The Blindboy Podcast - Why everything feels so Chaotic now
Episode Date: March 12, 2025Why everything feels so Chaotic now Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
BetterHelp Online Therapy bought this 30 second ad to remind you right now, wherever you are,
to unclench your jaw.
Relax your shoulders.
Take a deep breath in and out.
Feels better, right?
That's 15 seconds of self-care.
Imagine what you could do with more.
For a limited time, visit betterhelp.com slash random pod for one free week of online therapy.
No pressure, just help.
But for now, just relax.
Lick the crazy cream from the queen's kneecaps, you chaplet patricks. Relax. The Cork Podcast Festival. Which I fucking I despise saying the name of the festival.
I adore the Cork Podcast Festival.
I love the lads who run it.
It's one of my favorite festivals in the country.
But I can't fucking for the life of me pronounce the name correctly.
I keep calling it the Cork Cod Past Festival.
It's not it's the Cork Podcast Festival.
Just whatever way the consonants, whatever way the consonants are arranged, it's very
easy to call it the Park Cod Past Festival. One problem too I think is Cork Podcast. Like
I know what Cork is, it's a city, I know what a podcast is, I'm making one right
now, but Cork, Cork is also a type of wood, a very, a very buoyant wood that floats easily.
So you have a car, a pod, a pod made from Cork, and you're casting it, you're casting
it into the water for it to bob.
So the imagery of that throws me off. And then I'm like,
why the fuck would you have a festival for that? Why would you have a festival for casting pods
made out of cork? So that creates confusion. And to the point that I haven't been plugging this
fucking podcast festival enough, because the name is so confusing. And then I try to say it and what comes out is the pork cod past festival pork cod past and then I start thinking that's
actually more worthy of a festival why would you want to go to a festival about
casting pods made out of cork into the ocean when you could go to the pork cod
past festival which would be
well you see here's the thing I've thought about this pork and cod two two
food stuffs which historically were salted salted very heavily to preserve
them before refrigeration so the pork cod past festival it'd be a festival about salt.
I'd go to a festival about salt. Absolutely. Salt is fascinating. Salt was so important
in Persia right about 2500 years ago. Salt was so important that it was strictly controlled
by the king and because you you had this substance that was controlled
and produced by the state effectively,
salt was used as money,
even the word salary to be paid your salary
that has its etymological roots in salt
as a source of money or a source of payment.
In fact, salt is considered so important that it
potentially led to the development of human civilization. Like there's a tribe of people
called the Kalagadi people. They live in the Kalahari desert in Africa. And the Kalagadi tribe,
they live a hunter-gatherer lifestyle. And where they live in the Kalagadi tribe, they live a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
And where they live in the Kalahari Desert,
water is very difficult to come by.
There's not a lot of water and they have significant periods of drought.
So the way that this tribe find water traditionally is fucking fascinating, right?
So that they're in the middle of the Kadahari Desert, and there's a drought.
They can't find water.
But there's also these packs of baboons, right?
And baboons always have a source of water.
The baboons always know where there's water.
So what a tribesman does when he's trying to find water is, he'll
find like a termite mound, or an ant hill. A natural structure that contains lots of
insects, okay? Now this is the Kalahari Desert now, so just picture it. Dry, arid, yellow, sand.
The odd little tree, and this crystal clear blue sky.
Nothin'.
If you heard someone laugh in there that there's a pharmaceutical company having a meeting
next door to my office.
But anyway, back to the Kalahari Desert.
The tribesman who's seeking out a source of water.
He'll go to a termite mount, and he'll take out a stick, and he'll start poking a little
hole in the termite mount
but he'll make sure that a baboon is watching when he does it because baboons are mad curious.
So the man pokes this little hole in the termite mount and then into the hole he puts like
seeds.
Now he's fucking blatant about this. Like he's theatrically placing seeds into this hole that he's just made, making sure
that the baboon is watching and knows what's happening.
Meanwhile Mr. Baboon is up on a rock with his long blue nose and those giant swollen
pink arses that look like a car crash that they have.
Mr. Baboon is up in his rock anyway.
Watching, watching the man putting shit into the termite mound and he's going, what the
fuck is he doing?
That human just poked a hole and put food in there.
Those humans are clever.
What food has the human hidden in that termite mount? Because I'm
gonna go over and get it. And then the baboon waits and the human, the tribesman, he farts
off and hides. So then the baboon walks over with his big Ross Kemp looking anus, walks
over to the termite mount and then he inserts his arm into the hole that the human made.
But here's the thing, the hole that the human made, it's just the right size for a baboon's
arm to get in, and then at the very end is a chamber where the food is. It's a trap. So the
baboon has his hand down the hole, his arm down the hole, he's up to his shoulders
and he sorties around with his hand and then he finds the little food, the seeds that the
human has left in there.
So the baboon then, he feels the food, he grabs it, he makes a fist around the food
inside the hole.
But then, like fucking Homer Simpson when he put his hand in the vending machine to
grab the can of coke, the baboon won't leave go the food and his hand is stuck inside the termite mound and he's not
smart enough to let go so now he's fucked he's stuck he's too greedy all he's got to do is let
go but he won't. Now the tribesman reappears he's been hiding and the baboon is stuck in the termite
mound and the man goes over to the
baboon, wraps a rope around him and basically captures the baboon. He doesn't harm him,
he doesn't hurt him, but he has the baboon prisoner now. And he ties the baboon to a
tree and then the man takes out lumps of salt, rock salt, that he's been hanging onto, and he
puts them in front of the baboon.
Now the other thing that's quite rare in the desert is salt, so the baboon can't resist
this, and he starts, the baboon, who's tied against the tree, starts licking the salt,
licking the salt like a mad fucker, and Can't stop, can't stop until all the salt
is gone. And meanwhile the man is just standing back waiting, looking at this baboon. And
then after about 10 minutes, the salt is gone and the baboon is dying of thirst. Absolutely
ravenous for water. So then the man lets him go and the baboon legs it, legs it as fast as he can and the man follows and the baboon is
scarpering through the desert, over mounds, underneath ditches,
alongside trees, taking a left, taking a right, until he eventually
arrives at this, this rocky area and the baboon climbs up and climbs up and then
goes down and the man's following him and right inside the rocks is this naturally occurring
spring.
This naturally occurring spring of water and then the man goes, there you go.
That's where the baboons get their water.
The baboon had revealed the baboon water location to the man.
And I love that, just the human ingenuity of it.
The humans thinking so many steps ahead to find water by following the baboon, but the
use of salt.
Salt there is the thing that breaks the baboon.
There's even a theory about the world's first roads, that the first ever
roads that humans had, and I'm talking back in the hunter-gatherer days, so the
the wild animals that humans ate, okay, I'm talking the ancestors of cows, wild
ox, 30,000 years ago, 40,000 years ago, okay? The animals that humans used to hunt relied upon
naturally occurring salt licks, right? Salt licks in order to get all of their nutrients and
minerals. Think of like an ancient cow, right? Domestication hasn't even happened yet, so like a fucking a wildebeest thing
30 000 years ago, this animal isn't getting all of its nutrients from eating grass,
so the herds of these animals, they have to go to naturally occurring rocks that are made out of salt,
not just salt, fucking calcium zinc. So ancient cows would travel for miles and miles
to find these salt rocks to lick them.
Humans would follow the paths that these herbivores
would make to their salt licks
and then choose to settle down in areas near these salt licks
and these well-worn salt paths became the first roads. But the theory that salt
possibly led to the development of human civilization. So if you have all these
these human beings and they're following their prey, cattle effectively, early
cattle, they're following cattle to these salt lakes.
And then once the cattle are there licking salt, that's when you fucking attack.
So live near where the naturally occurring salt is and you'll have access to cattle,
right?
That's probably where humans also figured, oh fuck it, this same salt, if you put it
on the meat, it preserves it.
So they're killing the animals near where the naturally occurring salt is, and now they're putting the salt on the meat and
noticing that it's a very powerful preservative that keeps bacteria away. And now you don't have to rely upon fresh meat.
You can kill a cow and keep it all fucking year.
That ability to preserve your meat using salt, that might have been a catalyst.
A catalyst that allowed our ancestors to go from being hunter-gatherers that move with
animals to suddenly being able to stop and to settle down and say, no, we've got a little
village now we don't
have to move because we can preserve this meat all year round you see so now
we have a surplus of meat to eat at all times that ability to stay put leads to
the development of tools it leads to humans going odd that wild fucking ox
over there who's traveling to eat the salt I wonder if I can ah that wild fucking ox over there who's traveling to eat the salt, I wonder
if I can turn that wild ox into a cow through selective breeding and herd them.
Then the development of farming, towns, cities, salt may have started all of that.
Even more fascinating.
So cows, right?
Cows as you and I know them today.
First off, cows aren't real. Cows aren't real.
In the same way that dogs aren't real. Cows were invented by humans.
The cows you know today that was bred and invented by humans to serve humans.
Cows don't exist in nature. There was a wild animal
known as an auroch somewhere around Iran or Persia,
right? And the auroch is the ancestor of the cow. The auroch is to the cow what the wolf is to the
dog. But the auroch is completely extinct. Why? Because we turn the guns into cows.
Early humans probably followed the auroch,
like I said, the herds of them,
followed them to where they were licking salt,
killed them,
and then figured out
which are the most obedient ones,
which ones have the best milk,
which ones have the best meat,
and then bred these,
slowly but surely,
into what we call a cow.
So now 10-15,000 years later, there's no more aurochs, they're extinct, but we have cows we call a cow. So now 10, 15,000 years later,
there's no more aurochs, they're extinct,
but we have cows.
Cows everywhere.
Cows are unsustainable, they're destroying the planet.
How can an animal destroy the planet?
Cause they're not fucking real.
Cows aren't part of nature,
they're not part of a system of biodiversity.
Cows are our industry, they're industrial animals.
But anyway, cows.
Hards of cattle sometimes
When they live near
There's that I guess the pharmaceutical meeting is over and now they're banging fucking doors. I hope that's a passive aggressive
Door bang. I hope the I hope the pharmaceutical meeting was interrupted by me talking about the history of cattle.
But anyway, cows, right?
Sometimes when cows are near an area where mining occurs, so if humans are mining, digging
into the earth, right, for whatever, rare earth minerals, whatever.
So trucks, when trucks are transporting minerals from the mine, some of it falls
along the road along the way, you know, and these minerals can contain salt,
cobalt, selenium, zinc, and when this is, when this falls on the fucking road and
there's cows nearby, it awakens the ancient wolf in them. They sense the
minerals on the road and it awakens their ancient Aurok past and
the cows, their evolutionary memory, thinks that they're heading towards the old ancient
salt lake, again in search of those minerals that they need, and the cows will go fucking
ape shit, they'll break down fences, electric fences, whatever's there, and the cows will herd
onto the middle of a road if there's a mine nearby and just start licking, licking minerals off the road.
And cows die this way.
Truckers who work on roads near mineral mining are aware that there could be
lunatic cows in the middle of the road licking minerals off the road and that they could collide
with them at any point and it's really dangerous but what's going on it's it's the cow it's the
genetic memory of its ancestors 15 000 years ago traveling for a salt lake and isn't there a strange
little synchronicity there you know tens of thousands of years ago the first ever roads
that humans followed was in pursuit of these
aurochs when they went to their fucking salt lakes.
And now the descendants of these animals confuse our roads for salt lakes.
Why am I talking about this?
Yeah, the Cork podcast festival, the Cork Cod Past Festival, would be a festival about
salt. I would go to that.
I would go to the festival about our pork and cod past, and how we salted these things.
You could even have it in Cork if you wanted to.
The salting of cod, that was mainly done in Portugal, that's a real Portuguese thing.
But in Cork, the salting of pork was a pretty big deal.
Cork has a... Cork has a pretty serious food culture.
More than any Irish city.
Galway doesn't count.
Galway is just Ennis on a boner.
Galway does have a food culture, but it's a response to tourism.
And we're jealous of that in Limerick.
But Cork is different.
Cork had a lot of
rich Protestants you see. There's a food and wealth lineage going on in Cork that's a couple
of hundred years old. And in Ireland, we're not really known for food culture in Ireland
because of the famine and all that. That's not entirely true. The famine, the famine
obviously that wouldn't have helped our food culture. But one reason, I was speaking to a historian, I don't know who it was, but
this historian said that one reason that Ireland doesn't have a huge food culture like other
countries is because we had consistent access to fresh ingredients and because of that we didn't
need to preserve food as much. And cultures that have a long history of preservation, they tend to have the richest food cultures.
But down in Cork, there was a history of preservation.
Cork still has a place called the English Market, where meat is sold and delicacies,
and there's loads of posh Protestants, I suppose you'd call them, making food down in Cork,
and there has been for fucking years.
But the English market in Cork, it was controlled by the English.
It was a very Protestant market, and it serviced the British Empire.
It serviced the British Empire.
And the English market was famous for salted beef and salted pork to be exported to the West
Indies while the Brits were down there doing their slavery shit.
I'm going through all this stuff in my head so I can start calling the Cork podcast festival
by its proper fucking name and just get this...
I need to get this pork cod past business out of my head.
But technically if Cork did want to have a festival that celebrated
salt, you could pull it off down in Cork. You could pull it off down in Cork. You could
do that down in the Marina Market or something. You could dress Killian Murphy up as a baboon
and get him to recreate. Dress Killian Murphy up as a baboon and get him to recreate the Caligari salt experiment.
Just have Killian Murphy dressed up as a baboon.
Thirsty, thirsty, leading people to a watering hole after licking a lot of salt.
And there's your, there's your pork cod past festival.
So it's the Cork Podcast Festival, it's this Thursday, it's tomorrow, it's Thursday.
If you're a regular listener to this podcast you know that I'm shit at promoting gigs, alright? I'm always getting dates wrong.
Oh fuck me. After the pand-
After the pandemic. After the pandemic! Where I imagined- I don't know how it happened. I thought
I was gigging in Bristol and interviewing Maxim from The Prodigy and
I like promoted it. I said it like four times
Fantasy gig
Like I literally I was like I'm gonna be in Bristol and I'm gonna be interviewing Maxim from The Prodigy in Bristol
I said it in like three episodes. I wasn't lying. It's just
Whatever conversations I'd had with my book or whatever the fuck
had happened I'd gotten into my head that that was a thing that was gonna happen. I
think I might have just imagined it and then said that it was true. I'm not gigging in
Bristol and actually I fucking am am I? I actually am gigging in Bristol this June.
I don't think I'm interviewing Maxim from The Prodigy but I'm just saying about three
years ago I invented a gig in Bristol. Post-pandemic I was under a lot of stress,
but this time I am actually gigging in Bristol in...6th of June I think. That's nearly sold
out actually. But tomorrow I'm gigging in fucking Cork. I'm gigging in the Cork Opera
House tomorrow as part of the Cork Podcast Festival. The promoters Joe and Ed, they're
sound, they're lovely fellas and they asked me to plug it this week, but I give you the
history assault instead. Tomorrow, Thursday the 13th. I'm in the Cork Opera House at the
Cork Podcast Festival, come along to that, check out the rest of the Cork Podcast Festival.
I have a fucking unreal guest, a brilliant guest who's an expert in
a field that I'm fascinated in. And also, I'm gonna read out my short story, I'll Give
You Barcelona, which I'd never, I'd never read that out live, because it's too absurd.
But I read it out live in Kerry there last weekend.
It's the short story about the father who bites another man's arse in the gym.
I read it out live in Kerry last weekend and fuck me, it was great crack.
I didn't think it would work live, but it did.
So what I'd like to speak about in this week's podcast, I want to respond to a question, a question that I'm asked repeatedly.
And the question is,
why does everything feel so chaotic?
Why does the world feel so irrational?
There's a feeling and a sense that
maybe before the pandemic, I don't think so,
I think it's pre 2016, that we were a member at time when the world made sense. We used
to feel that if politicians stepped massively out of line, they'd lose their jobs and be
held accountable. We used to feel that if you just get an education, you get a good job, then you'll own a house
and have a family and lead a normal happy life.
We used to feel that if we're not happy with the way society and politics are going, don't
worry, we've got democracy.
Politicians will come along and they will
promise change and then if you just vote for them, if they get empowered then you'll have
that change. We used to believe if you just save up your money, just save up your money
and demonstrate that you're good at saving, then you'll get a house, you'll own a house.
The bank will give you a mortgage. Not so long ago we used to believe that if a
country or a world leader committed genocide and war crimes and was being
called out by like the International Criminal Court then we would see justice
that we would see these world leaders brought to justice. We used to believe
that if a genocide was occurring, if war
crimes were happening, that we could count upon a reliable journalism or
journalists, we could count upon reliable journalistic sources to call
these things out and to report this genocide as it happens and also for our
politicians to respond appropriately and condemn it happens, and also for our politicians to respond appropriately
and condemn and call out and do sanctions and whatever
on the country that's committing genocide and war crimes.
Not so long ago, we used to believe that Russia
aggressively invaded Ukraine, committed war crimes,
and was subjected to sanctions and
ostracization from the entire international community, right? We used
to believe that two years ago. Now in 2025 the president of America has flipped
that completely and now Ukraine, Ukraine is headed by a dictator and they are the
aggressors.
And that is now the narrative from fucking America.
A few years ago we used to believe that if there was a widespread disease, like I'm old
enough to remember foot and mouth disease.
In the early 2000s I was in school.
Foot and mouth disease was a disease that impacted cattle.
It was very serious.
And there was a huge government response as a result.
Herds of cattle were killed.
And also, when I was in school, sometimes school was shut down because of foot and mouth
disease.
It was 2001, Patrick's Day.
The St. Patrick's Day parade in 2001 didn't happen in Ireland because of foot and mouth disease.
Parades cancelled, public buildings closed.
Massive inconvenience, right?
We, I remember when that happened.
Nobody called foot and mouth disease fake. I remember everybody going, oh, there's this, there's this disease.
fake. I remember everybody going, oh there's this disease, there's this disease now and it's on cattle and it's really serious and it's annoying as fuck but we're gonna have
to respond to this disease that's definitely happening. I remember that. We used to believe
that when there was a widespread illness or disease or an epidemic or a pandemic. We used to believe that when that's happening,
it's actually scientific, evidence-based fact.
It's a thing that's actually happening because you can see it.
And if you were to question that, you're a fucking fruitcake.
We don't think like that anymore.
We don't think like that anymore.
It's now socially acceptable to say that a pandemic is fake.
We used to think that big gigantic corporations should pay tax.
That corporations that are earning billions should pay tax.
We don't think that anymore. We don't believe that anymore.
We used to think that, like, if a shopping center was being built,
or a giant housing estate was being built,
that even if there was a recession, they wouldn't just leave a gigantic half-built shopping
center lying there in the middle of your city for 17 years, or a housing estate unbuilt
for 17 years, just laying there rotten.
We used to think that was impossible. We used to think
That you couldn't have a box in your hand that you stare at and in this box are
hundreds of thousands of people's real people's anxieties
Beaming into your face whenever you want are all the information in the world all at once.
We used to think that was impossible.
I remember it.
Used to watch a cartoon called Inspector Gadget.
There was a girl in it called Lucy, I think.
And she had a book with a screen on it.
She could access all the information in the world.
And this was science fiction.
Flying cars were more possible than this.
What I'm describing
there, these beliefs, these beliefs that we could rely upon. There was a
philosopher called Francois Lyotard, he was a philosopher around the 1960s and
he referred to these things as grand narratives. And during the mid-20th century, from
about the end of World War II, up until the 70s,
there were certain grand narratives that we had in the West.
One grand narrative is the idea of progress.
Things are just gonna keep getting better and better.
Society is gonna continually improve and just get better and better. Society is going to continually improve and just get better and
better, mainly because we've got science and isn't science amazing? Like you look at science
fiction from the 1960s in particular, predictions about the future. If you asked someone in the
1960s how we'd be living in the 2020s, there'd be no diseases, flying cars, clean air, we wouldn't
have to work, robots would look after everything,
even to the point that we wouldn't even be eating food anymore, we'd get all our nutrients from vitamin pills.
Look at an episode of The Jetsons for a prediction of the future from the 50s and the 60s.
It's a very happy and secure society that predicts the future like that.
Another grand narrative that people had in the 20th century was economic security.
The government will protect you from homelessness.
If you get sick, the government will pay for you to get better.
If you get unemployed, there's going to be social welfare.
You're not going to be poor and destitute. And also, if you're a fascist, if you're a Nazi, if you're a Nazi and you've
committed a holocaust, then justice is going to be served. You're going to hang
at Nuremberg. Human rights are a thing now. People are protected just by being
people. These ideals are going to be reflected in journalism and the news
that's reported. In a lot of Western countries post-World War II. This was true. Why were these things true?
Well, from about the 1930s onwards, there was an economic feeling. Like, in the late 1920s,
America had a huge stock market crash. Massive. Which led to the Great Depression. Because
of the failure of unfettered capitalism. Let's just call it unfettered capitalism. Wealth
was controlled by 1% of people who could do whatever the fuck they want and there was
huge inequality and then you had a massive stock market crash in 1929. And then a response
to this was known as the No Deal. In the 1930s Franklin Roosevelt brought in a thing called the New Deal.
This was...it would look like socialism today.
If America did this today, America would look like a socialist country.
So from 1933, American tax...the government set up massive public works programs that would create a lot of jobs,
social security and fucking welfare for poor people.
Minimum wage was brought in, the right to unionise, the right to set up unions, and
the banks and Wall Street were regulated.
As in, there was rules, you can't do this, you can't do that.
Business was regulated. Business can't do this. You can't do that. Business was regulated.
Businesses and employers were regulated. Your profits are not the most important thing. You can't do this. You need to have a sense of responsibility. There's laws and if you break the
law, you're going to be punished. And as I mentioned, the biggest one of all, fucking unions.
Unions. The employees get together as a union and have power over their employer and
they're protected. The unions are protected by law. So now the employers, companies, corporations,
they couldn't outright exploit their workers because those workers had a legal right to strike
collective bargaining and to be protected. So that happened in America in the 1930s.
That's the government spending massively and creating a social safety net, a social safety
net to protect working class Americans from exploitation, poverty, homelessness, a social
safety net.
Now I'm simplifying the fuck out of this, and I'm not getting into racism or anything like this.
I'm synopsizing the fuck out of this.
America wasn't a perfect place in the 20th century, that's for sure.
But the New Deal of the 1930s, it would make America today look like a socialist country.
It is socialism. That's socialism. The New Deal was socialism.
The idea that the government has a responsibility to provide a social safety net for the people.
And that's nothing compared to what Britain did in the fucking 1940s after World War II.
You see, after World War II, the world had seen the Nazis. They'd seen the rise of fascism.
They'd seen how Nazism took over fucking Germany.
Germany from the 1920s onwards, after World War I, was fucked.
People lost their savings.
Complete economic collapse.
The Nazis, with their anti-Semitism, with their racism, with these simple narratives,
they took power from that.
Again, I'm oversimplifying massively for brevity.
So after World War II, Britain and other Western countries
that came out victorious out of the fucking war,
they looked at what happened in Germany and said,
right, okay, well if we don't want fascism in our country
and we want democracy, right, well the best thing to do
is to provide a social safety net for everybody.
And again, this is one of these things that breaks my heart, because I'm speaking about
shit from the 1940s and it seems like a utopian dream from the future.
Remember I said we used to have this belief that things get better and better and better,
and I'm going to describe here shit that Britain did in the 1940s that would make your jaw drop
So after World War two Britain and and Britain is bombed to bits here like fucked
Britain establishes the welfare state right and it was based on a thing called the beverage report and it identified
What it called the five giant evils, which are want, disease, ignorance, squalor and idleness.
They're very posh bastard words, but the sentiment is quite compassionate.
So in 1948, only like three years after World War II, Britain introduces the NHS, National
Health Service, right?
That's free healthcare for everybody. Fucking everybody.
Rich poor, everyone has free healthcare. If you get sick, the government looks after you.
Simple as that. Because you're a human being and human beings get sick. Not to mention
all the doctors and nurses that are now implied in full-time employment by the NHS and paid
by the government. Then in 1946 there's the National Insurance Act which is basically if you're unemployed you get
benefits, pensions, sick pay, the whole shebang. In 1944 the Education Act.
Secondary schools are free and compulsory. Everyone gets an education,
doesn't matter who the fuck you are, there's free education. Public housing.
Huge amounts of public housing are built.
You've got councils building houses.
Councils employing builders and building houses,
and then people who don't have houses are getting free houses.
And we think we're led to believe that the council housing
or the free housing was something for poor, for the poor people. No, right up
until the 60s in fucking Britain, look at the history of the the Barbican estate in London.
The Barbican estate were council houses for like doctors and you're thinking why the fuck
to why would you give a council house to a doctor? What this was the thinking? Why should why should
someone have to pay for housing?
Why can't everybody have a house?
Why can't that be the case?
The British post-war welfare state also had a full employment policy, right?
And this is the maddest thing of all.
So Britain nationalised its key industries.
So the coal industry, the steel industry, the railway industry, you
had all these government companies that aren't necessarily being run for profit.
They're being run because they're essential industries for the country and
to provide full employment and for the goal of the employees who are government
employees so that they can have houses and happy lives
and families so that you have an effective country.
Like I'm focusing on Britain and America here mostly because Ireland was a strange
one, but I benefited from that.
My dad, my dad worked in Aer Lingus, which was the Irish national airline.
It wasn't really run for profit.
Before Aer Lingus was privatized, it was run by the government.
My dad had a very modest job working in Shannon Airport
at a ticket desk in Aer Lingus.
And with that, he was a union organizer.
He had full employment. He wasn't afraid of union organizer. He had full employment.
He wasn't afraid of getting fired.
He had job security.
He had a guaranteed pension.
He had a life and a family.
And a sense of certainty, something he could believe in.
So the shit that I'm describing there, America and Britain, World War II era, the welfare
state, the no Deal, right?
It sounds like science fiction. It sounds like a utopia. It sounds like I'm making it up.
It wasn't perfect, but you didn't have the huge inequality that you have today. You didn't
have people living in tents on the side of the street. You didn't have the majority of
40-year-olds renting and not able to have families.
You didn't have mass anxiety, mass panic, mass fear. What you definitely didn't have is you didn't have a lot of billionaires.
There was under that system, there was not a lot of hyper wealthy people.
There were some wealthy people and a lot of people just doing okay.
Now I'm conscious that I'm really synopsizing huge swathes of
history in a small amount of words. And also I'm not a fucking expert here. I'm just, I'm a
storyteller. I'm a writer. And I understand how to research and source correctly so that
I can have a fairly high level of accuracy. But mostly I'm here as a storyteller. But what I'm describing there, like,
how the fuck, how the fuck does Britain introduce the NHS three years after World War II?
Like, we have a booming economy in Ireland.
There's huge employment, there's a lot of money around.
And there's people living in tents.
How can the economy look so healthy?
How can I see it and feel it and there be such huge inequality everywhere and such a sense of hopelessness?
Why is that happening now? Have you any idea what Britain was like in in
1948 now I'm aware in 1948 Britain had colonies
It was a colonial fucking power and it was extracting wealth from other fucking countries.
I know this. But in 1948 Britain had just fought World War II.
Sheffield would have looked like Ukraine or Gaza.
Massive cities in England, Scotland and Wales are in fucking rubble, in shit, like
bombed to bits by the Nazis and then
three years later Britain decides we're gonna make healthcare free for everybody
I know all the cities are like literally smoldering still but we're gonna make
healthcare free for everybody how the fuck do you do that three years after
World War Two and your country on fire and then today people can't afford
houses? What the fuck is going on? Now America did loan a lot of money to
people so America had a thing called the Marshall Plan after World War Two where
it loaned fucking billions to Europe and it did loan money to Britain to
physically rebuild cities but that didn't pay for the foundation of the NHS, or free education,
or council houses.
So in 1945 Britain was 21 billion in debt in 1945.
21 billion in 1945.
That's not adjusted for inflation.
So where did Britain get the money for this welfare state?
The first thing it did is it taxed the absolute fuck out of the wealthiest people.
The wealthiest people in Britain were taxed to fuck.
Clement Attlee and his Labour government, the wealthiest people in Britain were taxed
up to 90%. So all the incredibly wealthy people were taxed to pay for the
poor people. Like we live in a world right now where corporations that earn
billions and billions and billions pay less than 1% tax. That's the norm.
And the other thing that funded the welfare state was the nationalization, the
nationalization of coal, railways, steel, gas.
Because these things weren't necessarily being run for profit. They were being run as an essential
service to create employment. So that situation that I'm describing there, most of ye listening
would go, fuck it, I'd like that. I just want somewhere to live. I just want a job.
And to have the feeling that this job
isn't gonna disappear next month,
and that I have no control over that,
that I'm protected in some way.
I'd like to know that if I got sick next month,
it's not, I'm not gonna end up in debt.
I'd quite, I'd love it if all my friends
were also in the same situation.
I want my friends who want to have large families to have large fucking families
because they're not concerned about housing, healthcare,
or their jobs or employment or the future of their employment.
And why did this happen? How did this happen?
This utopia that I'm describing from nearly a hundred years ago.
How did it happen?
Because it was government policy.
Because it was fucking policy.
Why isn't it happening now?
Because it's not policy.
Because the policy now is the fucking opposite.
It's the same shit in America, in fucking England, in Ireland, wherever you go, the
same shit.
How did we get to this?
I'm leaving out so much. Like I'm speaking
about grand narratives here. A huge thing I'm leaving out is all of this is occurring
within the context of the Cold War. You have the West and you have the Soviet Union and
in the Soviet Union it's fully communist. Everything is state controlled.
Whereas in Britain, just as an example,
that's a mixed economy.
Capitalism and free market enterprise exists.
You can own a shop if you want, you can own a business.
These things exist, but certain industries,
essential industries, are nationalized,
so you have a mixed economy.
And under the Cold War,
there was pressure on Western countries
to be a little bit socialist.
Why did the people in Russia and Cuba, why did they get free healthcare?
Why do I have to pay for my healthcare?
So that pressure existed. Pressure existed to be a little bit socialist.
Because capitalism, communism were literally at ideological war.
That was the theme of the world.
So anyway, if you have a situation like in Britain where Clement Dalli is charging 90%
tax to some of the wealthiest people, that's a very hostile environment if you have a lot
of money.
If you're fucking wealthy, that's quite a hostile environment.
I need to take a break.
It's it's time for an ocarina pause now. But after the ocarina pause,
I'm gonna tell you the story of how we got to where we are now. I'll play my bass ocarina.
You're gonna hear some adverts for some bullshit.
Ooh.
I got a jewel tone there like Mongolian throat singing.
Oh, here's a siren as well.
Let's throw that in.
Spring means new opportunities.
Don't let cash flow slow you down.
With iCapital, you can access up to $250,000 in as little as 48 hours.
A 5-minute application and 24-hour approval mean you're back to business in no time.
Flexible repayment, no stress, just simple financing that works. Visit iCapital.ca today
and grow with confidence.
and grow with confidence. BetterHelp Online Therapy bought this 30-second ad to remind you right now wherever you are to unclench your jaw. Relax your shoulders. Take a deep breath in and out. Feels better, right? That's 15 seconds of self-care.
Imagine what you could do with more. For a limited time, visit betterhelp.com
randompod for one free week of online therapy. No pressure, just help. But for now, just relax.
With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff. And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan, you're not with Fizz.
Switch today. Conditions apply. Details at Fizz.ca.
That was the Ocarina Posse. Support for this podcast comes from you, the listener, via
the Patreon page, patreon.com forward slash the Blind By podcast. If this podcast brings you
mirth, merriment, entertainment, distraction, whatever the fuck has you listening to this podcast,
please consider supporting it directly. This is my full-time job. This is how I earn a living.
This is the Patreon allows me to have the time to research and write my podcast each week. The Patreon keeps us independent
Advertisers can't come in and tell me what to speak about
My Patreon model to be honest
It's kind of based on the original NHS and what I mean by that is well, that's what inspired me.
I just want to earn a living doing what I love. That's it. So if you can
afford, if you listen to this podcast and you can afford to give me the price of a pint
or a cup of coffee once a month, if you can afford that, right, then please do. But if
you can't afford it, if you don't have that money, you don't have to pay. You can listen for free.
You listen for free.
My Patreon page is blank.
There's nothing there.
The people who pay and the people who don't pay, there's no benefit to paying.
Everyone gets the exact same podcast.
The exact same.
There's a million regular listeners.
If I wanted to earn more, I'd have exclusive content
that some people pay for. I'd have more advertisers on here doing sponsored
episodes. But what I prefer is everybody gets the exact same podcast. I get to
earn a living. I've got creative freedom, right? And the people who can pay, who are
paying, they're paying for the people who can't afford to
pay. And everybody gets the exact same podcast. And that's the model that I like. So if you
can't afford to pay and to support this podcast directly, please do patreon.com forward slash
the blind by podcast. And don't do it through the Apple app, the Apple fucking Patreon app, because Apple
take 30% now, right, on the iPhone I mean. If you are becoming a paid patron, do it
on a web browser or on the browser on your mobile phone. Okay let's plug a few
gigs. Tomorrow night the Cork Opera House, please come along to that, right, if
if you're not sure about it, it's a wonderful little quiet Thursday
night gig. If you're thinking to yourself, oh fuck it, I don't want to go out on a Thursday.
I have a cracking guess, you're not going out on a Thursday. Coming to my live podcast
is, it's like going to the cinema or going to a play. You don't have to have a pint.
Most people aren't drinking.
You can go to my live podcast on Thursday night
and you'll be in home.
You'll be at home in bed by half 11
and you'll be awake for work the next day.
And you won't have a fucking hangover
because you're not gonna be getting shit faced
at a live podcast.
So come along to my gig in Cork,
the Cork Opera House tomorrow
as part of the Cork Podcast Festival.
And look up the Cork Podcast Festival, not the Cork Podcast...
Fuck's sake.
Australian New Zealand, sold out, right? Can't wait to go over there.
Dane, what have we got?
I think that's... Is that the lot?
Might have a gig in Cavern coming up, I'll give you the details of that soon enough.
Before I get on to the... the...
UK tour,
I have a gig in Derry, right?
I have a gig in Derry there in September.
Come along to that in Derry, Derry's a wonderful place to do a gig in September.
Derry.
Derry means, Orkwood.
The land of the Orkwoods. There was obviously a load of Ork trees there at once. Derry. Derry means oak wood. The land of the oak woods. There was obviously a lot of
oak trees there at once, one time. My tour of Scotland and England, right, which is happening
in June, which is almost sold out, alright. I'm in Bristol, Cornwall, Sheffield, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow, York, London, East Sussex and Norwich.
And you can get those tickets at fain.co.uk forward slash blind buy.
Come along to those gigs.
I love gigging for the Kraken Tans.
Most of my listeners are Kraken Tans now.
Right, let's get back to how we ended up in this shit that we're in today.
So the British welfare state, you know, 90% tax on wealthy people. The New Deal America, 1940s.
This wasn't a good time for multimillionaires. I don't think billionaires existed yet, but it
wasn't a good time for multimillionaires or people of generational wealth. And in 1940s,
a fella came about by the name of Friedrich Hayek.
He was an economist from Austria.
And he looked at the welfare state in Britain and the New Deal in America
and said, well, this has gone too far now.
This is too far. This is hostile to wealthy people.
This is actually going to lead to...
If Britain and America go down this path of creating gigantic social nets for all the
people, that's a type of collectivism.
That's going to lead to Soviet-style communism. That's the end result of this.
Give it 20 fucking years and Britain and America,
it's gonna turn into Stalin and Mao Tse-Tung.
And anyone who has any wealth,
they're gonna be executed in the streets.
So this fella, Friedrich Hayek,
he starts doing speaking tours in America in the 1940s,
speaking to incredibly wealthy people, to rich people, and freaking them out.
Freaking them out saying this new deal, this welfare state, it's gonna end in some French
revolution shit.
They're gonna behead the wealthy people.
This big government control.
The government controlling like oil industries, airplanes, electricity,
the government controlling industry, taxing people. This is an attack on freedom. That's
what this is. And he published a book in the 1940s called The Road to Serfdom. And it was
directed at very wealthy people in America. The very wealthy, and it was a book that basically said to the very wealthy, you people are freedom fighters. You have an absolute right to
earn as much money as you want for your business, the government
shouldn't interfere with your business at all. If you want to own the oil
industry, you should be allowed to compete and own the oil industry, the coal
industry. You do whatever you want for profit, that's actually freedom, and by industry, you should be allowed to compete and own the oil industry, the coal industry,
you do whatever you want for profit, that's actually freedom. And by you doing that, you're
fighting against the potential totalitarianism of this social safety net. And also, and here's
the thing, this social safety net stuff, where the government is investing in healthcare and housing and all that, that's
not how you have a healthy country. What you want is, you want the richest people. The richest people
should be allowed to do what they want. Let the really rich, intelligent, smart, successful people,
that's who we are, let us do whatever the fuck we want. And then when we earn
loads of money, that's gonna trickle
down. The freedom that we
have in business to do whatever we want,
we don't even want to pay taxes,
that will create jobs
and that will trickle down.
And this is the 1940s, and
these ideas are being exposed
by this economist, Friedrich Hayek.
And what he's creating here,
it's neoliberalism.
That's a word.
You'll hear me using it on this podcast a lot.
You might hear it in the media.
You have to understand what neoliberalism is.
It's a shitty word, because the thing is, if you don't know what neoliberalism means,
it's one of these words that you hear and it sounds like a word that a person uses to
try and sound smart.
It's one of them.
So we kind of switch off and you hear the word neoliberalism, if you don't know what
it means you think the person who says it is being a prick that they're showing off.
But we all have to understand what neoliberalism means.
It's how the wealthy steal.
It's how the wealthy people steal.
Giant corporations don't pay tax.
Corporations that earn billions and billions and billions each year don't pay any tax.
They do it in Ireland. I'm from fucking Ireland. We enable this. We enable this.
Corporations come here to Ireland for our 12% corporation tax and then through a lot of dirty tricks, some of them end up paying less than 1%.
We enable it. They're stealing.
They're stealing neoliberalism.
It's how the wealthiest people steal public money.
So back to the 1940s, this fellow, Friedrich Hayek, right?
He does speaking tours to the wealthiest people in America.
Every single wealthy person who hears his speech says I
fucking love this guy this is amazing I hate this welfare state shit. I hate this
I hate that rich people are being taxed. I hate that poor people who I think are
lazy and stupid. I hate they're getting free housing. I hate that I can't do
whatever I want. I hate that the coal industry isn't privatized. I hate that they're getting free housing. I hate that I can't do whatever I want. I hate that the coal industry isn't privatized.
I hate that I can't own the coal industry and make billions.
I hate that I own a tie company.
I own a tie company.
I make ties for children,
but I legally can't advertise to children.
I hate that that's illegal,
because I could make way more money if I could advertise to children because I'm selling ties
with my giant tie company. So by the 1950s money starts pouring into this Friedrich Hayek fella
to do his speaking tours and to form
organizations to promote these ideas that he has, these ideas of
neoliberalism, new economic liberalism.
of neoliberalism, new economic liberalism. Let rich people do whatever the fuck they want and it'll benefit the economy. To pursue wealth is a form of freedom and anything that isn't this
is totalitarianism. Like 1940s Jordan Peterson. You know, listening to fucking Jordan Peterson,
if you tell me in my job that I have to call a trans student trans, then the next step is
Soviet totalitarianism. That's a Jordan Peterson shtick for years. Hayek was like that.
So throughout the 50s all these big huge fucking corporations, massive corporations,
they start pouring money behind fucking Hayek, General Electric,
Coors Beer, Ford, giant giant corporations
start pouring money into this fella. Then they start spending money on think tanks,
these lobbying groups to change policy in all parts of US public life in political discourse, lobbying politicians, lobbying journalists,
universities. They start funding the University of Chicago. So now you've got economists coming
out of the University of Chicago in the 60s, 50s and 60s I believe, who are now promoting
this fella Hayek's, his ideas of economic liberalism equals freedom.
1960 he writes another book called the Constitution of Liberty. He equates
wealth and the pursuit of wealth with democracy, freedom,
heroism. I
mean, this is where we get, you get some of these people
licking Elon Musk's arse,
portraying Elon Musk as this scientific genius, as if he himself is designing the rockets,
designing the cars, instead of being a financier.
In this 1960 book that Hayek wrote, The Constitution of Liberty. You see this positioning of the very wealthy as, like, genius scientists.
These are the saviors of civilization.
To be wealthy means that you're good. It means that you work hard.
To be poor means that you're a scrounger, you're lazy, you're waiting for handouts.
The years and years of backing Hayek's ideas, it eventually pays off. It
pays off because it ends up influencing, by the 1970s, Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.
Now I've completely skipped Chile. The country of Chile, that's where... Chile was ground
zero for where this neoliberalism was tested.
Now I've done a podcast on that, I think it's called Why I Want to Fuck Donald Duck.
I think that's the name of the podcast.
If it's not that, it has something to do with Donald Duck, right?
I did it about four years ago and it's about Chile.
I hate calling it Chile, I'm just gonna call it Chile.
I know it's called Chile.
Chile sounds better to me.
It's like the fucking poor cod pass festival.
The country of Chile.
Chile basically,
it was a socialist country under a fellow called
Salvador Allende.
He had this mad socialist internet thing in the 70s.
Anyway, he was shut down by a coup.
Fellow called Pinochet took over.
Big fascist fucking coup, really brutal.
And neoliberal economists from the University of Chicago basically rebuilt the entire economy
of Chile under the fascist Pinochet and like sold off the copper industry.
But that's where neoliberalism was really road tested in Chile.
Long story short, right, these ideas by this fella Hayek, they
make it to Reagan, they make it to Thatcher. Both Thatcher and Reagan ideologically are
like, we want to get these ideas, right? And we want to make that happen. We want this
to be policy. We want this to be fucking policy and the policy is
Privatize everything right so that the nationalized industries where you have people with full-term employment
Pensions healthcare fuck that that's completely private now, so coal
rail steel whatever private industry for profit deregulation which means companies can do whatever they want so long as they can earn money so there's no more regulation on companies
i've done huge podcasts on this before the reason i mentioned children's toys is if you're a
millennial like me you grew up watching children's cartoons. He-men, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, all this shit, right?
Those weren't cartoons. Those were advertisements for toys under a Reagan era. Deregulation.
And I always use this as the best example to describe what deregulation is.
It used to be illegal to advertise to children. It used to be considered unethical, wrong and dangerous
to advertise to children. This was informed by psychologists. It was illegal
to advertise to children. Under Reagan, Reagan was like, that sounds anti-business,
that sounds anti-capitalism. I think very wealthy Thai companies should be allowed
to advertise to children. So they did it via cartoons.
And your childhood.
My Little Pony, He-Man, whatever the fuck.
Those were not cartoons.
They were advertisements for Thais.
Because advertising to children had been deregulated.
Even though the psychologist said, this isn't very safe.
Children are too young to be advertised to.
They're too young.
Reagan was like, no, fuck that.
I think that the right of a Thai company to earn more money
is more important than the mental health of children.
That's neoliberalism right there.
Reduced government intervention.
The government shouldn't be involved
in the economy whatsoever.
Just hand it all over to private companies. That's neoliberalism.
Elon Musk right now, with his Doge, the Department of Government Deficiency, and Trump,
selling this narrative to the people.
We're draining the swamp. We're getting rid of these elites from government. We're shutting down all these programs. Are they fuck? They're shutting them down so you don't have government employees anymore
and they're gonna turn everything into for profit. Like they've shut down the
national parks. They're gonna reopen the national parks but not they'll be owned
by fucking Jeff Bezos or whatever cabal of billionaires you currently see alongside Trump.
Fucking Zuckerberg, Bezos, fella called Peter Thiel.
He basically owns your man JD Vance.
And then Elon Musk.
You see, neoliberalism creates a feeling of powerlessness and hopelessness.
And what I mean by that is, if you work, you're paying taxes, right?
And you're looking around
and a lot of people are working
and a lot of people are paying a lot of taxes
then why are people living in tents?
Why are there people living in tents?
Why is that happening?
Because your taxes
I'm speaking for Ireland now, but this is happening in other countries
I'm sure it's the same in the fucking UK. In Ireland
The taxes that you pay to provide a person who's in need with housing, these taxes, that money is actually
stolen by a rich cunt. Like I have a job and I pay taxes, right?
And I want, I want my taxes
right? And I want, I want my taxes to pay for the housing of a family who aren't as fortunate as me. For whatever reason, I don't give a fuck what the reasons are.
But I know there's, there's people out there and they can't afford housing. And I
want those people to have houses, to be warm, to have food, to have a quality of life.
And I don't mind paying that with my taxes.
I want that.
I want to do that with my taxes.
I want to live in that society.
100%.
I want to live in that society where my taxes are helping people who are less fortunate than me.
Currently what's happening in Ireland is,
yes, there is a certain amount of affordable housing
or social housing for people, right?
So let's just say a family in Ireland
want to get social housing, right?
So they can get access to this.
They can get a house.
Now it's very, very fucking scarce, right?
It's very scarce.
But if a family is lucky enough to get a house, okay?
It's true thing called HAP,
the Housing Assistance Payment, right?
Instead of back in the day
where social housing was built and provided
by local authorities, by the council,
now what's happening is the government pays a landlord.
So the money that you think is a taxpayer is actually going to help a family get a house
or to get a home.
It is.
But the vast majority of that money that you pay is lining the pockets of a landlord.
And the government pays the landlord
with your taxes, the market value of the rent. So let's just say for argument's
sake, the person in need of a house, they pay 200 quid a month in HAP, right?
That's very affordable rent, 200 quid. The landlord who owns that house is paid by the government,
2,500 quid, from tax, from tax money.
And that there is neoliberalism.
A public service, such as providing people in need
with affordable housing, has been outsourced
to the private market, and very wealthy people are stealing. I'm calling
it stealing. Very wealthy people are stealing tax, making themselves wealthy
and pushing rents up. You see, now there's an incentive,
there's an incentive for a housing crisis now. Now there's an industry. An industry is developing whereby instead of
wanting to solve the housing crisis, okay, and to provide everybody with housing
because housing should be a right, instead of that what you have is an
industry where human misery and homelessness can be milked and profited
from. And that's how you end up with people paying taxes
to try and solve the housing crisis.
And still there's a lot of homeless people.
So you end up feeling that everything is pointless.
I'm paying taxes. Everyone I know is paying taxes.
There's a high employment and all these people who are highly employed
are paying fucking taxes.
Why are there people on the streets in tents?
Because the system has been set up for very rich people to steal taxes.
That's what neoliberalism is.
In America, prisons are privatised.
So when people go to prison in America,
the fucking prisons are private and people can earn money from running prisons.
So now they've incentivised the prison industry,
the wonderful NHS that I described in fucking Britain
that was set up as free healthcare for everybody.
That's been gutted.
Deregulation and neoliberalism has allowed the NHS
to be contracted out.
So lots of stuff in the NHS is now contracted out
for profit to private companies.
And then the NHS itself gets underfunded to encourage
this pushing it out to the private market.
So that situation there as well in Ireland where I mentioned that like when you pay taxes
for social housing, most of that goes to landlords.
These landlords, they're not like individual people. Sometimes they are, but mostly, you're talking about giant companies that own multiple properties.
How about this? This is gonna sound fucking nuts.
What if I told you that social housing in Ireland is advertised to other countries?
Social housing is advertised, social housing in Ireland is advertised in China as an investment.
Ireland's housing crisis, Ireland's misery, is advertised to multimillionaires in China as a secure investment.
It advertises Ireland. Now I'm taking this from, there's a journalist in Sunday Business Post called Killian Woods and he does brilliant investigation, he's
a legitimate journalist, he does brilliant investigations into this. So Ireland was being
advertised to these Chinese multi-millionaires, the housing crisis was being advertised as
the Irish people, they drink on Saturday and then drink for half the day on Sunday
and by then most of their weekly paycheck is spent.
So when Monday comes around and they start to work, they're lethargic.
It's basically positioning Ireland as this very safe country
where we don't notice what's going on because we're so pissed all the time.
And then it says, Ireland is a country that doesn't have any radical Muslim issues.
And what are they selling?
Social housing.
These ads were successful in my city in Limerick.
This is not a fucking joke.
In my city in Limerick, Chinese investors bought a 100 million euro site and they're
going to build 500 social homes. Now here's the thing, am I
anti-social housing? No, no, build fucking social housing. I don't want to see
people on the streets in tents. Isn't it a good thing that these Chinese
investors are building 500 social houses in Limerick? Is that not a good thing? So
yes, this means that 500 families might get 500 houses in
Limerick, right? Affordably. That's brilliant. Why are Chinese investors paying for it? That's
500 houses that are going to be rented out at market value. The current market value
to rent out a house for a month in Limerick would be between 2,500 and 3,000 euros. That's
1.5 million euros a month, right? Who pays that? The Irish taxpayer, you and me, are
taxes, right? Yes, those taxes 500 people are getting houses, or 500 families are getting
houses affordably, right? But the vast majority of that money, that 1.5 million,
the vast majority of that money is being siphoned off to Chinese investors. And they'll probably
have a company in Ireland where that money goes to, and they won't have to pay tax on
it. And then you now have an entire for-profit industry, whereby this industry makes it makes more money when the housing
crisis is worse you see the housing the more scarce housing is the more
expensive it is and now the more money you can make from a housing crisis so
money's being stolen what stops that regulation it should be illegal it
shouldn't happen because it's unconscionable.
It's unthinkable.
It's inhumane.
It perpetuates a housing crisis.
It creates a housing crisis.
It turns misery into a commodity
that can be profited from and milked.
And then that whole process
leaves the average person feeling utterly powerless.
The same thing is happening with refugees.
Ukrainian refugees. Refugees from all over the world.
You might be thinking, blind boy, are you anti-refugee now?
Why are you speaking about refugees? No, I'm not anti-refugee at all.
There's people escaping wars. They deserve to have safety.
Ireland is a safe country. I would like my taxes. I would like my taxes
to give these people safety and warmth and food for as long as they need.
But this has been outsourced to the private market, mostly by huge hotel
chains, earning millions and millions. And how are these hotel chains earning money?
By providing accommodation for refugees? Because they're charging the government market value.
So if Traveladger stuck into it, I know Travelodge are one of the companies for sure.
Yeah, so in 2023 Travelodge made 37 million from the Irish government by providing accommodation for refugees.
Now to the best of my understanding, rooms are charged at the going price.
So if the government outsourced privately contracts to hotels to accommodate refugees,
and then the hotel charges the government what the going rate would be for a hotel room that night,
which could be 300, 400 quid. So I think that my taxes are actually paying
to accommodate people who are fleeing war, and they are. But most of the money, most
of the money is going into the pockets of private corporations, right? Giant hotel companies
who are funneling tax, public money, into their private coffers and then paying
Ireland's very low corporation tax of 12%.
So what you're seeing really, okay, it's stealing.
It's legal so it's not stealing, right?
But slowly but surely through policy, through lobbying, and this isn't just Ireland, this is everywhere, right?
Neoliberalism, through privatisation, deregulation, has made it so that the wealthiest people and entities
pay the least amount of tax and can funnel tax money, public money that's supposed to be going to
to provide social safety nets. This money that's supposed to be going to to provide social
safety nets. This money that used to provide safety nets, it's now just been
funneled. And what do you get from that? Huge, huge inequality. You get a lot of
billionaires and then 99% of people going, this is hopeless, this is hopeless.
There appears to be money everywhere,
there appears to be a functioning economy,
but why are people in tents?
What's happening here?
Policy is what's happening.
That's a choice, that's a choice.
Policy.
Policy is what's fucking happening there.
In the same way, it was policy.
For Britain to start the
NHS, free healthcare for everybody, while the place was on fire.
Neoliberalism has figured out a way to take human misery and turn it into
profit and most of us aren't really aware that's what's happening. Instead we
just have a feeling of powerlessness and in that that golf, in that golf, what happens?
In the confusion, the confusion and the chaos of that, and the feeling of nothing I seems
to do makes a difference, we search for our narratives again.
Conspiracy theories, the pandemic, racism, fascism.
The billionaires own the social media companies.
The billionaires own the social media companies where disinformation is spread.
Not just disinformation, but any information that causes us to have high arousal emotions, anger and fear.
These platforms are owned by billionaires. These platforms,
the public square where we have conversations,
owned by billionaires and they set the rules of how discourse must occur.
And social media is a video game where you have turn and response combat, where everything must be
Trump, where you have turn and response combat, where everything must be polarised. And they make money from that too.
Or data, the longer you stay on whatever fucking app, arguing, the more money the billionaires
make.
Who's right hand side with Trump?
Elon Musk and fucking Mark Zuckerberg.
There's no conspiracy.
It's neoliberal capitalism, it's right there in front of you.
You don't need a conspiracy.
The wealthiest people in the world are taking ownership of everything including public discourse.
Conspiracy theories, anger, blaming, pointing the finger at one another,
pointing the finger at fucking refugees, pointing the finger at trans people, whatever the fuck.
These are all wonderful, brilliant distractions, while public money is funneled into private
interests and we can't see it happening. There was a psychologist by the name of Martin Seligman,
I think he was in the 1960s. His methods were studied by the fucking CIA when they were
writing up their torture manuals, but Martin Seligman proposed a theory called learned helplessness,
But Martin Seligman proposed a theory called learned helplessness in human behavior. And he did studies on dogs.
He got one dog and put him in a box, right?
And the dog was given electric shocks.
It wasn't very nice.
The dog was given electric shocks.
But the dog could turn off the electric shocks
By touching a lever, but at the same time there was another dog in another box
Watching all this and the other dog was getting shocks too except when the other dog touched the lever
Nothing happened. The dog got shocks regardless
Nothing that the dog could do would stop the shocks happening.
Animal cruelty.
Seligman continued these experiments, right?
So the one dog was receiving shocks,
but it could stop the shocks by touching a lever.
Other dog getting the same shocks,
but nothing it did could stop the shocks.
Then the experiment progressed.
Seligman got both dogs and put them into a couple of new
boxes, right? And in these boxes the dogs could avoid shocks if they just jumped over a bar.
The dog who had been in the box, whereby if he touched the lever he could stop the shocks.
This dog would jump whenever it felt the shock. This dog would actively avoid shocks and work
towards not being shocked. The dog that was in the box, whereby nothing it did, it got shocks anyway.
This dog just gave up and whimpered and yelped and allowed itself to be shocked,
consistently electrocuted in utter misery.
And Seligman called this learned helplessness.
The dog had been conditioned to believe
that it was going to be hurt and harmed regardless
and that nothing it could do could have any influence over its life and environment.
Neoliberalism thrives on that.
All the fucking mad conspiracy theories, the disinformation,
the horrifying images of genocide, the fact that nothing's done about it, that no one's held to account, the removal of all belief
structures, the removal of the international order, the rise of fascism, everything, everything
is preying upon our feeling of hopelessness and then adding to it as well.
It's a system designed to make you feel helpless so you don't do anything about it and you
just give up and put up with it.
It's hard to find an answer but one thing I do notice is that the system thrives upon
division.
Whatever the subject.
Like, think of it, if you go to the fucking pub, and this wasn't the case 10 years ago,
if you go to the pub, right, and you're with your friends, and there's a few other people who you
don't know that well, are you really going to bring up housing or immigration? Are you really
going to do that? You probably won't because you don't know where the conversation is going to go.
You're afraid that someone is gonna say something racist or utterly
fucking mad. Someone might legitimately turn around and say you bring off
housing and then they go you know refugees you know that's actually a
global plot to replace white people and the ones that are doing it are
interdimensional shape-shifting lizards. I know people who believe that. I didn't know people who believed that ten fucking years ago.
Everything has become so polarised and divided.
Doesn't... There's people in America fighting over milk.
There's people fighting over raw milk.
You've Robert Kennedy running the healthcare system over there.
People in America, milk has become politicised.
Right-wing people want raw milk that comes straight
from a cow's tit. Left-leaning people want milk that's been pasteurised. If I see someone who's
into yoga now, I have to wonder if they're a fascist. Oh, you're into crystals here? Do you
like crystals? Or do you think that the Covid vaccine was actually implanted in us as a tracking device
for Hollywood elites so that they can so that they can suck adrenochrome from the glands
of abused children in order to have longevity?
There's people who believe that.
Some some of these people are into yoga.
Ten years ago when someone was into yoga they were
just into meditating and breathing. No matter what it is, it's being polarized,
whatever the subject, it's being polarized and people are being split
into two teams. And you know who's being split into two teams? People who are
fucked by the system. People at the bottom of the system. So I don't know
what the answer
is but I do know that division is a goal. The first thing that I do proactively, I can
only give advice to people in Ireland. Giant Community Action Tenancy Union, CATU, it's a volunteer run organization, Community Action Tenants Union, who strive for collective
bargaining against evictions and landlords.
And it's about people power and community, and I don't think it's centrally run.
So that's a positive thing you could do.
Join your local Cato branch. If division is a very clear goal, which we can see, if division is a clear
goal, then community and unity and solidarity and empathy and trying to
meet in real-life spaces outside of online spaces, that's probably a
potential solution. Okay, I didn't expect this podcast to be... I could have done
fucking longer on this. I could have done longer and there's so, I didn't expect this podcast to be... I could have done fucking longer on this.
I could have done longer and there's so much I didn't fucking speak about. I mean, I just
focused on housing. All right, dog bless. I'll catch you next week. My voice is gone.
Genuflect to a swan, wink at a worm. Gently explain neoliberalism to a snail, to a garden snail.
Dog bless. With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
you're not with Fizz.
Switch today.
Conditions apply.
Details at Fizz.ca.
Better Help Online Therapy bought this 30-second ad to remind you right now, wherever you are, to unclench your
jaw.
Relax your shoulders.
Take a deep breath in and out.
Feels better right?
That's 15 seconds of self care.
Imagine what you could do with more.
For a limited time, visit betterhelp.com slash random pod for one free week of online therapy.
No pressure, just help.
But for now, just relax. you... you. So you. So.. Thank you.