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We now go live to a broadcast of Kierstarmers' first speech as Prime Minister. White Boy Summer was created to be fun, playful, and a celebration of fly white boys who love beautiful queens of every race. Anything else that has been twisted into to support any kind of hate or bigotry against any group of people is deplorable at eye-catching. You'd never say this. White Boy Summer is for white English people only.
Reasonable concerns about the extent to which white boy summer is changing. I know it's called White Boy Summer. Welcome everybody to the first episode of TF in the new In Curium of Man. Very good. Year zero, day five. For very similar to you, I shouldn't be on this segment. Yeah, how are we all feeling? How are we doing under the new regime? The Labour Party has been regime-pilled once again. I'll tell you, I wouldn't say it's harshing my white boy summer.
I'm being forced to have a white boy summer against my well. Oh God, we're obviously going to be talking about that. But who say, how have you spent your first five days in the In Curium of Man? Have you enjoyed White Boy Summer? Have you been allowed in? Well, yeah, no, I haven't. So I've just sort of been like watching in the little window. I've been sitting on my own cuck-chair watching everyone else have a white boy summer.
Although it is, you know, if I'm, if I'm correct and don't at me if I'm wrong, it has been a very damp, very somewhat cold, surprisingly cold period. All of which to say it is the summer of care. I don't know how the England football team has done, but my prediction has always been that they'll sort of like apathetically make it to the finals. Yeah. And so is the summer of Kirstaumer.
The funniest thing, the funniest possible thing is Kirstaumer wins the kind of like stonking, ridiculous majority, the weather clears up. England somehow like fumble their way towards winning the Euros. And we have to read a thousand, thousand think pieces about how everything is good now. I will be lying dead in a ditch for most of that, ideally.
It's going to be very funny watching him wrestle with the fact that the Tories suggested they would do an extra bank holiday if we won and being like, no, no, it's white boy summer. It's not work short summer. Yeah, a key part of white boy summer is going to work at the office. Yeah. You're not working from home and working all five work days. Because that's what proposed crazy ass white boys. They love doing extra hours for no pay. That's true.
For the service of the economy and the British family. Kirstaumer, I guess you could ask her a white boy summer. No, no, it's dumb hands on hips. Why don't you drive busting it down work style? He's the team leader who fires you but sat backwards in the chair. Efficiency up white boy busset down work style. It's going to be, oh my god, that's going to live in my head for a while. It's just a gift for coming up with these things.
Well, look, the real white boy summer hobby, I guess, or like thing to do is to learn like fluid Mandarin, right? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Doesn't get much more white boy summer than that. Yeah, because they like imagine the restaurant owners, you'll shock. Remember that children's book. Oh, the, the wait staff, you'll surprise with your fluid Mandarin. I know.
I think the, oh, sorry, one more white boy summer thing, which is that for, for, what, sorry, on our agenda for white boy summer, I have one more idea. This is the problem with not having Milo on is that without him in the back of the class to like diverse us from the thing, we all divert from the thing. We don't like to admit it, but we like to be diverted from the thing that I'm like, oh, come on back on track.
But yeah, you know, it's, I think with no, with no inmates in the asylum, we have checked ourselves in. No, I was going to say it's that, it's that we're drinking lean, but it's lean six sigma, actually. Sure. Okay. All right. Okay. All right. That's enough of that settle down. Yeah. Okay. All right. Come on. There's always one person in the class that always overexert, always overexert. Ruins the fun for everyone else. Yeah. Substitute teacher genuinely upset instead of like playfully upset.
Oh, look, look. Before we talk about the sort of the beginning of the thousand year white boy summer of Kierstormer, I wanted to revisit better than the last time somebody tries to do a thousand year white boy summer off say that. Oh, God. Oh, my, I wanted to revisit some old friends before we talk about that because look, there's no way it fits in easily. But my God, is it satisfying when companies that we say are going to go out of business, go out of business?
Oh, is that another episode of we were right watch? We've been right about EVs for a while and like, not like electric vehicles are bad, certainly not. It's like fine to have an electric vehicle, but we've seen that the way that they're delivered by companies that are structured like startups, which suck frequently have a habit of going bankrupt. Yes, largely scams is the problem with EVs unless you buy a Chinese one. Yeah, exactly.
So remember we talked about many, a couple years ago, Trevor Milton and the company Nicola to refresh your memory. It was demonstrated as functional and an investor presentation when it was in fact just rolled down a hill. I was going to say that's what I remember Nicola for. Yes. Fisker was another company we talked about like on that episode is like here are all of the crazy electric car companies. None of which are going to succeed. And I'll succeed.
Well, it's now officially filed filed for bankruptcy protection. It was going to for a while. In many ways, the Nina power of electric vehicle company. Yeah, it's interesting. Most of her writing was actually just her rolling under her own power down a hill. And so many ways. So basically, yes, the vehicles were found to have serious build quality shortcoming software issues, a less than responsive central touch screen.
But now owners have been asking themselves what's going to happen when the car eventually bricks because no one's updating the software anymore. Oh, I wouldn't worry about that. Like it just not including any kind of like right to repair or any kind of transparency about how these things are like made or maintained. That's fine because you lock people into your kind of like walled garden ecosystem and everything goes wrong. Don't worry about it.
You know, you now have a very, very expensive payboy. But I say, well, you can weigh down a fuckload of paper with an EV. So well, actually, you'd think you can because the EV is big, but because of the structure of a car, you can weigh down a maximum of four piles of paper. Yeah. Okay. Sure. It will not be better than that one massive sheets of paper, the sort of size and dimensions of a car wheelbase. Yeah. Look, I'm not going to tell you how to use your new paper.
You're used to, you used to have a car. You now have a paper weight. I'm not going to tell you how to use it. If you want to weigh down a bunch of billboards that you're saving up outside under a car, then that be my guest, you don't have to do the sensible thing and weigh down four separate stacks of normal non-silly paper. Three billboards outside having Missouri under any V. I never saw that movie. I don't know if that's offensive or not. I assume that's what it's about.
Probably. At the same time, Lord's Town Motors has also filed for bankruptcy. Oh, those guys, yeah. We also set there a scam. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, the thing about all this is, there's a lot of uses for a dead EV besides paper weight. For instance, four chairs. You could use the glove box for stuff, assuming that isn't locked to an app. Four chairs don't talk to each other though. Yeah. For sort of like facing forward chairs. Yeah. You know what it is? You could do a drive-in at your home.
You could project a video onto your garage door. How about that? You could use the trunk as a keepsake box. He used to make in woodwork. Yeah. Any number of things. You could practice driving in a really low stakes way. The radio might still work. Can I say might? So you have a massive radio. Why? There's the most obvious thing for it, which is you could turn it into one of those, what you call it, those types of YouTubers that just film in their cars. Oh, yeah. They just read your soundstage.
Yeah. Absolutely. You have a content creation studio right there. Buying a dead electric vehicle instead of like a kind of 10 pound backdrop thing to film my YouTube videos. Yeah. And then when you get really big, you can buy like one of, you know, like in the old films where they sort of have the automatic backdrop and you know, to sort of love.
Yeah. Yeah. So you can sort of like bring that back where you're like sitting stationary in the car, but you're pretending or driving while also sort of like doing your racist rant. Recording or sort of like racist rant, the camera both hands in frame and off the wheel at all times and you're like ostensibly going like 90 miles an hour. Yeah. Oh my God. Driving 90 miles an hour through the old west. How that happened?
Yeah. The other thing of course is, hey, maybe don't let it slowly decompose in your front lawn because then all those helpful battery chemicals will end up in your garden. It's one of the like wrong answers on the theory test for driving. What should you do when you're like dead EVs, batteries are decaying? And the answer is of course, throw them in the ocean. It's a safe and legal thrill. It's often answer C on the test. I don't know why, but it is.
The other answer to the driving theory test is of course, what should you do when you're EV that you bought directly from a private company run like a startup on huge amounts of venture capital inevitably goes in a business? Have fun with it. Weirdly long question. It like goes off the edge of the monitor. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Can you refill it in? Yeah. And the answer is, as you say, be yourself and have fun.
Yeah. It's really really the answer to every question on the theory test being fully honest. This is official driving test advice by the way. Absolutely. This all comes in because I need to reset my theory test. A little bit of a peak behind the curtain. The other thing I wanted to cover before we get back to the, back to the, the, the in Kerium is of course, I don't even have notes for this. It's just something that's been in my head. Why is Mark Zuckerberg getting epic?
And why is he getting epic in such a specifically 2004 way? Listen, I know I said this about Macron, right? Who can comprehend the mind of Jupiter? And then it turned out that anyone can easily comprehend the mind of Jupiter, which is why things are going very badly from Macron. But like, I think Mark Zuckerberg really is like a Jupiterian in that way. I think none of us are like kind of spiritually large enough to comprehend his thinking, right?
If he decides, he wants to become a kind of like 2000's epic bacon guy, right? He has the facilities to do that. And we none of us are going to know how he arrived at that conclusion. Wasn't it the case because, because Milo basically made this point that he's like the most normal weird tack guy, right? Right. Like, sure. All of the rest of him have sort of gone off the rails and very different bizar ways.
Most of them involving trying to sort of start their own version of the Greywolves or build their own sort of mega cities or like develop their own cults for like broadly political reasons, right? And Zuckerberg just is completely disengaged. And it's interesting because like a few years ago, there was that whole thing about like, well, is he going to like do a presidential round? And is he going to, you know, and it sort of seemed like he was kind of venturing towards that territory.
And perhaps he did it and was just like, yeah, the bibles pretty often, not for me. Which is so reasonable, to be honest, he went to like two diners in like Iowa and did the kind of like, glad handing everyone the photos exist. He must have realized somewhere, which is like, I'm rich. I don't have to deal with this shit. Yeah. For real. I can use my money to do whatever I want. Why do I want to deal with this shit?
And that's why he's now, and now he's got a perm and he's got like big chains and like. Yeah. White boy summer. He's the only one doing it right. And he's the only one doing it right. He passed the test of Rishi Sunak failed, right? Which is okay, a smaller scale, he's still like a billion hour or whatever. So Rishi Sunak was like, okay, yeah, but what I really want is like the trappings of power and like motorcade and shit like that. Okay. Yeah. So we're a Zuckerberg correctly assessed.
If I don't do that, I can just record videos of myself like perfectly hurling a spear through a watermelon. Okay. I've developed my theory a little bit, right? Which is in the Sunak period. This is like, you know, Sunaks, like Sunaks manager, like a techno manager, right? Yeah. But he comes from a world where like accolades and status and like job names and stuff, like all your CV really matters.
And so for him, it's just like, well, no, like, you know, you want to rack up all those, you want to, you know, you want to rack up all that stuff. You know, you know, you want to work for the big bank. You want to have like been a sort of MP. You want it to be Prime Minister, like all these cool things that like people sort of do your thumbs up and LinkedIn for, right? Not realizing that like no one does that, like all is only like weird and kind of strange people, but do LinkedIn endorsement?
You suggesting that Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to get endorsed as Prime Minister on the issue? Yes, I, yeah. Yeah. That's, that's my theory. I believe this. Like intrinsically, that on a deep like spiritual level. It's I look, I've got, I've got like a bunch of, I've got like a, well, I've got like a few friends who are management consultants who still really believe in like what they do as sort of being valuable and like they love fucking posting on LinkedIn.
They love posting their job promotions. Like they're really into that stuff. But Zuckerberg is sort of calculated that none of that really matters anymore. Everything's going to shit. No one cares if you sort of like have those accolades. No one cares if you're Prime Minister. No one cares if you're like a congressman. If anything, like people sort of despise you for it.
But if you're just like a cool guy doing epic, she like, it would feel just like sort of perceived to be a cool guy doing epic shit and being normal, like not even doing like the Elon thing or being like a fucking weirdo. Like you're better off doing that. And I feel like he's sort of calculated that he may as well have fun and like not be perceived as as weird guy as like Elon and Andreessen and stuff. He just, the thing is right. Like you're so right.
I think the psychic wound, the precipitized it all, that was like Hollywood deciding that this was a man who needed to be portrayed by Jesse Eisenberg. He just kind of like took that and was like, I need to change everything about my being. And he has done. So fair play, you know? I think I've sort of explored this theory a little bit on Twitter. I think what happened is the PR team that has been making him normal.
Number one is not made him normal, but has made him like palatable to people who aren't looking too closely. It was helpful when he tried to kill Elon Musk. I appreciate that. It was, it would, when he took up Salat and then and then just effortlessly turned to brick wall into dust with 400 simultaneous punches.
No, no, no, it's that it's that what they've, I think what the PR team rehabilitating him is done is they have restarted his experience of the internet at 1999 and they did that about six years ago. He's discovering like Maddox now. Yeah. It's going to get worse. He's a couple of years off of like you're the man now dog. Yeah. He's going to discover why TMNDs. He's going to get really into like Fave Star.
We are three years away from Mark Zuckerberg doing like cop starts break dancing line, line break jokes. Oh, I'm, gee, Jenny. He's going to get into Fave Star. He's going to be a tweet Decker. He's going to start saying my dude and he's going to stop Coney. And I think that's really exciting on that basis. He realized in a mere 20 years time in a bunker, he's going to be doing like K high bits.
Yeah. Although, although I think maybe actually what about this his experience or workshop in real time, not a single note on this. What if he is experiencing the internet faster? You think he's on like a kind of interstellar situation. Yeah. Yeah. He's going to pass us and he's going to be doing K high bits like next year. He's going to be like when Kamala Harris is like halfway into her presidency. He's going to be doing like, Hey, the coconut tree, I know about that.
Like he's going to be doing like pieces to camera and he's going to stop like wearing a tuxedo and surfing and like drinking a giant beer. He's going to have left his like bacon shorts in the cupboard. He's going to have like passed his like, you know, my dude, not a good look phase. He's going to have his like make poverty history bracelet.
He's going to have his, um, his fuck cancer shirt burned and then he's going to be a K Heiver and he's going to go on to something else burning your fuck cancer shirt. To get your new founts of both the cats. Yeah. That's right. Joining the war of cats are on the side of cats doing a reverse fundraise to make people in hospital worse. Yeah. That's the kind of shit he's going to be doing in like 10 years and we're going to get it like five years after. Mm hmm. I think it's what's going to happen.
But this is like like 23rd seed trend of like reverse fundraisers to make things worse. Yeah. He's going to be so much of a bigger Mr. Beast than Mr. Beast ever could. Oh, yeah. He's going to take over an actual country and start a real war like as a social experiment. Yeah. Well, maybe Vassie and gamers like he's not viewing Elon. Elon wants him to what Elon wants like Zuckerberg to view him as like his main opponent.
So really like his main opponent is Mr. Beast and this all ends with like an epic showdown between both of them. Yeah, it was it was it was called Les Arthur Terrible projects. Yeah, they're all for Brazil. No, I just I think that we're getting closer and closer to Mark Zuckerberg. As you say, like declaring Hawaii, I guess, to be his own country calling it outer heaven. And then we just we just started on the metal guess all the time line.
It turns out it took it we had to like send one of our stranger billionaires back in time to before he invented the thing that made him weird. It's not much more contrived than MGS 5 to be honest. The guy who did basically invent Big Shell, Arsenal gear, we're sending him back to experience time faster than any of us. And he just happens to be in a kind of uncanny valley of not old enough to be retro, but not recent enough to be trendy version of the internet.
Everyone when solid as snake came out to the roof of the like federal hall wearing the tuxedo and the epic bacon shorts. Okay, we I have to get us back to this. Yeah, this is the thing. Once I've introduced metal guess all that you need to like start like hitting the shot collar button at some point. So I'm not going to stop talking about it. I will need to break the glass. All right, I want to talk a little bit about sort of about the politics.
This is obviously like the last episode we're talking of. We're doing this on election day, and I suppose it's worth just like, msash, you're our last politics episode we're ever talking about because like, yeah, after this, I'll be dead. And then like Riley, you'll be experiencing like white boy summer. So you'll be in the like carcature. Yeah. So you won't ever have to hear from us again.
If you're like annoyed by this, if you're one of the people on Twitter who's like off trash feature, don't worry about it because it's over now. Yeah, that's right. Because they finally fixed it by getting a labor government in. What kind of labor government? Don't worry about it. Just abolish the podcast, having achieved our political aims of, I don't know, a bit more NHS privatization. Yeah. So so much of this shit has appeared.
We want to talk about stuff coming through a time portal from the late 90s. Well, Peter Madelsen is here. Yeah, we'll start getting like the support and backing of the sun. And like I'm tired at this point of being like, well, he lied about this as well. Right. It sucks to be like, oh yeah, this same thing we have to say over and over again, which is he lied. He lied, he lied. He lies constantly and most people don't actually like him.
And you know, he took to them to say, oh, I have the support of the sun, which just shows how this is a change labor party back in the service of working people. Which working people do you mean the ones that work for the sun? Like, what do you mean? I saw Paul recently that said that Stammer has like the same favorability racing give or take as Jeremy Corbyn. Like every media force in this country trying to convince you, he was some kind of mad Romanian communist.
Whereas Stammer has gotten like a relatively easy ride and has still arrived at the kind of sunless uplands of 22%. Yeah. How the earth? Well, the only conclusion you can draw is that people just don't give a fuck anymore. Yeah. It's rhetorically, but it's like it's the situation in which we now find ourselves is astonishingly.
To be honest, to me feels like new territory that we have been edging closer towards, which is after the wave election that brought in the Tories because labor couldn't respond to the financial crisis. That's where they got sustained on cheap credit, which is never coming back. By the way, that is gone. That is never coming back. There stuff will be expensive forever because of climate adaptation. A lone climate adaptation let alone increased conflict pronies in the world system.
Politics is over in the sense of politics as we know it. We know labor is going to govern that way too, right? It suits them for most people to be like, I don't give a fuck. Nothing I can do can change this. Therefore, I'm just not going to worry about it and let these bastards get on with it, which is what they're going to try and do. It's just at a certain point that's going to become unsustainable too. And what follows that?
What follows the like post-politics, if you like the post post-politics, could be really spicy. If you want to talk also about things coming through in a time machine from 1997. Nigel Farage is here.
Guardian must have had this article like in a content management system since party gate, which is, Julie and Hartley, the head of NHS providers, wants the government to apply quote, fresh thinking and imagination to how the health service can access potentially billions of pounds in private capital to build new facilities by collaborating with property developers, private healthcare companies, pension funds, drug companies, universities, and local councils.
See the problem with PFI is that too few like jackal vulture companies like Corrillian and G4S got to benefit from it. What if we let Glaxo Smith Klein build a wing of a hospital and it like beeps if you try to go in and you've had the Moderna vaccine? What if we did that? Yeah, I mean, it's not even like PFI, but worse. It's like PFI again. This is PFI too. Like it's the same thing. Yeah, like, oh, Elsa, what if we let private healthcare companies collaborate with the NHS to build hospitals?
What do you think they're going to do? It's fine. Don't worry about it, you know? And the thing is we already have that in Birmingham, there is a hospital that has a private wing that's got like a kind of back and forth deal with the local NHS trust that has creating literally a two tier system in the same building.
But there's already a back and forth thing because like all of like every private hospital in the UK sends patients to the NHS for stuff, including like all the like, like intensive care stuff.
But look, think about the positive, which is that we'll have a lot more sort of media commissioned where the sort of concy is you couldn't afford medical care, so you had to go to extreme measures to, you know, to sort of get like a routine hospital appointment, which is something that this country is lacking, that type of those types of movies and TV shows. It's so true, like, you know, post-policycs, it's going to suck in a lot of ways, but it's going to be great for the amoecoverse.
Yep. I'm finally creating the conditions for a British breaking bad. I don't approve of it. But you couldn't do a British breaking bad because water white would get killed by the concrete roof coming in in an episode one. Yeah, that's also right. How come we're thinking, oh, we need fresh thinking and imagination? You've been diagnosed with cancer. You need to do something to pay for your treatment. The roof of hospice will collapse as killing water white. It solves the cancer problem.
You're not getting the time to cancer. Yeah. Mark Zuckerberg has been doing a fundraiser to give you cancer because he thinks it's going to like create entrepreneurship. And to be honest, in the case of breaking bad, he would have been right. So yeah. Yeah. Also, it's like, yeah, well, we need fresh thinking and imagination. There are hospitals where if you're overweight, you have to stay on the ground floor. Why do we need fresh thinking and imagination? We need concrete.
This is the thing, things that are concrete, either literally or metaphorically, just don't figure into the like new, changed labor party's world view. You know, obviously, we know this is what they're offering. They've made it very clear ever since like 10 minutes after the 2020 leadership election.
This is what they're offering and this is all they're going to offer that the lack of enthusiasm for them is it's again, it's not surprising, but like that much of the data that gets analyzed is that the party is less well liked than in any previous year since 2015. It's just that the Tories are hated more. Once you are in government, that goes away. That's gone. Like the Tories figured out a way to trade on people not liking new labor for like 10 years.
Like one treasurer, one secretary, a cancel of the extractor, excuse me, made one joke about there being no money left, that there was the just consent. Everyone decided to believe it. Also, like the other thing is that in some ways, they're a victim of their own success because the like if as it seems now an election day, the conservative wipeout is so much so that they like cease to be a going concern, right? And the real opposition on the right is reform.
Then you don't even have the Tories to kick around anymore. You can because like Nigel Farage can continue to say that, you know, the Conservatives are terrified of him and the yesterday's yesterday's party anyway, you know? And you know, I mean, that's again, what he has the advantage of is like, Hey, we've never been in government. You don't know what it's going to be. We can break.
We're not having to trade against any record at all, just promises, just wonder, just whatever you can imagine will do it for everyone forever. And that's what it's going to be. And you can always kind of sheep dog labor to the right like this. You can always be like interesting. It's been like six months in power and nobody's machine gunning migrant boats yet. And on the off chance Kierstahn would does decide to do that. They'll be like, interesting.
You're not using like mortars on the migrant boats instead. Britain has a lot of anti material rifles. Yeah. Why why doesn't the channel look like the kind of a vulgar scene from enemy at the gates? You know, why not that? We have lived so long now in a political system where you are voting against the other guy. And promise it's except Brexit.
And by the way, if you want to talk about fucking Brexit, Mr. Remain, Mr. like, oh, Mr. second referendum, Mr. Luz, the 2019 election on the basis of insisting that a second referendum like appear as a manifesto commitment is now saying we will not in my lifetime go back into the European Union. We won't even have a youth exchange program because that looks too much like free movement.
Yeah, the kids can escape and then who else is going to like eventually have to do all your late low paid labor. Hey, but think about this as much as the economy might be absolutely turbo fucked. Steve Bray, job for life. He's the only one that fucking cares. Everybody else who was like a Corbin is a secret Brexit here. We could never support him. I'm afraid a tactical vote for a remainder must never go to labor while Corbin's in charge of it. Who's now replicating Theresa May's Brexit policy?
Like that's what we have now. Okay, great. And the only person you hear from about it is fucking Steve Bray, the guy who camped out in front of parliament and just harasses everybody going by like bewilders tourists with a megaphone. That's the only guy who seems to actually care.
Do you think that he like was briefly granted the gift of prophecy at this time and was like he was just trying to like get out of the house and was just kind of like, oh boy, looks like another five years camping out again. Can't come home. Sorry. His wife is desperately waiting for him by the way. Just like no, any day now we'll do a second referendum and we'll win. No, sorry, sorry darling. It's still Brexit is out here. There are lots of people that actually do care about it.
It's like lots of people who are, yeah, I care. Fucking sucks. But like at the same time, it's just like I recognize that this is a kind of like path we've been led down, right? I'm not having an opinion either way, except just, hey, that thing you said was the worst possible thing that could happen to the country. We're all just agreeing now that the guy is in that it's sort of fine or at least it's fine enough to not cause a bother.
And it's just explained so much of why at the end of the day, 55% of voters who were again pulled by you, gov were doing a lot of you gov polling in this episode were chose like, oh yeah, I'm not, I don't care of a shit about Starmer. One percent of people pulled by you, gov said that they had confidence who'd fixed the cost of living crisis. One percent five percent of people said they agreed with his policies generally. The rest were fuck I hate the Tories.
I would vote for like an inanimate carbon rod to get them out. Yeah, it's not great. Is it even the people who like the hard right stuff we hope he fails to do? They're like, they don't even think he'll solve the small votes crisis. Quote unquote, we want him to not do that. Obviously, but even the people who are quite right wing, don't think he'll do anything.
I would actually like it if Starmer was doing the kind of like long con that he's sometimes accused of and is like the second he gets in, which is today, by the way. So like maybe today, as of as of like now, he's like announced that like he's now a Maoist and like the purges begin 10 minutes from now, we are unilaterally reentering the EU. The Maoist unilaterally entering the Euro, the Pian Union, it's called a united front, you right deviationist.
Yeah, and like everyone's going to have to have pronouns now, maybe, you know, I would like to announce the dissolution of the united kingdom. It is a settler colonial project. A difficult, difficult to speak in Maoist standard English when your name has a K and an S in it already. Oh my god. Kekukai is a Starmer. Yeah, make a plaque. I'll keep it in the back just in case. I'm sure I'm sure I'm sure I'll be quite a long East. We support our new Maoist Starmer over the way.
But also, right, like I mean, there's sort of so many things is cropping up in the final days of the election where everybody's trying to interview, interview everybody. He's just getting a chance to like talk and talk and talk and talk. This is going to subside, I think, for a while, right? So to some of the last Starmer all that you guys hope to do for a bit, unless we're like looking at how he's actually governing.
But again, it's like he also is showing himself to be someone who will just like he will abandon a commitment to a piece of settled legislation if you ask him and raise an eyebrow where he's interviewed in the times and asked a question that JK Rowling asked on Twitter. James, do you just biological males with gender recognition certificate have the right to enter women only spaces? It's a simple yes, no question here. Starmer was emphatic. No, they don't have that right.
They shouldn't, that's why I've always said always. He's always said this by the way, he's always said that biological women spaces need to be protected. What does the labor manifesto say? He's never said any of that, of course. No, no, no, he had nothing to do with that. Between this and Israel, do not ask this guy a yes or no question on what he thinks someone has a right to do. So his answer is like legally incoherent, which is funny for a lawyer.
It would rip up about 20 years of equality law and labor have since quietly clarified that they don't really want to rewrite the equality act definition of sex, which means that ultimately, as extremely depressing and frightening as this is, pre-election, it's all meaningless. I'm not going to say I haven't been terrified by all of this, but I think I'm more usefully terrified by the stuff that happens once he's prime minister rather than while he's a candidate.
The problem with this, though, is that I keep having this thing, whether it's the UK or the US, where I keep coming up with a smart, well-reasoned rationale for why you shouldn't worry so much and things are going to be fine. And then it gets worse again. So maybe I'm just coping and seething. I don't know.
There's also been something I've been thinking about a bit, not least, because we don't really know at the time of speaking, we don't really know what this new government is going to look like, or how active they are going to be.
Well, we mentioned this a little bit earlier, which is that as this becomes a different version of managerial politics, and we've kind of, I can totally imagine a lot of the promises that have been made by the Labour Party right now, kind of are reneged on the basis of, oh, well, we had a look at the finances and realised how actually we couldn't afford to do. We couldn't afford to fit to the fixed part-holes, actually. There's no money for bathroom cops.
I mean, this is the thing when Maoist, when Chairman Starmus sent us all to the field, not all of men's or women's toilets in the field. Well, this is the other thing I mean, again, like I've mentioned this a lot of times, but like, you know, the sort of bathroom discourse in this country really does ignore the fact that a lot of the public bathrooms here really fucking suck, they never work. I went to a hospital of a maternity ward like the other week, and there was one working bathroom.
And like, when I say working, I mean, you could go into there, but the flush wasn't working. This is a maternity ward of a hospital, right? Statistically, one of the most likely like women's spaces, you know? Yeah, exactly. And so it's like, but if you're like got beyond willy, or if you're really hoping that fucking G4S comes in and fixes the fixers of a toilet, I mean, I guess you could then turn them into toilet jails, but that would probably be an effective way of doing it.
With the point being that like, as they sort of reneg on even the sort of lukewarm promises they've made, what is really left in terms of like how politics is kind of defined in life and in this first time period is really by the affect around it.
And what you're going to have is like a mixer of kind of populace firebrands in parliament that like have a lot of sway over a very vicious and cruel media culture that we've sort of seen little slivers of in the like Boris, you know, and when once like Boris got elected with like GB news and everything, I imagine that's going to really, really get worse.
But also like the lack of a kind of coherent opposition sort of means that that potential for chaos is a lot more likely to kind of flourish in quite surprising. And I wouldn't be surprised. Yeah. Pretty like violent ways. It doesn't the idea that like the government is sort of going to sort of not even fix problems, but like kind of ameliorate all the sort of catastrophes, overtories, of course.
Like yeah, they might do some sort of cosmetic stuff, but I think the thing that's really going to define this first period is like the types of politics that kind of occur outside of the sort of parliamentary system and how these will be less likely to be controlled. You're sorry. It's like it's a cultural thing first, right? And the Labour Party is having it's like the dog being wagged by its tail on this one, right?
But like again, the thing is like irrespective of like exchanging the laws very, very hard and very, very boring and a lot of people don't want to do it. This is another like coat by the way, just to be clear. But like what it is doing is it's enabling and it's reinforcing the same kind of stochastic, often violent kind of like prejudices, right? Like obviously like as far as like me going into the like women's bathroom, right?
First of all, there's the question of me finding one, but second of all, if you're sort of like if you've already changed the law, which is presumably a pretty like arduous process in order to make it so that I can't be in there, you're then I guess citizens arresting me and then we all wait 10 hours for the one cop left to turn up. It's like that cop is on a patrol of bathrooms, which is like exactly what they used to be doing in like the 70s as well. Like we're bringing that back.
Yeah, but like no, what you're not really aiming at doing that, what you're aiming at doing is making it more likely for like someone who has been driven insane by the internet to like confront me and kick the shit out of me while filming on their phone. It's like volunteer, volunteer border guards, volunteer toilet cops, like that's kind of what the culture is going to. But you know, we sort of see it heading towards that direction in some instances.
You know, we see this happening a lot more in like, you know, mainland Europe, right? Germany, like being a really big example of this. So I wouldn't be surprised if like again, one of these sort of uncontrolled or like we want to be sources about like the Starmler administrators, not going to be able to control because their version of like sensible grown up politics completely ignores the fact that like this is the type of political energy that is kind of about to emerge.
Like you're very chaotic, very external. I feel like that we're sort of going to see a lot more very chaotic, like citizen policing of, you know, lots of like the remaining public institutions. You're under a citizen's arrest, but your hands on the toilet and prepare to die. It's crucial, I think, here, especially about this like, Oh, JK Rowling, you object, don't worry. I the punitive prime minister, and he'll do it again when he's prime minister probably.
Well, also I'm willing to like say I went fine with ignoring this longstanding piece of equality's legislation, which number one, that's demonstrating to me, I think an enormous amount of like personal weakness because that's like, Oh, is it callabess about to ask me a confrontational question? Better fold, better promise to like have a beer summit with JK Rowling.
Yeah, I mean, this is the thing like you might not care about trans people, but like if he's going to fold for us, he's going to fold for whatever it is you have going on to. Yeah. And moreover, it's also like, I think what you're talking about about like this is also a kind of stochastic incitement, which is a willingness to be like, Oh, yeah, the law, it's like when you have a burned out EV that's not getting updated anymore. Just have fun with it.
Just be yourself. Uh-huh. Starmer's Britain gangs of roving, terfs kicking, dense in the side of a dead EV by the side of the road. Yeah. It's like a law is a law, but it has to be supported. You have to have the state capacity to enforce it. A law is a law. You have to have the state capacity to enforce it. And if there's going to be like something like a piece of equality's legislation, it has to have the constant moral support of people in power. Otherwise, it's not going to work.
It's not going to work if everyone powerful signals, oh, we don't care about this actually. We don't give a shit. It's going to not be worth the paper it's printed on. And again, whether knowingly or unknowingly, he's doing this so that the Harry Potter lady won't get mad at him. He's doing this because he doesn't want people to get mad at him. Yeah. Do you want to be friends with a woman who posts 16 hours a day about how much she hates trans women? Did she sound like a fun hang?
Did she sound cool? She should get married to Bill Ackman, I think. I think they would be so. They would have such a good vacation together. Uh-huh. Just like reply. Both of them, Laura Lumer's mentions from like, just like in bed on their phones separately. Yeah. In like the world's like in a mansion on a Caribbean island that's so luxurious, it's not on the map. All of the pleasures of the world raid at your feet. So I saw a photo of JK Rowling's yacht, right?
And like, if I think if I had a yacht, let alone her yacht, which is a big fucking yacht, right? I think there is not like, there is very little you could do to entice me to care about anything. And I consider myself a like more like community involved person than her, right? So she's just fully like, it's just deranged stuff. And she can't even enjoy any of the billionaire stuff. She's making herself miserable by doing this. She should learn from Mark Zuckerberg about like, yeah, like, career.
JK Rowling, do your white boy summer, you'll really enjoy it. Like, you know, this is an official like call from trash reach to the podcast. JK Rowling, embrace, embrace white boy summer, you know, cut to like 60 replies from her about how actually I'm the one who needs to embrace white boy summer. But finally, last thing we'll talk about on labor before we move on is, you know, you say one insider with knowledge of the party's growth plan.
By the way, all of this is like, it's all Kremlin, all the G, right? We don't know what's actually going on in there. Right now. Secret Maoism. It's streeting is preparing even as we speak the shock for guys. Not last. It's not right. It's just, it's a secret third way. Yeah. Wes Creeding. Yeah, there's a weird handshake meme between Tony Blair and Mao, you know?
But right is everything we're talking about is like, we don't know how much like blood letting and back room, like back room deal making, glad handing is going on at labor party right now. I know that they're all having a great fucking time. They're all getting to play other little fantasies. Yeah, they're so excited that they get to betray each other. And it's like actually meaningful or at least as meaningful as British politics can be. Kind of like the magic wand turned up to maximum.
Just like this is just like the West. Sure. Yeah. And you know, I wish them every happiness with it, to be honest. Yeah. They should just, they should just play diplomacy. New Victoria DLC just dropped. Yeah. What is that? With knowledge of the party's growth plan suggested there could be quote, pretty hair raising stuff ahead saying there will have to be almost trust like deregulation on things like planning and free parts. We're going to do that again. This is the plan.
This is the fucking plan is like we're going to try and do the cabbage lady shit without scaring the like bond markets. Yeah. We're going to try to do the Liz Truss thing, which everyone admits was fucking mental, but we're going to do it good. And also the OPR won't let them do it because again, like the thing is even if they wanted to do something like that.
And again, I mean, I guess like he could sort of break it, but like one of the sort of like a gam, one of the sort of things that he said or they said to sort of get the son support, I suppose, was well, every costing we do will sort of pass it for a V.O.B.R. And like when is V.O.B.R. or V.I.F.S. or any of these fucking places ever said, yeah, you should spend stuff, right?
Like their ideology is still very much rooted in austerity because of your product, or at least like the V.O.B.R. is sort of a product of an austerity project. And so again, it's like, well, okay. How are you going to do this? Oh, I can tell you that, which is that this site, this source says planning and free ports, the craziest stuff that will have the least effect everywhere is a free port now. Congratulations, citizen.
You live in like neo-brish and free port zone 800s, formerly known as stock port. Yeah. The like the confederation of Hackney and the two Bethnal Greens has declared war on this sounds this says pretty good actually. I'm kind of in favor of this one actually. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What you think we should do more like a conditary like a roving bands of mercenaries. I'm willing to become some kind of like corporate ninja warrior mercenary in the service of like, you know, the Glasgow free port.
Yeah, but that's the problem. We're going to get like, let's say South Shields, a subsidiary of the Arisarchic Corporation etc. Yeah, but we're not going to get trauma team. Like that's never, we're never going to get trauma team because that's too good care. It was my favorite part of that game. It really conceptually is really good. And this is the thing.
This is the kind of like innovative private, so healthcare initiative that you can bring to the NHS once you kind of like open that door, you know? What if there was one ambulance left? It cost 600,000 quid to call it and everyone on board had a rail gun. Also it flies. It's the ambulance. It's the ambulance. We're just combining existing startups. That's ambulance crossed with the like, the like hover taxi that crashes into your building.
And crossed with the hydrogen powered rail gun that was invented by the like the three year old. It's all coming together. All the technologies are there on the table for trauma team to be real. Unfortunately, it's also based on crypto, so it will take them 90 hours to get there. So I want to finish up on what may initially seem like a startup segment, but might not be. The company is called Halo Solutions. Just to achieve where you going with that VC funding.
I'm going to give the covenant back their series B. Halo, I've done a couple of those recently. Halo Solutions, Colin, let's protect everyone. Okay. So rather than doing all the guessing, right, I'll just go into tell you what button is. It is a incident management platform designed for a world leading client base experts in the field and unique features.
So it is a essentially it is like a really common type of product of product that aggregates a whole bunch of security information into one screen. Oh, sure. So it's if you're managing like Wembley, right? It shows you simultaneously like how many drunk antikissed fans are trying to like kick down each turn style. Yeah, it will show you the location of the guy with the flare up is asked at any given time. Just that, but there's like AI enabled to really like lock on to it.
Seen so many pictures of that guy with a flare up is asked. It can identify instantly. It just becomes sentient and believes it is the guy with this with this flare up is asked. So there was a police officer in 2014 called Lloyd Major, who started just like a normal security consulting company that started working at like festivals. And then after the match has to arena bombing in 2017 said, okay, we're going to work to stop that anything like that from happening again.
Yeah. If only there had been a kind of like sort of oversight platform that seeing that guy walk into the crowded orders for him had identified him as a guy with a flare up is asked. Or also like, oh yeah, if only there had been like some kind of a national security state that was, I don't know, tracking the guy that did it. Anyway, yeah. So he creates this thing, right, which is used at like, which is as we say, right, a like something that just aggregates lots of information.
So you can see what's happening where what kind of incidents are going on. This is relatively common and like in as much as anything is innocuous, pretty innocuous. Yeah. Well, like when you're looking at the kind of like surveillance cameras following your everywhere thing, the kind of like, it's not particularly objectionable in itself to be like they're using software that lets them watch a bunch of screens at once kind of thing, you know?
Yeah. I mean, other than like the fact that that allows, I always think when you're thinking about information, the guy in the middle of the pinopticon's wearing glasses. Yeah. A little bit. The guy in the middle of the pinopticon has like a bunch of mirrors that allow him to look at all of the cells at once and without having to turn. They're defeating the purpose of the pinopticon, really. But essentially right is what you think of yourself as like giving off information.
You have to understand like the more that gets aggregated with other people who are in some category similar to you, whether that's people who are co-located with you, people who share a demographic with you, people who might share a set of political beliefs with you, people, any, any characteristic that you can have in common with someone else, the more you can be observed alongside them, the more the person observing you has power over you. With respect of that thing.
Yeah, I mean, that's what a lot of like intelligence and intelligence like analysis is is like making connections between like data you've collected, right? Yeah, exactly. And this is something that just sort of automates that process and is a British company that's like sold to a lot of other sort of British organizations. This is the point at which is sort of centrist, more centrist podcast would do the kind of like all wells that ends well joke and like like white or the eyebrows, right?
So what I think is worth talking about here is that they have an education offering saying from boisterous events at the student union to quiet in corners of the library, overseeing the safety and security of a campus comes with many challenges and obstacles. A proactive approach and operations reduces risk and maximizes the value of your services. You can identify an entire Palestine solidarity camp as guy with a flare up is us in a matter of microseconds. You point that out.
November, this is why I wanted to talk about this company because it's connects to a couple of things that I think are worth discussing. And I think it's something we're going to see. We've seen a lot of in Britain and we're going to see a lot more of, which is as the semi-public sector like universities, for example, has like increased needs for security and more importantly, these demands placed on it by the state to engage in like political policing so to speak.
There's going to be a melding of private capital. In this case, like a company started by a guy, a relatively small company, a university and then the security state and the police. Yeah. Until you're at the point where you're like, why do my uni's security guards know as much about me as like MI5 do? Yeah, exactly. Because it's not like tools like this or more less automated, more human versions of this kind of process don't exist already.
It's just a question of them being broadened out to like what you might call non-state actors, right? Exactly. It's the company. This is a press release. And by the way, like none of this is happening in secret. It's just not talked about because it only happens in press releases. And those press releases only go out to like safety management magazine quarterly or whatever. How about which you can learn a lot by reading those?
Yeah. Where do you think like 20% of the content of this show comes from? I just read the press releases. The information's out there. There's just so much of it. It's hard to know what's relevant. This company is providing a technology to Birmingham City University. It's in discussions with a number of other universities in the UK.
This is the press release following growing concerns about female safety on campus, criminal activity and a spate of non-student protest activity and protest over the war in Gaza. Going to identify outside agitators and we're going to protect women and girls. This is all very, very familiar language as far as this stuff goes.
I think Birmingham City University was also one of those, like when Prevent was sort of talked about a lot, it was like one of those, because I think a PhD student who was doing a research project on like ironically like surveillance of counter extremism on campuses, like ended up getting reported to Prevent because they took out a book on like terrorism or something like that.
I think he was at Birmingham City University, all of which is to say, but like, very sort of like interesting and convenient. And the thing that I was thinking about when you were sort of talking about this, because I think in the mid 2010s there was this, there were these events on like student campuses in London. I'm not sure where ever happened anywhere else, which was called like students against surveillance. And it was the idea that like Prevent had just sort of been expanded.
And the idea was that like anyone who had like any sort of like public position and that range from like someone, you know, a university administrator, like a secretary or someone who was like, you know, just kind of working in the medical center, for example, had a duty to like report anyone who they sort of considered to be like at risk of, you know, sort of being extremist or sort of on the verge of it.
And like this sort of framework for that were really, really broad, but it relied on like expanding the scope of snitching and kind of like telling, you know, telling like public administrators that like if you kind of refuse to do this, then your job is also at risk as well. And so clearly like the extension of this now is that well, clearly like despite that sort of expansion of actual surveillance against students, this still isn't enough.
And so in a weird way, it's kind of like, okay, so now we're going to introduce a type of, I presume like an AI assisted technology that will do the job, but like people who are sort of coerced into doing it weren't able to do effectively enough. So this involves some mention of AI, but I think that's just because they want to increase their evaluation.
Like I don't see much evidence of it or there's very little information available as when trying to say I'm sure there's some of the usual in it. I think in this case though, it doesn't even matter if it has AI because the more a security platform can integrate data feeds and spit you out one coordinated number that will allow you to take action, the longer your lever is against people you're trying to control.
And so Lloyd Major says, well, legitimate protests are allowed to take place in the cornerstone of every vibrant thriving democracy. I love that. Well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, well, we do have to like allow some level of protest to legitimize our kind of like democracy. You are allowed to protest against like if the canteen of the of the of the of the university like a servish fingers like three times in a week.
You're allowed to do the kind of like pro the last ditch protests of like the Russian anti-war movement. You can hold up like a blank sheet of A4 paper on your own. You can't you can't do with horrendous. The Russian anti-war left doing a woofer and against the special military upright. Just like that they beat the shit out of a lot of dogs in the course of the Russian woofer and them. It was really bad. Yeah, I tried to take my ex-sold bullies of a last woofer and they would just. Oh my god.
Is that Steve Bray has been spotted at the University of Coventry? The recent barricade over Gaza at the University of Manchester, which is carried out by a large group of protesters, many of whom are not students, has highlighted how vulnerable UK universities are to such actions. You're not allowed to have like a position on stuff that the University of Manchester is doing or saying or investing in if you're not paying them nine grand a year. Like the university isn't a public institution.
It's a kind of like, you know, real estate fund and kind of Ponzi scheme. It's whatever it needs to be. Yeah, exactly. It's a real estate fund. It's also a classroom. You you as someone who like maybe like lives in Manchester or who lives in Britain. You don't really like your opinion of what like any given university might be doing is kind of irrelevant, ideally. I understand that sometimes people graduate universities, right?
Like and maybe they still have a bit that like, you know, they'd maybe send them like a news lesser, you know, they may be kind of like are alive to issues of like governance of the university. Just as long as you don't do that in any kind of like protest-related way. You should interact with the university by donating to them. And if you can maybe find a special number, you can donate that signals disapproval, but it's still ample.
And then you can just ask off at the gift shop shake your head the whole time so that they know that you disagree with it. One of the reasons I'm talking about this as well as there was recently an article published by Liberty Investigations of the law firm, the sort of civil rights law firm on email exchanges with police. Now, I want to be clear, I'm not connecting any of this to Halo. None of the universities here explicitly use Halo and Halo doesn't say they cooperate with the police.
They give information to the university. The university can choose what to do with it. It's just I'm saying that's one example of like an increased ability to surveil. Yeah. And it's all working in like an incestuous ecosystem generally. Yeah. If we can't like make actual connections between those things. And on the other side of the universities are state organizations which are demanding that they all work together. So this is a quote from from the investigation by Liberty.
In one email, forwarded by North Yorkshire police to the head of campus safety at York University, a former police officer said of an unnamed female protestor. She came to our attention during the anti-monarchy protestoring the King's visit in York.
Is it possible to find out if she's a current student of the uni and any address details that she holds the force also highlighted that captures protesters enchanted from the river to the sea and five six seven eight Israel is a terrorist state on May 21st. Campus security said it was keeping a log monitoring general mood and behavior of the York encampment. The Mending seniors at management's decision against installing CCTV.
Yeah, because all of the all of this stuff kind of exists irrespective of what university bureaucrats choose to do about it. Like if you're kind of like if you successfully move your 750 grand a year vice chancellor to not deploy the kind of like predator drone over your encampment, it doesn't matter. They still employ a staff of people who are going to be like emailing the cops about you.
And earlier that month, the National Police Chiefs Council's neighborhood policing lead contacted all police forces asking for intelligence on any students quote replicating American camp is protest an email sent from Gloucestershire, Constabulary to the Royal Agricultural University and Siren Cestors suggests number one. Imagine that protest encampment. Just like.
Yeah, people with 19 last names who are accidentally starting a protest encampment because they drank a mixture of port and piss that might be the first like Palestine solidarity campaign, but actually is most evaded predominantly by anti-Semitism. Just like costs, costing a couple of kind of like the triangle and the Palestinian flag out of your red trousers.
Yeah. So it also it's like, but this is cooperation again and again and again, where like university security as officers like join them in the control room to monitor CCTV during protests. Yeah, it's very similar to like a lot of police intelligence in the US and the UK is a waste of time, right? It's a waste of time and it's a waste of money, but it is kind of a jobs program, right? You look at like US stuff like fusion centers, right?
Which exist largely to regurgitate myths from Facebook to scare other cops time and time again in in 2020 and later you saw these fusion centers which are intended to do just this, to share intelligence, to collace intelligence and disseminated outlets, doing things like, hey, does anyone have any information on the bus full of antifa that's coming to like a small town to start a forest fire? What set you, yeah, what set you from?
Because we have read about this on Facebook, we are like putting out a kind of alert generally to maybe like, you know, without considering it's sort of like evidence base, you should be aware of and afraid of the idea that like a bus full of antifa, they're going to show up and they're going to like fire an RPG full of dildos at you or whatever.
Whereas, and it's exactly the same in this country too, it's just like slightly more obscured because we have more of a kind of a security state around it. Yeah, well, because there's also this is interlinking with prevent, right? Yeah, cool. And this is saying like, which is extremely like hysteric organization to be like this kid like, you know, drew a picture of like a stick guy with a gun in his notebook and is therefore like presumably pledged allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
And like this is what I sort of see here is a willingness on the, we go back to like how people interpret the law and how so much of the law is what people think it is because it depends who's enforcing it at any given day. It's not illegal to say from the river to the sea. It's not illegal to say five six seven eight Israel is a terrorist state.
Not illegal, but all these police forces, all of the, well, not the met for reasons we discussed, but other police forces, other like semi private security and organizations, universities and so on are all acting like it is. And like they can't send you to jail, but they can refer you to this like quasi institutional sort of formal, very vague state surveillance program that will repeatedly fuck your life up.
Yeah, even before the kind of latest round of legislation on this like intelligence gathering was always something that was like deliberately for exactly this reason, extremely vague and extremely unaccountable, right? And to sort of ask what, you know, what information the police will prevent or security services or whatever kind of like a glomeration of policing that becomes like counterterror policing or like shared intelligence units or whatever hold about you. It's like almost impossible.
You know, it's also kind of just relies on people not caring in the main that this is a thing that happens, which, you know, most people don't give a shit, which is also a gram. Yeah. Well, look, I think what we're going to see is, of course, we elected a labor government. So that's, they're going to put a stop to that, right? I assume that's how that's going to go. This kind of intelligence work is absolutely a growth industry, probably where we are growth industry everywhere going forward.
And it's very self perpetuating is the thing. Like does this create a lot of useful intelligence arguably not, but it does create a lot of jobs for people to, to, you know, keep doing this and keep monitoring people who the state feels more comfortable when they're monitored. Yeah. Exactly. Anyway, I think that's about all we have time for today.
So I hope you enjoyed the, the first episode of the new Mkirium and that you're, you're ready to enjoy the new flash, the new very square Lego hair flash. Oh, you got a license for that flash. Yeah. Oh, you got a license. You got a video, you got a video drum license going to jail, so they didn't pay my TV license for video drum. Okay. All right. All right. That's enough silliness now. Thank you for listening to this free episode of TF.
Don't forget there's a bonus that we coming out next week and next week, excuse me, in a couple days, guess what it is? It's finally the live show we did about Liz Truss's autobiography. That's what's going to be. It's a 10 years to save the West, which at this point is like nine years, 10 months to save the West. We have so little time to save the West. So that's coming, that's coming this week. So do check that out. And yeah, I guess we will see you in a few days.
Maybe we still have Edinburgh tickets. I don't know. I guess you're going to have to check in the episode description. It'll say do your own like work for once. Yeah. Hey, you know what? Why don't you find out if there are Edinburgh tickets? I'm not. You can't have me to kick around anymore. Okay. All right. I actually have to go. Bye, everybody. Bye.