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tv   The Neil Oliver Show  GB News  September 8, 2024 6:00pm-7:01pm BST

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good evening, good people. thanks for joining good evening, good people. thanks forjoining me. good evening, good people. thanks for joining me. welcome to the neil oliver show on gb news tv, radio and online tonight, investigative journalist , tonight, investigative journalist, author and activist derrick broze will be to here talk about the people's reset, an event aimed at promoting regenerative culture. we'll also
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be joined by colonel douglas mcgregor to discuss recent developments in ukraine, including zelenskyy hitting out at britain for the slowing of delivery of long—range missiles and doctor ivor cummins will be joining us to talk about what's grinding his gears. and i can can i pre—empt that by saying it's basically what grinds my gears. all of that and more coming up. but first, an update on the latest . on the latest. news. >> good evening. the top stories from the gb newsroom . today from the gb newsroom. today marks two years since the passing of britain's longest reigning monarch, queen elizabeth. the second. she was on the throne for 70 years and was beloved by the nation and around the world. earlier today, the king and queen attended crathie kirk church near balmoral , where the late queen balmoral, where the late queen was a regular worshipper. they
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were there for a sunday service with prayer and remembrance of his late mother, who passed at the age of 96. the prime minister has hit out at previous governments this morning, saying the nhs has been broken in ways that he called unforgivable. these comments come as labour commissioned a review into how children are treated by the nhs, is due to be published in the coming week. health secretary wes streeting set out labour's plan to tackle the nhs crisis. >> former gender is about is about three big shifts out of hospital into the community, so we get the gp appointments that people need, the social care that people need, care closer to people's homes, better for patients, better for value taxpayers. it's a shift from analogue to digital . so we're analogue to digital. so we're not working with outdated systems and allowing the waste in the nhs to go unchallenged. and then thirdly, from sickness to prevention, making sure we're supporting people not to just live longer but to live well for longer through good public
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health and prevention measures. those are the pillars of labour's reform agenda. >> meanwhile, shadow health secretary victoria atkins told gb news that she's concerned that labour are using this report to cover their plans to increase taxes . increase taxes. >> what concerns me about the way that labour is seeking to report this report is that they seem to be chasing headlines, you know, lord darzi is a very respected eminent surgeon. of course, he is . also, it's fair course, he is. also, it's fair to say, a former labour minister and a former labour peer. but this report should be about what the state of the of the nhs is and providing solutions. and what worries me is that labour is using this report as cover for the tax rises that they plan to raise on us all at the budget in october. >> now a 15 year old boy has died after having difficulty whilst in the water at an activity centre in greater manchester. manchester police says officers were called over concerns for a male in the water at scotland's flash in wigan at
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around 3:00 yesterday afternoon. he was recovered from the water by members of the public, but he died despite the best efforts of the emergency services. the force says there aren't believed to be any suspicious circumstances around that incident , circumstances around that incident, and the king has sent his heartfelt congratulations to the paralympian athletes from great britain and northern ireland, and from across the whole commonwealth. ahead of tonight's closing ceremony , his tonight's closing ceremony, his majesty added your example has succeeded in inspiring, encouraging and lifting the hearts of all. team gb have won a huge number of medals today , a huge number of medals today, including in the kayaking with a gold and silver in the women's 200m kl2 a gold in the women's 200m kl2 a gold in the women's 200m kl3 and a silver in the men's 200m kl3. and those are the latest gb news headlines for now. i'm tatiana sanchez, i'm back in an hour for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code ,
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alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts . slash alerts. >> it occurred to me this week that i find it hard to remember my life before. or more broadly, the way things used to be and not so very long ago. so much has changed in four years, or rather, so much change has been forced upon us and keeps coming. i think a lot about remembering and memory, how it's memory that enables us to know who we are when we wake up each morning . when we wake up each morning. remembrance is vital for individuals, but also nations. if we forget who we are on account of dementia perhaps, or other neurological damage , then other neurological damage, then we're just bodies without identities. something similar is true of nations when they are stripped of the mythologies and traditions that are the national foundations. i see the nations of the west are being made to forget who they are, who they were , and that it's no accident.
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were, and that it's no accident. national personalities. what it has been to be british, what it has been to be british, what it has been to be british, what it has been to be french. what it has been to be french. what it has been to be french. what it has been to be american, canadian, australian. all of those national identities are and more are being dissolved before our eyes. or rather, i would say deliberately and malevolently dismantled by those who see the dissolution of identity, the onset of national forgetfulness as steps towards something else , something else something else, something else they would prefer. where there has been a presence all too soon, there will be only an absence instead. look at britain now, at other european countries. besides, look at the usa , canada, france and ask usa, canada, france and ask yourself if you still recognise those places. ask yourself as well whether those places still recognise you or in the manner of an elderly relative afflicted with dementia, have they forgotten you.7 when with dementia, have they forgotten you? when i say the changes are no accident, i think about how it has been accomplished. the truth is that the techniques have been used before, found to work, and are
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being used again. i get myself into trouble when i talk about the centralising of power, about globalism. let's use another word instead collectivism. maybe at the tail end of world war two, at the yalta conference in early 1945, us president roosevelt and british prime minister winston churchill met with joseph stalin of the ussr and gave him in effect, half of europe, and in that eastern bloc. the consequences of collectivism came into the fullest flowering. stalin's power to control the production and distribution of food made possible the holodomor, the man made famine that killed, or rather deliberately murdered millions of ukrainians and neighbouring russians between 1932 and 1933. ukraine, that benighted place fought over and so tortured by nazis and communists, by one ideology, or the other ideologies that in truth, you couldn't slip a cigarette paper between in terms of their consequences for
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populations living under either. the mass starvation was no mistake , no accidental mistake, no accidental misfortune born of hubris. it was made possible by collectivism. stalin wanted rid of the ukrainian peasantry and control of the food supply gave him the means he particularly loathed. the so—called kulaks , loathed. the so—called kulaks, those farmers, a generation or so out of serfdom who had acquired a few fields, some livestock, maybe built a decent house. kulak was a pejorative, a name meaning tight fisted , part name meaning tight fisted, part of a carefully choreographed campaign by which anyone with any kind of independence, and therefore any kind of resistance to the collectivism, was demonised and set up for being murdered. food. every source of food right down to the last seed, even the leaves on the trees, grass in the fields was seized and taken from the countryside and into the cities. a systematic and ruthless denial of any and every form of sustenance to the rural population applied by soldiers and activists, returning again
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and activists, returning again and again to every village, every house ensured no one had anything to eat, nothing at all, not even worms or bugs scavenged from the soil, broken and driven mad by hunger. people descended into madness, finally lay down and died in their millions. some will say those days are in the past, that it's ancient history. they will insist that there's no similarity between what happened in the second half of the 20th century. in the countries under stalin's thrall, and 21st century centralising policies of progressives and so—called liberals. i see what happened before can happen again. the worst of times included. and if we don't waken up to the threat now that it surely will. there's talk again of collectivising farming plans afoot to seize farmland , forcing the farmers farmland, forcing the farmers away, and so taking control of food. i see the threat no longer comes from the east, but is home grown, living right here in the form of those who treat the citizenry with out and out contempt , who work day and citizenry with out and out contempt, who work day and night to seize every last drop of
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control over our lives, who would silence and even jail those with opinions that run against the mainstream, who would tighten the stranglehold on freedom of speech, who would leave the people their own people cold in their homes while funnelling billions of pounds into profitable wars and proxy wars abroad? wealth shamelessly laundered back into the pockets of the rich who advocates for centralised digital currency , centralised digital currency, giving the state moment by moment control over what you can do , where you can go, what food do, where you can go, what food you can buy. i said. the centralising collectivist totalitarians of the soviet saw totalitarians of the soviet saw to the dismantling and dissolving of national identities. i say it's the goal of all totalitarian regimes. we're invited to believe all thatis we're invited to believe all that is behind us now, invited even to forget it ever happened. and yet the ideology walks among us to this day in different clothes, with different acronyms. an ideology that is always anti—human, anti—family, anti the individual anti—human part of the stripping of
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identity has been anti—christian anti—christianity of that there can be no doubt. it's no recent phenomenon either. early in the french revolution, the land once known as the eldest daughter of the church, cathedrals and churches were destroyed by the revolutionaries, priests and nuns murdered. the so—called festival of reason saw the destruction of crosses, the mocking of christian figures. much of the same followed the russian revolution across europe. for the past few centuries, there has been a unilateral disarmament of faith. christianity ridiculed , driven christianity ridiculed, driven out, abandoned, continues to this day. churches are burned to the ground in france , targeted the ground in france, targeted by arsonists. it's been going for on years, most recently the 19th century church of saint omer was gutted by a fire deliberately set. national identity is made of many elements, and the loss of each is telling. ultimately ruinous , is telling. ultimately ruinous, a quote often attributed to g.k. a quote often attributed to gk. chesterton has it that when
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people stop believing in god, they don't then believe in nothing, but rather in anything loss of meaning in people's lives is endemic and has taken another toll on identity. tyrants of old like henry the eighth or louis the 14th, and then totalitarians like stalin and mao had aspirations limited at least to some extent by their reach. all the secret police and citizen snitches in the ussr could not quite reach into the minds of every citizen . by now, minds of every citizen. by now, the technology of the 21st century has overcome those limitations. now, those who crave total control of wealth, energy and food have the means at their disposal. witness to the attitude of the world economic forum and the politicians in its thrall . politicians in its thrall. listen to their notion of you'll own nothing and be happy. and remember that collectivisation under stalin, under mao in china was about abolishing private property, making it impossible for a middle class to aspire to
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far less achieve any kind of independence from the state. by now, the education of children has been all but captured to infected wherever possible with the nonsense double speak of critical race theory, gender studies, diversity, equality and inclusion. always. the claim is that such topics do not feature in the curriculum. but while the curriculum describes what is taught, what matters most is how it's taught. conservative and christian author and commentator pete hegseth has used the greek word paidia to describe the enveloping atmosphere in which a child is taught , from which the child is taught, from which the child is taught, from which the child absorbs the abiding culture, just as the fish is enveloped by the water in which it swims and breathes. the all conquering nature of progressive culture has all but rendered our schools and our universities into places not of education, but of indoctrination. the indoctrination is all about pushing the cultural forgetting, the forgetting of the national
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identity of before driving the cultural dementia. it's in this way that education too, has been centralised as never before . and centralised as never before. and wisdom tells us that the pupils of today are the governments of tomorrow, brainwashed and ready tomorrow, brainwashed and ready to serve, and so perpetuate the ideology that indoctrinated them. here's the thing i miss them. here's the thing i miss the identity we used to have the people we used to be. and i have not forgotten. i've not forgotten the thousands of years of history that got us here. i have not forgotten the good or the bad horrors included. i've not forgotten the history or the traditions or the christianity that underpins what used to be called christendom. i'll always remember . called christendom. i'll always remember. that i am joined by broadcaster, author and tv personality ingrid tarrant. lovely to see you, ingrid . lovely to see you, ingrid. >> lovely to see you, neil, >> lovely to see you, neil, >> i do think what i'm experiencing this is partly
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because of how long it's been going on, but i catch myself sometimes remembering that in the not too distant past, everything was different. >> everything was different. but you know what's really frightening? it has been going on for a very long time, but it's been so it's crept in, so under the radar that we haven't really noticed. and it's only when you look back, you look at now and then look back 40 years or something and you think, oh my goodness, the change is dramatic. but it was done so slowly. it was happening in front of our eyes and we didn't see it. we weren't suspicious . see it. we weren't suspicious. >> i was definitely i was a combination of trusting, oblivious and preoccupied with my own stuff. you know, i was paying my own stuff. you know, i was paying the bills. that's it for the next gig. and i didn't look up until, frankly, until, you know, 2020 trust. >> that's the word that it was the first word you used. it's the first word you used. it's the trust you don't . you trust the trust you don't. you trust
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in the people guiding you, educating you, running the country , your doctors. it's only country, your doctors. it's only later on when that sort of trust starts to go away, and you do have that chance to look back and realise, hello, we've been this has been going on for an awful long time. >> i think more than almost more than anything else. i'm shocked by america . i mean, i grew up by america. i mean, i grew up obviously immersed in american culture. your music, hollywood television series, everything, clothes, the whole works. you know, i watched the west wing, you know, i believed that if the democrats were in the white house, all would be right with the world and all of that. and now i find that i look at america and i think, is that even the same country? >> yeah. it's not though, is it? at all? and, you know, it goes back to the thing of if america sneezes, we catch a cold. it's always been like that. but now we're catching much more than a cold. we're we're catching a deadly flu. if you want to kind
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of like move that analogy on. it has changed beyond recognition. but it's the power. it's the power that has been able or for the people able to seize the power because it's gone. unstopped it's gone unnoticed. and then suddenly they're there and then they are in control and also the forgetfulness that i mentioned , you know, we've we've mentioned, you know, we've we've seen god help us. >> we've seen centralised power before. you know, we've seen totalitarianism in the within the part of the 20th century that you and i, we haven't experienced it, though, haven't experienced it, though, haven't experienced it, though, haven't experienced it directly from a distance. but the lesson was there that if you if you allow there that if you if you allow the centralisation of power , the centralisation of power, then there are consequences. and they're and they're almost invariably bad consequences. and yet we're watching the centralising of power again with 21st century tech. >> this time. yes. the worst thing is , neil, it will never go
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thing is, neil, it will never go back because the technology is there. you can't destroy it with al, it's going to advance even ai, it's going to advance even further, even quicker and take away our liberties and the control that they have over us will be complete. actually complete. i think that that really isn't exaggerating. >> i do feel that the nations have to remember. i mean, i can't i can't think of anything to be had , anything positive to to be had, anything positive to be had from a homogeneity around the world where everywhere is just a slice of the same . you just a slice of the same. you know, i want all the all the differences , all the different differences, all the different identities, all the different cultures. you know, i want them all to be rubbing along together. but but defined, you know, this this is where this one stops. this is where something else begins. and that's that's okay. >> and respect for those
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differences, because we don't have respect for those differences anymore either. we've lost that. so now it's just aggressive . we're not just aggressive. we're not tolerant of other people's differences. we've just got to be in one great big melting pot and all think the same way. all have the same customs . cultures have the same customs. cultures eat the same food, but they're forcing that onto us. and i don't want that. i've just come back from norway. so that's my homeland . and the difference homeland. and the difference there is extraordinary. and it's even more noticeable this year when i went back, because how quickly england has everything is disappearing in england. the british flag. you can't fly that george's flag you couldn't fly. that you could have the gay pride flags flying. i'm sorry. this is just that is just nuts. but there there's that national identity, very strong national pride with all the flags. nobody is saying you can't fly the flag because that's offensive and you'll be upsetting the other people, the minorities and so on and so forth . there's very and so forth. there's very little evidence of, of, you know ,
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little evidence of, of, you know, lbgtq how's that being achieved ? lbgtq how's that being achieved? >> how, you know, norway is in population terms at least, is a small is a small country. how is that sustaining? i think i don't know, but part of it i would imagine, is because they have controlled immigration and the way that they've integrated the immigrants into society is very carefully and cleverly measured. >> so , so an immigrant or >> so, so an immigrant or immigrants will go into like a rural village to start off with, not into the towns, because then they get lost, then they become kind of ghettoised, and they, they are absolutely. it's like they are absolutely. it's like the only gay in the village type of thing . so they are enveloped of thing. so they are enveloped by the customs and cultures of the norwegians, and therefore they grow with it. they get a job, they work within the community, they are respected
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because there's no threat to the people that live there and the residents. and then they get the job. they move on, then they move to the city, and by then they have an understanding of norwegian culture and a respect for it. so there's a lot of respect. it sounds so simple when you when you know it doesn't sound difficult. but i doesn't sound difficult. but i do think on a small scale. yeah, it's manageable here. it's not manageable. >> the speed and the scale. i've got to go to a break. ingrid bear with me. after the break, i'll be speaking with investigative journalist derek broderick, talking about some of the same things, to be quite honest with you, about a people's reset. you're watching the neil oliver show on gb news .
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welcome back to the neil oliver
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show. the people's reset event is going to take place in bath in the south west of england. at the end of the month. i'm going, it's an event that's of a, it's of a certain type, really four years in to so much going on rather than always just reiterating the problems and lamenting what's happened. there are more and more movements trying to look at the future, trying to look at the future, trying to look at the future, trying to come up with constructive solutions and alternatives. it's about regenerative culture, which is a movement based on ethics and principles that can create conditions for more life to exist, not less. more. and also finding ways for life to live in harmony with all other life. so with all of that in mind, i'm joined now by investigative journalist, author and activist derek burrows. are you there, derek burrows. are you there, derek ? derek? >> i'm here. thank you for having me, neal. >> no, it's always a it's always a pleasure to see you there. as
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i say, it's about solutions, isn't it? we've kind of all had enough. you and i have spoken more than once. we have crossed paths. we've been at bath before, doing one thing and another. and it's about looking for better ways, isn't it ? for better ways, isn't it? >> yes. we're trying to focus on how we can build a better world, rather than maybe always focusing on the problems. >> and what is your , you know, >> and what is your, you know, what kind of range of topics are we talking about? what kind of speakers are going to be there? because the impression i get, i'm coming , because the impression i get, i'm coming, and the impression i get is that it's people from all over with a whole spectrum of intentions and hopes . intentions and hopes. >> absolutely, neil, we're really excited to have you speaking. so the event is called the people's reset uk. this is actually our sixth event. we started it in north america in texas and mexico. so we're bringing over speakers from nonh bringing over speakers from north america. we're bringing speakers from across the uk of course, and across europe with a focus on five different themes health, mental, physical, spiritual, growing your own food, permaculture , food,
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food, permaculture, food, independence, building parallel, alternative systems like education models using technology in a way that can protect our privacy and promote liberty and how do we build and organise our communities in a free and conscious way? so we have five different themes. we have five different themes. we have 24 speakers, dozens of workshops . the entire event will workshops. the entire event will be streamed for free online at our website at the greater reset org as well. for those who can't make it in person. but we do still have tickets for people to come in person to hear you speak to and hear the other 24 speakers. >> how, how difficult or indeed how easy is it to gather people together? >> because it feels a lot of the time, there's a lot of pressure beanng time, there's a lot of pressure bearing down on everyone. there's a lot of negativity. so how easy is it to find and to and to and to gather speakers like these with this kind of motivation? >> you know, it is a it's a labour of love. we've been working on this. our team's been working on this. our team's been working on this for about six
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months now. we pretty much started right after our last eventin started right after our last event in mexico in january. but in terms of getting the folks at home to understand what we're doing, it can be a little bit of a challenge because as you mentioned earlier, many people are so focused on the problems that we've seen during the last four years, what i call covid 1984 and facing, you know, what the governments were up to, which is important to dissect and to report on. but not so many people redirect their energy to focus on what we can do for ourselves. and that's what our entire movement is about, is how do we take our focus, our energy, our time, our money, etc. and not so much focus it on what quote unquote they are doing , but what we can they are doing, but what we can do for ourselves for 2030 and beyond. because the other side, the world economic forum, the united nations, and some of these other organisations are very organised and highly coordinated, and they're constantly meeting and organising. in fact, later this month they're meeting for something called the summit of the future. and our gathering, the future. and our gathering, the people's reset. we're calling it our summit for our future. so it's very much a
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response to say, hey, those folks have their plans and that's fine, but why don't we focus on what we want to do for our future, for the coming generations, so we can leave behind a better world that does respect individual liberty , respect individual liberty, bodily autonomy, freedom of speech. and i think all these values that that we care about. >> derek, my guest in the studio with me here in london, ingrid tarrant, is, is radiating the body language of someone who very much is interested in what you have to say. ingrid, how do you have to say. ingrid, how do you react to, you know, an injection of positivity and alternative? >> oh, i can't tell you how good that feels , because individually that feels, because individually and we tend to find people who are like minded in thinking and thought. word, deed. but when we're brought together and there's a catalyst like derek is doing, i can't tell you how good that feels because you aren't alone and you know, we can build this better future. all together. and how fabulous. thank you. derek you're a
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leader. i love the idea. i'm coming by the way. >> yes. we'd love to see you, derek. >> how much? how much do you think movements like yours, opportunities like like that which you are providing annoy, you know , those who are you know, those who are organising things like a summit for the future. and you know, after after four years, there's more and more people . not less more and more people. not less and less. more and more people who won't just roll over and accept whatever centralised , accept whatever centralised, collectivised nonsense they're trying to push down our throats. >> i think it annoys them quite a bit. you know, we our movement is very much focused on, as i said, what we can do for ourselves. we're not a movement that believes violence is the answer. we don't really think the answers are going to come from politics, and we don't think that apathy and giving up is the answer. instead, we think it's is the answer. instead, we think wsfime is the answer. instead, we think it's time for us to reclaim our own power, whether that's in the uk, mexico, the us, across europe, africa, wherever you're from, if everybody starts reclaiming their power, focusing on what we can do in our own
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local communities, i do believe it's inevitable that we will create a better world. >> and you actually , you walk >> and you actually, you walk the walk. i mean, i know from experience of to talking you and spending time with you, but your life is shaped in this direction, you know, day by day. >> yes, very much so. i mean, i personally i don't use the big banks. i try to avoid what i call slavery systems, systems that are going to lead to slavery and less liberty. many people, i'm sure, in your audience are aware of the concerns, for example, around central bank digital currencies, concerns about digital identities and how these things can lead to social credit scores, attempts to modify our behaviour , attempts to limit our behaviour, attempts to limit our behaviour, attempts to limit our behaviour, limit our movement. of course, we saw much of this sort of tested out during the covid years , and i think that covid years, and i think that the more proactive, the more forward thinking we are, the less dependent we are on those systems, the better off we're going to be in the future. it doesn't mean that it's easy. i think we've been sold a lie that you know, all we have to do is go vote or go protest or riot in
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the streets and everything's going to be better somehow. but in reality, the work that we're trying to do is, is it's a little more difficult. it's more time consuming. it does involve potentially changing your life, changing your habits, your relationships. but i think if we are going to be the generation which i say that from my age and my late 30s to the folks older than me and younger than me, that all of us collectively are, i believe we're here at this moment in time on the planet to be the ones to redirect the energy, because what i call the powers that wish they were the powers that wish they were the powers that wish they were the powers that ought not be. they have their own visions, and it's time for us to reclaim that as i said, and focus on what are 2030 and beyond looks like. and for me, it looks like being around like minded people, focusing on individual liberty , focusing on individual liberty, focusing on growing good organic food, having clean water, clean air and focusing on our energy, on how we can come together, inspire each other, motivate each other. and you know, our event, the people's reset . we event, the people's reset. we actually call it an activation, not a conference, not a festival, because the goal is that everybody who comes in
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person or who watches online will go home feeling activated and motivated to take the ideas that they've heard and apply them to their lives. >> derek, you are an inspiration. i'm always reminded to think of the character in jurassic park, jeff goldblum's character who says life will find a way. and i think that the powers ranged against us. forget that life will find a way. thank you so much. i look forward to seeing you in bath. derrick broze another break, after which colonel douglas macgregor, former advisor to the white house military man, will be with me to discuss recent developments in the war in .
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ukraine. welcome back to the neil oliver show . on to the ongoing war
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welcome back to the neil oliver show. on to the ongoing war in ukraine. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy has accused the uk and the united states of america of slowing down deliveries of long—range missiles to ukraine, whilst a top ukrainian general has claimed that they have stopped russia in the east to pick up on all of this. i'm joined by retired us army colonel douglas mcgregor. are you there, colonel ? mcgregor. are you there, colonel? >> yes. i'm here. >> neil, it's always reassuring to see you. you and i have spoken on numerous occasions now about this ongoing conflict. we've predicted or you've predicted an imminent end. where are we now ? you know, i suppose, are we now? you know, i suppose, in short, what is happening today in ukraine? >> well, we have at least 600,000 dead ukrainian soldiers . 600,000 dead ukrainian soldiers. you're watching somewhere between a thousand and 1500, maybe even 2000 a day are being
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lost. the front, if you will, is collapsing the war itself was lost a long time ago. but the russians declined to advance. i think , because they assumed think, because they assumed there would be some negotiations at this point. they know that's not going to happen. they're watching the ukrainian government itself collapse. all of its ministers are finding someplace else to live. i suspect , and these sort of suspect, and these sort of revenge weapons that we've been providing them with. now they're supposed to get a multiple launch rocket system, which is a very powerful system with great range, that's not going to change anything. if anything, it will probably hasten ukraine's destruction as the russians are really preparing now for a much more serious advance. we know, for instance , that the russians for instance, that the russians have now gotten down to the tactical level with their short range ballistic missiles. these are the iskander and the
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iskanden are the iskander and the iskander. until recently, you had to practically go to the front or theatre level to get permission to use it. now, the generals that command brigades can actually use the iskander missiles as they see fit. and that's what happened at poltava recently. so i think the russians know where everything is. i don't think they're worried about the mlrs , because worried about the mlrs, because as soon as they find it, they'll destroy it, just as they've destroyed all the other systems. the tragedy here is that no one wants to admit that they were wrong in washington, and i suspect anywhere else. and so more ukrainians will have to die . more ukrainians will have to die. >> how should we interpret ? how >> how should we interpret? how should we read the zelenskyy's recent cabinet reshuffle, is he repositioning himself? is it realistic or is he just is he just rebranding himself? >> well, i don't think he can do much to rebrand himself at this stage , he's he's on a sinking stage, he's he's on a sinking ship and he's standing on the quarterdeck and the waves are beginning to lap over the sides ,
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beginning to lap over the sides, he may find some people who, for a great quantities of money, are willing to stand up and pretend to be part of something. but the truth is, it's over. and now he knows he's illegitimate. because the russians have said there's been no elections. he's no longer viewed by them as legitimate. they're not going to bother talking to him anymore . bother talking to him anymore. so i think he's desperate and he's going to reach out to anybody, anywhere for help. and assistance. >> how long can this how long can this be drawn out? colonel, you know, we watch. well, i watch and, you know, just lingering horror. you know, you quote the death toll, you know, 600,000 dead now. and you know and goodness knows how many dead russians as well. and yet and yet the west just keeps, you know, offering up, making it possible to drag this out, you know, when is someone, somewhere going to say there is no this is immoral to keep dragging this out in this way ? out in this way? >> well, keep in mind that we
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went through the vietnam war and went through the vietnam war and we said we killed only 250 or 300,000 vietnamese. ultimately, we killed 2 million. no one would admit to that travesty and that mistake. we simply packed our things and left. i suspect that's what we will do very shortly in ukraine, the narrative is, is not to be questioned . the same domestic questioned. the same domestic problem that you've been talking about all morning exists in foreign policy. anyone who challenges it is tarred as some sort of evil putinist or a foreign agent. the bottom line is this will collapse, and i think the russians now realise they have to cross the river. they'll have to go into kyiv. and there are many who are saying it's time to go all the way to the polish border. they don't want to because they certainly don't want to govern any ukrainians. i think the only possibility now is that we'll see the governments in berlin tumble, and probably in paris. and if that happens, you may get new leadership there. and they may be sufficiently sober to
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come to an arrangement in ukraine, but otherwise this will drag on as long as we continue to throw money into the black hole until the russians are standing on the polish border , standing on the polish border, it feels watching the united states of america, watching the political situation there, it feels as if events there are moving faster and faster. >> you know, surprises and upsets every day. it will end well. is any of that having a bearing, you know, is anything that's happening in ukraine being driven by the possibility of perhaps a, you know, a significant change in the white house >> and i, you know, that's a good question, recently, supposedly a proposal to end the war was floated from the trump to team moscow. it doesn't seem to team moscow. it doesn't seem to have had any effect because i suspect it was unrealistic, i think that the only way for this to end is for the united states to end is for the united states to suspend any further aid, military aid whatsoever to
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ukraine. that's what we did with vietnam. and then to evacuate all the americans who are there in or out of uniform , regardless in or out of uniform, regardless of what they're doing. i think that will eventually happen, but no one wants to admit to it. but i don't think that the russians harbour the illusion that simply a new government of any kind is going to change direction dramatically. that will never happen. it will be a quiet but unspoken admission of complete failure, and then we'll change the subject. remember, most americans on any given day , americans on any given day, neal americans on any given day, neal, don't pay attention to anything that happens beyond their borders, which is one of their borders, which is one of the reasons the ruling political elite in washington can run around and do things that the change now is money, monetary , change now is money, monetary, financial, and a lot of people fear we're near a very great fiscal crisis. and that too, could have a profound impact. >> is there can you think of a parallel for what we're watching at the moment, or are the way that events in ukraine, especially most recently, the way that these events are
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playing out, are we into new territory in relation to the way you know, proxy wars are just being prosecuted for the basically the laundering of money? >> well, this is something that quite frankly, we've practised with the cia and the defence department for many decades. on a smaller scale, this is probably the most egregious example, and we're simply suffering from imperial overstretch. we have too many forces and too many places costing too much money, and we don't have the manpower to man most of the forces. and what we have on in eastern europe is most of the united states army, which is too small to take anything on in the meantime, russia has grown this enormous military establishment that is battle hardened and ready to fight. so i think the handwriting is on the proverbial wall. it's over for us. we're going to be embarrassed. we'll get out. but unless you have an unambiguous demonstration that cannot be concealed from the
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american public of our weakness, and that means complete failure on the battlefield and everywhere, nothing, nothing will really change in the united states, colonel douglas macgregor, it's such an enervating , depressing story, enervating, depressing story, >> but it's always a privilege to. it's always a privilege to get your insight and to hear youn get your insight and to hear your, your common sense approach, your buttoned down approach, your buttoned down approach to all of it. thank you. colonel douglas macgregor. i'm sure we'll speak again about this in due course. >> sure. thank you. neal >> sure. thank you. neal >> thanks, as always to colonel douglas macgregor. another break, after which we'll be speaking with doctor ivor cummins about what is grinding his gears at the moment. and i can tell you, ivor and i talk often enough to know that we are a simpatico in this. what grinds his gears, grinds mine. and if that gives you any clue .
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welcome back. my next guest. this evening is doctor ivor cummins, he and i have spoken about all of the issues that have preoccupied both of us for the last several years, what we're going to talk about tonight is no exception. in part, it relates to a schoolbook which was offered up to irish school pupils , supposedly school pupils, supposedly depicting irish family life, suffice to say, it's been withdrawn, ivor, are you there withdrawn, ivor, are you there with me ? with me? >> yeah. neill. great to be here. thank you . here. thank you. >> i mentioned this, this textbook. now i would have thought that really around the world, many people would have an idea of ireland as being synonymous with traditional
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family life. you know, lots of kids. you know, lots of life centred around the home. you know , lots of life centred know, lots of life centred around wholesome activities. but there's been a textbook out there's been a textbook out there , has there not? that's there, has there not? that's been overtly trying to propose another idea to irish kids. >> yeah, neil, unfortunately. i mean, there's been a fuselage of madness over the past few weeks alone in ireland, but this is one of the things. and traditionally ireland had all that, but they kind of had a bit of a grip of the church over society. and when that collapsed a couple of decades ago, the globalists poured in to fill the god shaped hole, if you will. so we've gone from one regime to the next, and this speech has social, political and health indoctrination. sorry propaganda, sorry education. he is the education. and they've
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really gone too far now and they've gotten caught red handed. so briefly, this curriculum goes in kids 14, 15 years of age. they show a picture of a kind of twee irish family in orange jumpers, with the kids doing irish dancing and wood hurls, you know, the national game. the father has stains on his jumper. national game. the father has stains on his jumper . there's a stains on his jumper. there's a cow looking kind of almost disgustedly over a stone wall. and it's that kind of picture, right? very demeaning. but the paragraph that comes with this family, a they call it in the curriculum, is atrocious. it says they eat bacon and cabbage only, and they refuse to get involved with any other cultures. they will only play their own instruments. they won't listen to any other music comically. it even says they won't watch rte the state kind of propaganda media and they say it's all a load of rubbish. so
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that bit was true, but they were trying to put that in with all the other negative stereotype. to say the whole lot is bad, that it was denigrating and it was racist, quite frankly . so was racist, quite frankly. so that was family. a but on the right they had family b and family b were all different colours of people taking selfies in front of get this, the colosseum . so they gathered colosseum. so they gathered a family b with a paragraph saying how amazing they were, and they had great fun and they loved indian food and going around the world. and they all of this positive stuff. and remember, they're giving this to the kids . they're giving this to the kids. the killer thing was they then asked the kids to list the disadvantages of family a, and this is straight out of mao's playbook. you know, the cultural revolution. you don't just feed propaganda on the people you make them stand up and deny themselves and their families and their heritage because there's power in making them stand up in front of the crew ,
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stand up in front of the crew, the crowd and say it, they're doing that to our children. and finally, i'll finish on this and we can discuss it. they then go on yet to ask the class to discuss it. but but it's clear that the whole class will have to say yes. the traditional irish family in any guise is something we should be disgusted with and disown. so that's the class exercise. now it's even i'm shocked, which i find it hard to believe i'm saying. and it was exposed in the daily mail after x platform, mainly exposed it. a few days later, the daily mail did a front page blistering article, and the publishers and the government rolled over immediately. like the cowards they are. and it really highlights a point if you get exposure on this madness and they rapidly roll over, you know they rapidly roll over, you know they don't even have any backbone. >> mr ivor cummins, that is
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going to hopefully have teased the listening and the viewers to pick up with this conversation in the digital hour that i have coming up immediately after this. so stay with me, mr ivor cummins. but that is it for the tv hour . >>a >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news . news. >> hello there, welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. low pressure has beenin met office. low pressure has been in charge bringing heavy rain and thunderstorms. some localised flooding does stay unsettled next week but the winds turn to a northerly direction and it turns
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increasingly cold, particularly by the middle of the week. low pressure at the moment still giving outbreaks of heavy rain across southeast scotland, northern england down into wales, parts of the midlands as well thundery showers across the southeast. and as we head overnight, this all slowly pushes its way eastward. still, some heavy bursts of rain possible dry across northern ireland and scotland, with a few showers here under the clearest skies across scotland, temperatures dipping into single figures elsewhere under the cloud and rain holding up around 12 to 14 celsius. so much of england and wales starting quite cloudy. outbreaks of rain but clearer skies across scotland. a few showers across the highlands and islands, but some bright spells elsewhere. just so still some thicker cloud across the southeast with some patchy rain in places. bright skies across to northern ireland start monday morning, though rather cloudy across much of england , those across much of england, those sunny spells starting to develop across wales and the west country first thing on monday morning and then through the day. the bright spells across the west just slowly start to
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push eastwards. it does mean, though, central and eastern parts of england staying cloudy for longest, the cloud thick enough for some outbreaks of rain at times. sunny spells across northern england, wales, the west country, though starting to cloud over across northern ireland and scotland with rain arriving in the west later on in the day. temperatures cooler for all, generally near average for the time of year 16 to 18 celsius, perhaps locally 20 towards the southeast, turning more unsettled on tuesday as a weather system pushes southeastward. some outbreaks of rain showers following the winds, picking up some strong and gusty winds across northern and gusty winds across northern and western parts of the uk as well. starting to feel colder, and that cold theme continues through the week ahead as well. temperatures falling below average for the time of year. see you soon! >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> well .
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>> well. >> well. >> good evening. the top stories from the gb newsroom. today marks two years since the passing of britain's longest reigning monarch, queen elizabeth. the second. she was on the throne for 70 years and was beloved by the nation and around the world. well, earlier today, the king and queen attended crathie kirk church near balmoral, where the late queen was a regular worshipper. they were there for a sunday service with prayer and remembrance of his late mother, who passed at the age of 96. in other news, the prime minister has hit out at the previous government. this morning, saying the nhs has been broken in ways that he called unforgivable. those comments came as a labour commissioned review into how children are treated by the nhs, is due to be published in the coming week. health secretary wes streeting set out labour's
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plan to tackle the nhs

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