. Again, I'm
asking this question for specific reasons. Because if you notice from the
beginning of the conversation you and I've had till now, I was data at
the beginning with UK. I was data with Dominik Tarjinsky on why Poland is a safe place. I was data with Iran.
I was data with the 0.2% Jewish community in the US.
That's what they yet, the 0.2% yet 17% is what we're talking about.
Whatever I think is 1% of US, yet 17% of billionaires is what we have in the States.
That's data.
Why is that? That's not easy to do. How did that happen? So
here's another question. Well that's data people don't mind collecting for instance.
But I think there's a lot to be said about it. So for example, if somebody,
if a college football team produces five different Super Bowl quarterback champions,
you have to kind of look into it and say why are they producing so many Super Bowl
quarterback champions?
Well, except we don't others or not.
We don't do that in loads of things.
Oh, we do do that in sports all the time.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely. All the time.
Yeah. And also very, I mean, very selectively in sports.
I'm assuming you're not a sport.
Are you a fan of sports or not?
Certain sports with sports.
We don't again, because we speak foreign, because we'll be speaking a foreign language.
We'll be speaking a foreign language to each other.
So here's another question for you.
Let's see where you go with this one.
I asked you the question about what communities families
feel safe in, right?
And we talked about the Judeo-Christian, US,
everybody feels safe to be in an environment like this.
You're going to be fine to be in an environment like this.
Why do you think the opposite is not true? Why do you think Christian
families who are leaving their countries, they don't think about moving to Iran? Why
do you think they don't think about moving to, you know, different Muslim? Why do you
think they don't think that?
This is one, I will answer the question, but let me do it in this slightly roundabout way.
This is one of the reasons why I'm worried about this anti-Westernism and anti-Americanism
which I see coming from right and left at the moment, is that there's a deep failure
of recognition of what it is in our societies that's worked. And I think we're at risk of killing the golden goose by saying the gold isn't golden enough.
And the things that work in our society are very fundamental. What the framers,
the founders, the framers of the constitution realized.
I mean, you know, maybe the only successful revolution in the world.
They realized that things like freedom of conscience,
freedom of speech were absolutely the bedrocks.
And that if you didn't get them, then the rest could not follow.
If you don't believe in freedom of expression, freedom of belief, freedom of worship, a whole set of other problems come.
They essentially, as I see it, fall down to the fact that if you are in error, you cannot
correct it.
If you are in an error, you cannot correct it. Unpack that.
So this is what John Stuart Mill, for instance, on the great philosophers of liberty,
unpacks in one of his most famous works on liberty.
The free speech, the necessity of free speech in a society comes about in part because
if you are wrong, you need to know you're wrong.
So if you're doing the economy, if you're running the economy and it's not working,
instead of keeping on allowing it to not work, you have to have your ears and eyes open for a system that works. And it's one of the interesting things I find about markets guys in general is their ability to pivot.
In a way, by the way, it just goes back slightly
to the politicians issue.
My, one of the reasons I'm interested in the way
in which market people think is that it's very, very different
to the way that politicians think.
Politicians can see a wall and they drive towards it
at the same speed or faster and you say wall,
wall, wall, and then they hit. A market guy, you say wall and they move. This is a very,
very different instinct. Now, but to go back to this, the ability to correct yourself if
you're in error is absolutely key. The lack of information that has been available in not all, but much
of the Islamic world for many centuries has caused a deep stagnation, a deep stagnation
in those societies. And as I see it, the oil rich countries like Qatar and Saudi, although Saudi is interestingly pivoting at the moment, very
successfully, really.
They have been in the same situation that European monarchies were like in, let's say,
the 14th, 15th, 16th centuries, which was they could not grow the economy.
There was no such concept really.
You had resources in those days, sheep and crops, as today the Gulf countries have oil.
But that money was held by a small number of people, and there was just no other way
of squeezing money from them other than squeezing them further in some form of taxation or invading
a neighbor and taking their stuff.
Much of the Muslim world, I think, has failed to grow in the way that the West has succeeded
in growing in the last few centuries. And
this causes many things. One of them is a deep resentment. And one of the most, I think
one of the most important insights I've ever stumbled upon in my life in relation to that
is there's a particular problem in the Islamic world, which people don't really talk about very much, but it's this.
That the Quran is meant to be the final revelation of God to man, the final revelation.
There's none after it.
And all the revelations that come before in the Abrahamic religions are part of Islam. If you are the recipients of the final word and you are the followers
of that word and the followers of that prophet and that god, why is your society not working
and why are other societies working? I think this is a deep psychological problem within much of the Muslim world, which is
we thought we were meant, we were the winners, theologically, we're the ones who got the
final revelation.
And I think, by the way, that much of the anti-Americanism, the anti-Zionism and anti-Westernism in much of the Muslim world falls down to this fact somewhere
at its root, which is how come they're doing better than us when we were told that we were
best? And I think it causes serious cognitive dissonance. It's one of the reasons why the Muslim world is so vulnerable to conspiracy
theory. It's why when a shark attack happened at Sharm el-Sheikh 10 years ago, the local
authorities said that the shark that had eaten the beaver at the most popular tourist resort in Egypt had been sent by the
Zionists. This is like seeing the hand of the West in other things is an explanation
for why the things are not doing well there. And in country after country, whether it's
Egypt, which is doing comparatively well compared to some of them,
or Iran, the immiseration of the people, the inability to unleash talent and much more comes back to this small number of people benefiting and having no idea how to unleash talent underneath.
That and political and personal and religious freedom, including freedom of speech and freedom of worship, are the absolute prerequisites. And that is why I cannot understand the suicidal anti-Westernism within our societies
in our time. Because, as I like to say, you know, the footfall should tell us everything.
Nobody, as you say, is trying to go to Iran in order to have freedom of religion. Nobody is going into communist China for a
better life, certainly not from the West.
You have a negative in that migration, right?
Right. And this is why when I think of the sort of college students who believe that
no one's had it so bad as you do in 2024 at Berkeley, one of the things I sort of amaze
that is like, do you not notice that the world wants to
come here?
Do you not think there might be a reason for that?
And do you not think that it might be because there are some things that we've done well
here and that if we've done well with them in the past, we should hold on to those things?
Yeah.
You're a history guy.
Got a question for you.
I'm Armenian.
I'm curious on how you're going to answer this.
Let's see if this is going to piss you off or not.
I'll be the judge of that.
And I'll react to it. So it is what it is.
So, you know, the world has recognized the Holocaust that it happened. Okay?
100 plus countries, including Germany. You got reparations. You got all this other stuff.
It'd be rather alarming if Germany hadn't recognized it.
I know exactly, but they even paid for it.
So it's not like, you know, they, they went one up.
They're like, not only yes, but we'll also pay our debt
because of XYZ, right?
But if there's anybody that knows about genocides,
if anybody knows about genocides,
it would have to be the Jewish community, right?
With the Holocaust.
And the Armenians and others.
The Armenians prior to the Jewish community, you know, 2.25 million, whatever, they don't
have one and a half million Armenians.
You got, I think, three, 400,000 Greeks and a quarter of a million Assyrians.
And isn't it amazing that that's still a political issue?
It is, but believe it or not, Joe Biden is the first one that recognized it. Okay.
And of the 34 countries around the world that have recognized the Armenian
genocide, including Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Italy,
Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, US,
Israel has not. Why not? No idea. You'd have to ask them.
Don't you think that's a little weird?
I don't know. It's one of those facts you can pull out that I just don't know.
You'd have to ask them.
Yeah. And I'm curious because to me it would be like, you know,
that part is a, it's not a, uh, like if there's anybody that would be the first,
Hey, hey, we're the first listen hmm that's kind of weird what just happened I
think there's a lot of weird stuff in the world you can always pull something
like that out that's what are you driving at I'm Armenian I'm driving because I'm
Armenian right you know so to me like we don't sit there and we say you know the
events didn't happen to to the to the Jewish community but if they're you you know that happened you didn't happen to the Jewish community.
But if they're, you know, that happened, you're not supposed to, by the way, I don't know
if you saw what Erdogan said recently.
Did you see what Erdogan said last week?
I follow him relatively closely because he's quite a close enemy.
So Erdogan, if you type in news, type in Erdogan in Israel.
I think that's the one right there.
The first story wrap.
Zoom in a little bit so we can read it. I can see all the stories. Erdogan seeks Islamic. I think that's the one right there. The first story wrap. Zoom in a little bit so we can read it.
I can see all the stories.
Erdogan seeks Islamic, that's the one.
Erdogan seeks Islamic alliance against Israel, says it's expansionism.
So part of it, you know, you'll hear some people make the argument the reason why Israel doesn't want to recognize
the Armenian genocide is because they may lose an ally like Turkey.
But Turkey is not necessarily the biggest ally to Israel, especially the position that
they're taking.
I don't think Erdogan wakes up in the morning saying, I wonder how safe Israel is.
No, I mean, Erdogan is a deep opponent of Israel, of course. For sure it is. But what's
your point? I just think if the Israeli community is seeing what's happening, they know what history
is, and they're seeing what Turkey and Azerbaijan was doing to Armenia, why wouldn't they come out
and say, hey, we don't support this and And we also recognize the Armenian genocide. It's a little weird. Well, it could be a real politic thing of the very, very tense Israeli Turkish
relationship, which is, you know, I mean, sometimes it's, sometimes it's relatively
tepid and at other times it's absolutely rank like whether with the Mavi Mamara.
But this is different. I mean, everyone is saying that actually the claim to
Lebanon, Syria, and our home. I mean, this is everyone doing everyone. I mean, everyone is saying that Lebanon, Syria, and I mean, this is everyone doing everyone. I mean, I'm not as not defending only defending Gaza, but also Islamic lands. Oh, yeah, absolutely. So I see Hamas deeply, deeply caring about the Arabs. I see. I see that absolutely. I mean, Hamas's desire to simply help the people of Lebanon, like their friends in Hezbollah,
they definitely care about the Lebanese people and definitely, definitely big humanitarians,
these Hamas guys.
Apparently, you know, based on this article, they're sweethearts.
Yeah, well, I mean, Erdogan is an extraordinary little tyrant.
When he was almost overthrown the other the
other year in that whatever it was that happened when was it 2016-17 18 when
there was that sort of what seemed to be an attempt to overthrow Erdogan in
Turkey do you remember that the immediately strange enough the next
morning he had a list of 2,000 judges who were responsible for the attempted
overthrow amazing how much data you can collect overnight if
you're Edoan, of course all the judges. Yeah. Got there come up and say Edoan is not
somebody I would go to for morals or advice or anything else. He's a piece of
work. He has got the strongest military in the Middle East though. He's an
ismist very obviously and he's also in NATO which
is potentially was a big mistake by NATO. He is but he's also talking about wanting
to join the BRICS. I don't know if you saw that last week. He wants to join the BRICS
and that's kind of tricky right there if you want to do that right because if you're NATO
you almost have to be anti-Russia right or not necessarily anti-Russia. Anti-expansionism of Russia. Anti-expansionism of Russia, right?
It's just so funny. There is this rule that I have about when people, you know, criticize, disproportionately criticize Israel, that they always reveal something about themselves.
Yeah.
And in Erdogan's case, he's accusing Israel of expansionism. Just see what Erdogan has done with the Kurds.
What's your position with war? So right now, you know
What's my position with war? Let me explain what I mean by that. So right now like with the Middle East, okay, so
You got elections. You got Trump you got Kamala. You got all this stuff that's going on right now
and
You know, some people are saying hey man, we gotta see Trump gets elected Ukraine Russia is gonna be done
you know, you know everything going on with Israel and Palestine, Gaza, he's gonna
stop that overnight, you know, and then from there, let's not get involved in businesses
that we have nothing to do.
What's your position with that?
What position should America take with everything that's going on in the Middle East?
Well, I'd say it's another trench is available for us to fall into, which is the
temptation to retreat from the world.
America is the most important country in the world, by an incredibly long way.
Not just financially, not just militarily, culturally, in terms of ideology, in terms
of the spread of the ideas that come from America.
I see no scenario in which America can retreat from the world as it is,
and for the world to remain as it is.
And I know because I might, people I know on the American right as well as on the American left always always at the risk of falling into the temptation of American withdrawal
from the world. And I always have the same thing which is have has America made mistakes
of course. Has it got involved in things it couldn't deal with Afghanistan? Absolutely.
But that is not an argument for America stepping back. Because although America
should be judicious in where it steps in in the world, if it has no involvement in the
world, other people will. And if America doesn't want to be the dominant power on the world
stage, then it will have to cede the terrain to China or the Communist Party of China or whoever else.
I'm interested, by the way, in the particular on the right, I'm interested in this fall
into the isolationism moment because it's very interesting that those people want America
still to be the foremost country in the world, but don't want to be involved in the world.
Interesting that.
Don't want to be involved in every war.
No, no, no. America is not involved in every war plenty of stuff I mean what's
America doing in Myanmar we're we're involved in the main ones whether it's
whether the funding money it's you know the main ones I mean what are the two
main ones right now that the ones that have the most the two ones that have
the most attention is different.
What's costing more than those two?
Well, the Syrian civil war that's lasted the last decades cost far more lives.
I'm talking like two years.
The Syrian civil war that's gone on for more than a decade now, more people have been killed
in that than have been killed in every single war involving Israel and all of the Arab armies
in the last 80 years.
So it does seem actually that people's attention is sometimes very clearly on certain issues.
So why do you think that is?
A range of things.
In the case of, I covered the Ukraine wars with the embedded Ukrainian armed forces when
they were retaking Kherson or Mikhailov from the Russians.
And so I've seen quite a lot of that war up close.
That one is a very straightforward one.
I don't believe that Ukraine is part of Europe, but it's awfully close.
And if you go to the Baltic States, as I did again,
I know 18 months ago, I suppose, a year ago,
if you go to the Baltic states, Latvia,
Lithuania, and so on, they are really worried about Russia, really worried. They have, you
know, enlistment and so on. If you go to the central and eastern Europe, simply the further
east you go across Europe, the more you find a genuine concern about this.
If Vladimir Putin had succeeded in making it all the way to Kiev in 2022,
Europe would be shaking its boots even more than it currently is.
It would have, and it would have been an unbelievable destabilizing effect on the world.
It's not the case, as some people pretend, that Vladimir Putin is only interested in Ukraine.
I know that because I've been to the country, not the state, the country of Georgia when
he tried to invade that in 2008.
So the idea that Putin simply has Ukraine in his sights is not true.
And should we get into World War III over this?
Obviously not.
We're floating with it.
I hope not.
I hope not.
But should he be allowed to gobble up nations, whatever you think of them, by the way, and
then this is a point at which a lot of people on the right will say, well, Ukraine is so
corrupt and this and that and that. Let's say if I agreed with all of that, nevertheless,
not good for world stability to allow Russia to invade nation states, particularly ones
whose security that we had agreed to, whose borders we'd agreed
to secure. I mean that was part of the deal that Britain was involved in as
well with the handing of the nukes in the 90s. So Ukraine is a war
that is deeply troubling Europe and NATO and therefore America does have interests
in that. So you afford that war, you afford the money and the funding that we give to that war.
We could go into all sorts of the details of it.
I have criticisms around the edges about the way in which the funding has happened, the
way in which the arming has happened, the training and so on.
But to date, Vladimir Putin has not been able to overrun all of Ukraine, and I think that's
a good thing.
And this has happened, by the way, with American funding, but no American troops. And if people
don't like the idea of American troops on the ground around the world in order to secure
world peace and the global order, the global order of nation states, if people don't like
the idea of American troops being on the ground, what else have you got available than helping and arming other countries' troops who are willing to fight for their own country?
That's the only other option. Unless you want, as I say, to just step back, Vladimir Putin wants it, he can have it.
Israel and the Hamas war has gained the world's attention because every war involving Israel always
does gain the world's attention. And maybe it's because of what we were discussing before
about disproportionate attention towards the tiny percentage of the world's population
that's Jewish. I mean, I can't help thinking that is the case because as I say, I mean,
I just notice in country after country, people being massacred and
nobody gives a damn.
I mean, I've seen the massacre of Christians in the countries and the Arab countries and
the destruction of the Christian communities in Iraq, for instance, destruction of the
Christian communities in the north of Nigeria.
The world is not focused day in, day out on these stories.
As the old thing goes, if it's Jews, it's news.
The world is obsessed with the question of Israel.
And there are lots of reasons for that.
And this past year, I mean, I spent a lot of the time
in Israel and Gaza.
The world seems to have gone crazy over this conflict. Utterly crazy.
So what do you think is going to happen?
Trump gets elected.
If Trump gets elected, what do you think happens with those two wars?
Do you think he stops it like he says overnight?
We don't know, of course.
I mean, because he actually has a clever strategy on this,
which he did in 2016 as well, which is to say, I'm not going to tell you what I'm going
to do.
Yeah, I saw that.
And I like that.
I like that as well.
It's a good, this thing of the interviewed politician having to give precisely what they
were doing off is not a wise idea.
Not when you're dealing with people on the world stage like Putin or Hamas.
I don't, I mean, there is a, you know, I think that in the case of Ukraine,
sad as I am about it, it'll probably end up having to be a land swap situation and there'll be redrawing of the borders.
It's terrible. But since the spring offensive failed last year, I don't think
that the Ukrainians have had enough of a military success since 22. So I don't know how he would carve that
out or how it would be done. In relation to the Israel Hamas war, it's not really an Israel
Hamas war, it's an Israel Iran war. I mean, it's a war between, at the moment, one of
Iran's proxies, the revolutionary Islamic government, Iran's proxies, Hamas and Israel,
but the real war obviously is between Jerusalem and Tehran. And the thing that Trump can do,
which the current administration has not done, is to strangle the revolutionary regime in Tehran.
By the time Trump left office, the Iranians were begging for a
release of relief of the sanctions. And they got it under
Biden, they got this huge cash flow. And that's, I do think that's, I mean,
it's not the only thing you can't say that, for instance, October 7, wouldn't have happened
if Trump had been in, but the cash flow to Iran, since the Democrats have been in, has
definitely helped the regime in Tehran. And that means it's been able to fund its terror proxies from
Lebanon to Gaza to I mean even Yemen
You know so the Yemen the the Houthis in Yemen are able to fire really pretty
significant
munitions at places like
Elat in the south of Israel
That's all Iran is doing. Now I think that Trump, the most
likely thing he would do is to do what he did before and is to try to tighten the cordon
around the regime in Tehran. That would certainly, if you could stop the Ayatollah's expansionism
across the region and unify the, basically the countries that were part of the Abraham
Accords and bring some more into it, There's a definite way to have a better situation
in the whole region for everyone.
He could broker that. I mean, he brokered
the Abraham Accords which nobody thought could be done.
If he could add to that, that would be extraordinary. But the main thing is
is stopping the Ayatollahs
from their, I think, absolutely insane actual expansionism.
You think they're gonna give a shit? Like you think they're gonna react because they're
gonna be like, I'm getting money from, you know, China, I'm getting money from Russia.
You're not gonna be able to do anything to Iran. You think Iran will react?
Well, it has rather reacted recently.
I mean, if you send hundreds of missiles and munitions that are directly from Iran into
Israel, that is kind of intolerable.
Don't you think?
I do know what I'm saying is you think Iran
is at a point right now that they feel if Russia and China have their backs,
well, there's a big if. They're capable of,
well, I mean, I think the first thing's got to go is if Trump's got a great relationship with Putin and he reacts to Trump,
Putin cannot empower,
you know, Iran and if Trump comes in and the tariffs go and he starts
challenging them with the Mexico tariffs with the cars coming up here from
Huffington, the big plant that they build in Mexico and they're saving all
this money where per hourly labor they're paying in China 475, I think
Huffington in Mexico is 395. They're saving money on workers in Mexico. So if Trump goes like this to Russia and China,
then Iran has no power. If he does that. And if there's anybody capable of doing that,
it's him.
Yeah, I know. That's what I think. I mean, I think that, and I think in any case, if
I was the Iranians, I'd be very worried about throwing myself into the arms of the Chinese
communist party and indeed Vladimir Putin, who are after their own interests.
But just going back to this quickly, I mean, this obsession with the Israel-Hamas war in
the last year, it's terrible because October 7th was unbelievable and Hamas has this trap
that it tries to catch Israel into every time, which is, come in and kill
our people in order that we can call for the world's attention to be on you as the aggressor.
And the world falls for it every time. The intercepted messages, the Wall Street Journal
ran the other week from Sinwar, the architect of the
seventh, Hamas leader now in Gaza. The interceptive messages of his where he talks about how good
it is that there are so many casualties in the Gaza population because the Israelis are
being blamed for it. Every casualty in my view view, is on Hamas, because you're not allowed to start
a war and then moan when you lose it. And every casualty is on Hamas because they could
have given back the hostages or not taken them in the first place. The world is very unempathetic when anything happens to Israel, in my view.
A wildly lacking in empathy.
I remember when I think it's something like a belief on the right as well as parts of the left,
there's something like a belief that Israel did something that justifies this.
I think that's the sort of root of the problem. And I remember after 9-11, there was an academic
in the UK called Mary Beard, the classicist, who said in the London Review of Books that,
you know, bad as 9-11 was, it was hard to
get out of your head the fact that America had it coming.
That was a huge scandal at the time, because most of us were like, how dare you?
Even if America had done every single thing that her enemies accused her of.
How dare you say that America had the killing of 3,000 civilians in one day coming?
Well, I'm as intolerant of that attitude towards the state of Israel as I am towards the republic
here.
I think it's a reprehensible attitude.
And as for all of the self-taught people
who've suddenly mugged up on tiny, tiny corners
of Middle Eastern history in the last 11 months,
I have yet to find somebody who's to persuade me
that if, for instance, thousands and thousands of Americans have been killed
on one day and thousands of Americans by proportion of population taken, kidnapped, that America
would not be tearing up the earth to get them back.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, there's a...
And that by the way, it would have the right to do so and that its friends and allies should
expect it to do so.
Yeah. You know, I understand everybody.
I understand everybody's arguments on the side of defending yourself.
Obviously, I understand those who have family in Palestine and they're sitting there saying,
hey, I'm not for this.
You're going to think your family first.
I'm fully against any of the proxies that Iran funds as a guy that lived there
and witnessed what the Hezbollahs did, living there where your women and your family are
frightened of walking outside because you may get whipped 77 times in your back for showing a little
bit of hair or a little bit of this. Those stories are endless. And I'm for 100% America first being the greatest country in the world and we got to do our
best to make sure we keep it that way. And some of the stuff that's happened with us being confused
doesn't make me... it concerns me a little bit, but I'm an optimist. I'm a guy that believes future
looks bright. I believe the right people will rise up. I think the right people are finding each other.
I think we're going in the right direction. I'm always going to be in that state of mind. It's always been more
beneficial to be 51% optimistic and thinking the future looks bright and 49% being paranoid
that only the paranoid survive. And flirting with that mindset is a little bit confusing
at times because sometimes you go too much this way, too much that way, both way, but
I'm always going gonna be more optimistic
than anything else.
Douglas, appreciate you for coming out.
Rob, if you can do me a favor, the events coming up,
let's put the link below.
Miami Beach, that's gonna be tomorrow.
Tomorrow the date is the 10th, I believe.
Then you're at DC, the 11th, LA, 23rd, New York, 29th,
Denver, Colorado, October 11th, LA, 23rd, New York, 29th,
Denver, Colorado, October 13th. Rob, put the link to all the events below
for folks to go see, as well as the link to his book
that I think people should go check out,
The War on the West.
With that being said, I'll give you the final words
before we finish up.
No, it's a great pleasure to be here, finally to meet.
We've got a lot more to go over, it seems to me.
I think we're gonna do many, many more of these
for many years to come,
but I appreciate you for coming out.
This was great. I appreciate you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Take care, everybody.
Bye-bye, bye-bye.
By the way, a lot of people ask us,
how the hell do you guys get all this content research AI
for your PBD podcast?
How do you guys pull all this information out?
We worked the last 12 months
and hired 15 machine learning guys
and built a news aggregator site that we want as a customer.
We decided to build that and release it to everybody.
And if you've not seen it, it's called VT News.ai.
You can track timelines of stories.
You can find out which stories are lopsided.
You can find out any story who's reporting it on the left and the right.
And last but not least, it's the only news site today that you can go to the
AI and ask questions specific to news and it'll give you the answer back.
Not just picking a few questions that may be the questions you're going to ask, any
question you want to ask, our AI will respond back to you.
If you haven't gone to it yet, go to vtnews.ai or click on the QR code here.
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