The Duran Podcast - UK Labour takes over. Tories implode w/ Dr. Neema Parvini (Live)
Episode Date: July 9, 2024UK Labour takes over. Tories implode w/ Dr. Neema Parvini (Live) ...
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All right. We're live with Alexander Mercuris, and we are once again joined by a very special guest, the one and only Dr. Nemaparvini. Dr. Parvini, how are you?
Well, I'm good, as I were just saying, it's because I can be in the pouring British weather.
It never stops raining in this country. But other than that, I'm feeling well.
All right. Well, let's talk British politics.
We just had the big elections.
And we are going to discuss what is going on in the UK.
Before we get started and I pass it off to Alexandria,
let me just say a quick hello to everyone that is watching us on Odyssey and Rock Finn Rumble.
Hello to all our Rumble viewers and YouTube as well.
And a big shout out to everyone that is on the chat at the duran.
dot locals.com. Definitely join us on locals. Reckless Abandon, moderating. Good to have you with us.
Alan Watson, good to have you with us as well. And Zareel, Zario is also moderating. All right,
I think that is, those are the moderators. We've got with us, Alexander Mercuris. We've got
Dr. Parvini. Gentlemen, should we discuss what happened last week in the UK, Alexander?
I think we should because I think we've got the best person with us to discuss it with.
We did a wonderful program with Dr. Parvini a short time ago in which we were talking about the election in the run-up to the election.
He was telling us many things about his desire to see the Conservative Party lose all its seats.
Well, it didn't quite happen.
He'll no doubt have more to say about that.
They did do very, very badly.
we have a situation where the Labour Party won a landslide on 33% of the vote.
Turnout was very poor.
The Reform Party emerged.
But Dr. Parvini will have his own insightful take on all of these events.
And I think the best thing to do, given always that we have time constraints,
is to go over directly to him.
So Dr. Parvini, are you happy with what happened in the election?
They didn't get no seats.
They did get some.
Tell us what you think.
Well, I mean, yeah, we had quite a large campaign,
which was called zero seats.
And I said multiple times,
as one of the people who were spearheading that,
that anything above 100 seats would be a zero seat loss.
And the Tories, unfortunately,
as they often have done throughout history,
it just about enough to get over that line.
They got 121 seats in the end.
And in the run up to the election,
I said multiple times, like I was telling people, listen, this is the most successful political party in history.
If you look at something about, if you look at the past 200 years, I think it's something ridiculous, like 120 of them are Tory government.
They are essentially the permanent government of the UK, if you want to pair that way.
And so what we talked about is even if we got the zero seats, we would effectively need to double tap, right?
what that means is, I don't know, I'm showing my age here, but do you know the film Terminator 2?
Do you remember there was the T-1000 that, you know, they blasted in, they froze in liquid nitrogen,
Asta-Labaster baby, million smithereens, and yet the little bits of liquid metal come back together
and the T-1,000 is back. And the Tory party are much like that, okay? And unfortunately, with a
121 seats, what I desired, which was a breaking of what I call the political K-Fape,
is not going to happen now.
That is enough for the Tories to be the opposition.
That is enough for the Punch and Judy show of day-to-day politics to continue.
And it is enough for the real question in British politics on the quote-unquote right-hand side now
to be how are the Tory party going to respond and come back?
from this. Now, there are a number of reasons or a number of factors that I would blame,
or in more neutral language, I would attribute the late surge. Because if you remember at the
MRP projections, many of them have the Tories on 60 seats, 80 seats. So how is it that they
managed to double that at the last minute? And there were really four reasons. One, I'm afraid to say,
is the Mail on Sunday journalist Peter Hitchens.
The original idea for zero seats was actually Peter Hitchens' idea back in the 2010 election.
He wrote a book called The Cameron Delusion, where he basically wrote out all of the reasons
why the Tory party need to die if we're going to get any change in this country in a kind
of conservative direction.
And, you know, so this was basically, he was basically the same.
spiritual godfather of this move to try to get the Tories to zero seats. Well, at the 11th hour,
unfortunately, Hitchens decided that, no, the timing is now wrong and the prospect of a
Stama government is too terrifying. And so he basically rallied to, I mean, he wasn't proactively
telling people to vote Tory, but he was saying, listen, you have to, this zero seats thing is
silly. We can't have a Labour government. So that was the first thing. And people may scoff at that,
but he is a very influential journalist. A lot of people, especially older people,
religiously read his column in the mail on Sunday. And I think that if he had got on board
with the campaign rather than counter-signaled it, as he did, we could have got below that
100 seat threshold. The second factor is that Boris Johnson came back from holiday and made a last
minute intervention. I remember it was the Wednesday before the election. I had to pop into town.
And I happened to look at the papers. You know, they have all the papers up on the rack.
I counted four out of eight papers had Boris Johnson on the front, warning of Starmageddon.
That's what he was calling him. And, you know, where the
you love him or hates him, Johnson is popular with a segment of the Tory base, and that last-minute
fear mongering campaign worked. I saw it with my own eyes. Older people I know, I saw it. They were
basically scared, you know, which is a typical Tory tactic, really. You know, okay, we're bad,
but the other guys are even worse. So, you know, keep us in type thing. The third factor is that
Kier Stama just has no charisma whatsoever.
You know, he, I mean, I saw somebody call him the most boring politician in the world.
Alex, I saw your impression of him on your video the other day and I had to laugh.
And so unlike Tony Blair, who we'll talk a little bit more about it in a moment,
because he's another figure looming in the background.
People, you know, Labor did not win because people like Kiyosama,
they simply won because this was an anti-Torri election.
So he was not able to galvanize many people towards him.
And as you pointed out, Alexander, and as many of the press have pointed out,
they actually reduced their number of votes from Corby, which is saying something.
And then the fourth factor, I'm afraid to say,
and this is something that afflicts not just Britain, but America and every European country.
And I don't want to alienate too many of your viewers here,
but I have to say that it is the selfishness of the boomer generation who basically the reason
those fear campaigns worked is because many older people were thinking of their pensions,
their quadruple lock pensions or whatever it is they've got now.
And rather than do what was necessary, they were thinking as they often have of their own welfare.
and this is one of the reasons why there's such an issue in the system.
There's this saying that goes around online.
Nothing ever happens.
One of the reasons that nothing ever happens is because the system basically can count
on those people who are 60 and above to keep the status quo going,
happen in France as well.
So those are the things that got the Tories over the 121.
seat line. So really all of the questions that face British politics now are basically still
the divisions within each of the two major parties. And the Tory party have a huge, as far as I can
see, insurmountable division between the so-called one-nation Tories and those who want to go
in a more populist direction.
The press are calling it Farragist now.
Sounds like something from the Spanish Civil War or something.
So that is one question that's going to be decided fairly soon.
And then there are lots of more hidden problems on the Labour side,
which we can talk about as well.
But it depends on what direction you guys want to go in.
I'm just going to say a few quick things.
I mean, firstly, I actually think that one of the reasons
that they got more than 100 seats.
I think the main reason was the fact
that Labor didn't do as well as it should have done.
I think many of the original opinion polls
that appeared to show the Conservatives losing
being knocked down all the way to 50, 60 seats
were partly because those same opinion polls
were overestimating by a significant margin
the Labour vote.
The Labour vote had been,
stronger and had taken more votes and more seats that way. That would have, I think, depressed
the conservative numbers. One would have to go through and analyze all the figures and go through
seat by seat to see whether that might happen. But I think that probably was a major role.
And I also, by the way, completely agree with you about Boris Johnson. I think Boris Johnson's
late intervention did make a difference.
with the boomer thing. Well, Alex and I have talked about this election several times,
and I've always felt that the Conservatives would hold on, where they would hold on,
would be amongst the over 60s, and that they would come to their rescue. But having said
all of that, talking about the Conservatives, if you adjust for, you know, turnout, they did very,
very poorly indeed. They got 23% of the vote on a 60% turnout, 59.9% turnout. That means that
fewer than 14% of the British electorate voted Conservative in this election. Now that is, I think,
a historic and dreadful though, for the party, which I can remember, I can remember when I first
came to Britain, that it was not just a major political force in Britain. It was a huge social force.
There were conservative clubs, conservative societies. You had the young conservatives,
you know, in every village practically, and they were almost, you know, bringing together all the
young people there. It was the great place where you met people and had fun. I mean,
it is, I think it's not as quite as you say. I think it is actually melting away.
and they are racked by divisions.
They still don't know which way to go.
Do they go with, you know, Sweller Braverman
and where she wants to take them,
which is towards, you know,
the more right, hard-edged,
more right-wing position,
which I don't think they can do, by the way.
Or are they going to go for, you know,
more centrist, leftist position,
which they've tried and hasn't worked for them?
I said, I actually, on the contrary,
I think they're in a very, very bad place.
I can't really see where this revival is going to come from.
They're clinging on because people over 60 still vote conservative
and a couple of people still listen to Boris
and Kirstama wasn't a particularly good leader.
But I would say actually that they are in a very, very bad place.
That's my quick thing.
I mean, I don't want to disagree too much, Alexander,
because they are in a very, very bad place,
which we can outline in the second.
But, I mean, I'll discover it.
It's like the horror movie, you know, you think they're down,
and then at the last minute the zombie hand will come up.
The Tories have this way of finding it.
Now, we can talk about why they're in such a tricky spot,
which is that another factor in this election
that not a lot of people have talked about enough, in my opinion,
is the Lib Dems, who took what is, you know,
everybody talks about the red wall. There's also this blue wall, which is essentially from Cornwall
all the way to the home counties, whole sway of the country in more well-to-do areas, wealthier
areas of the country, which typically have voted Tory. Lots of those seats went Lib Dem this time.
And to add insult to injury, they went Lib Dem on the back of a campaign where Ed Davy did nothing
but bungee jump and, you know, go to water parks,
which as someone who was into elite theory was one of my favorite campaigns ever,
maybe all, maybe all, you know, maybe the sham of democracy can be shown by this, you know.
But this presents a real problem because Soella Braverman in her analysis is right
that many people in the Tory base feel betrayed and that, you know, if the Tories need to survive,
they need to go, you know, in a more right-wards direction
or a more anti-immigration direction or something like that.
But the problem is, is that many of those more well-to-do Lib Dem sort of seats,
you know, the politics of those places is basically,
I describe them as NIMB.
Have you heard this term NIMBY, not in my backyard?
Well, I have. I'm not sure how much other people outside of the reason have.
But anyway.
So the politics in these kind of posher areas is basically like, well, we want to have all the
trendy opinions and we want to have the nice coffee shops and so on, just not here.
That like we don't want the, you know, we want all of the nice policies, but we don't want it
here.
And in fact, the way the Tories campaign in a lot of these seats is instructive because many of
them just spend all their time going around saying, you know, I support farmers and then
they'll go to a little butchers or a pork pie shop or something and they'll shake hands with the
locals and be like, oh, you know, we're all about local rural life, vote for us type thing,
not mentioning all the terrible kind of globalist stuff they do in Westminster.
So there's this kind of, and this is how the Tories actually held on to some of those seats as
well.
But of course, the Lib Dems basically have become a way for middle class people in the country.
to not have the kind of stigma that comes with voting labor in some places,
but also of saying, well, you know, I'm not an awful racist like those Tories.
I'm a libidem, you know, and this presents a problem because the Jeremy Hunts in the party
and people like Alicia Kearns and various other, but Rory Stewart, they will argue that
if the Tories go in the Braverman direction, they will never win back all of them.
all of those seats. But the other problem is if they go in that direction, they will then never win
back all of those working class votes. This is an aspect of the Thatcher coalition that is not
commented on enough, right? It's always painted as, you know, the Tories versus Labor is rich versus
poor. Thatcher won three elections by getting aspirational working class people. And Boris Johnson,
he was able somehow to have a coalition where you got both the kind of NIMBY types and those
red wall types. He kind of, I don't know how, like he was both a Wef globalist and a populist
at the same time. Johnson was. Now, you can do that for one election, but if you betray those voters,
many of them who voted Tory with bitter teeth in Wales and in the North, well, they're never going to
vote Tory again. So this is, I agree with you, Alexander. It's going to take a long time for the
Tories to figure out what they're going to do. And I actually cannot see how these two factions of the
party are going to come together. Either Braverman and friends will join reform, or the one nation
types have to join the Lib Dems. I just don't see how they can keep this, the current
configuration together.
And it will be interesting
to see what happens in the future.
I will say
though, those NIMBY types
I was talking about,
in many ways they have their beliefs
as a result of
luxury. And
if the realities that are visible
in other parts of the country
become more visible in those areas,
I can see them shifting right as well,
as has happened in other countries,
France being a, you know,
a bad in our case.
I should say that many of my friends
could be classified as NIMBY's
and I agree with your analysis completely.
I can very easily see these people
if they really come under that kind of pressure,
swinging right again.
But of course they're not doing that at the moment
and then they probably are going to be
horrified if the Tory party
goes in a swell of Bravenman direction.
The Republicans in the US through Trump have gone further down the road of becoming a more working class party than the conservatives have yet managed successfully to do in Britain.
But at least that those quick things.
But anyway, shall we talk about the other thing which you were talking about a lot in our previous programme,
which is about the terrible way in which Britain has been governed?
and the fact that the elites in Britain
have not actually been performing very well
and that this is one of the factors
that the Conservative Party has played a big role in
given what an important institution
in the Conservative Party has been
in the Britain that we've all lived in
and have experienced.
What is going to happen now?
We have a Labour Party that isn't very popular
that has a lopsided majority in the House of Commons,
we have a situation where the Conservatives are still the official opposition,
but with all of the problems that you've said.
And there's this bubbling dissatisfaction in the country that exists as well.
Do we have a situation now where the elite,
can start to sort of readjust, regain control,
or is the situation actually even more brittle in some respects
than it was before, in the sense that previously
we did have a kind of two-party system with two viable parties,
but now one of those parties, the more important one, historically, is much weakened,
and the other one isn't terribly popular either.
Yeah, I mean, but my view is that the elites are, at the moment, they need to perform, right?
What our elites offer is technocratic managerialism, okay, with a veneer of, you know, social
liberalism and other stuff, but that stuff is fluff.
The key point is you've got to make things work, okay?
which at the moment means, you know, energy prices coming down, fix the potholes, you know,
just stuff working, make the trains run on time.
And the Tories have spectacularly failed in that, as we discussed.
Now, Stama is back, and behind him is the ever-present, omniscient figure of Sir Tony Blair,
who was already, after saying he wasn't going to backseat drive the government,
is already on a daily basis
by secret telling Kiyosama what he needs to do.
But essentially Blair is right.
Blair understands that
if the system does not deliver for people,
they will start seeking solutions in other places,
i.e., not from the neoliberal centre,
but from the extremes of the far left, as they call them,
and the far right.
They'll start turning back to people like Corbyn,
or they'll start turning to people like Farage.
And what Blair wants to do as a master of containment
is to basically make stuff work
to keep in five years' time to show a graph.
Look, you complained about immigration,
we halved immigration.
You complained about law and order,
we've halved law and order.
And this is what, I mean,
whether you believe them or not,
this is what the first new Labour government did.
They were able to show lots of graphs
saying things are getting better,
you know, because we are the managers,
We are the experts.
We know how this stuff works.
Now, the problem that the Starma government has
and that actually Sir Tony Blair has
is that there are many people within the Labour Party,
which is now a big party, 400 people,
who have other ideas.
And two such people who have other ideas
are people who your audience may not have heard of
because they're not kind of front-of-the-camera figures.
One of them is called Sue Gray,
who's a lifelong...
civil servant, but she is very close to Kea Starma on an operational level. The other person
is Morgan McSweeney, who is being hailed as the mastermind behind the campaign. Now, neither Sue Gray nor
McSweeney like Blair or the influence of Blairism. And if you think about the Tony Blair Institute,
it is now the biggest NGO by some distance. I think it's something like 10,
times bigger than the next NGO down. That's just in Britain. I think it's got over 330 employees
just in London and worldwide it's got 800. And I remember when you guys were talking about the
situation in Nigeria, who were the first people kicked out of Nigeria? It was the Tony Blair
Institute, right? I mean, he has his, what I'm saying is, is that people, and he is not just
the former prime minister. He is, in many ways, the kind of, the,
secret manager of this country. And so what he has done, Blair, he is embedded so many of his people
that people like McFadden and Melbourne has just been added to the cabinet. There are many people
in the, in the, Patrick Valence is another one who you'll remember from COVID. These people either
directly work for Blair or have a long history of being loyal to Blair. And one of the things I
foresee happening in the near future is that, you know, one of the things I like to say is that
power doesn't, can't stand, doesn't like a rival castle. And these figures, Gray and McSweeney,
are not going to like Blair, essentially backseat driving the government. And we've already
seen one tussle, because on Sunday, that was two days ago, almost what, on day one of the new
Labour cabinet, Blair came out and he said, here are all the things you need.
need to do and the number one thing you need to do is introduce a mandatory digital ID,
something he's been singularly obsessed by for the past 20 years. And initially the Labor spokesman
said, oh, well, we're looking at all options. And then they saw a backlash on Twitter or whatever.
And two hours later, they said, oh, actually, we can rule this out. This is not the way we're
doing things. We reject Blair's proposal. And then on Robert Peston last night, they had another
government spokesman on. And he said, oh, so you're not ruling out digital ID?
then and he was like, no.
So it's like, well, this is a problem for any party, right?
Because is Kea Stama in charge or is actually the Tony Blair Institute in charge?
And I'm mentioning this because today they had a huge conference at the Tony Blair Institute
all day where they basically outlined all of their plans for the country.
One of the huge issues on the agenda was, again, digital ID.
And, you know, these people have.
have huge amounts of financial backing behind them.
And I just don't know if they're going to take no for an answer.
And I mean, I don't want to speculate too wildly.
But if the Starma government starts to say, actually, no, we're not going to do all
of this stuff.
I wouldn't put it past them to be like, okay, star me are out.
Next guy in, just like they did to lose trust.
So anyway, we're back over to you.
Well, not at all.
Because I actually read Blair's article in the Times.
I'm sure you did. It was quite extraordinary because he was writing as if he was the person who was actually going to be running the government.
It was most, it was a most bizarre article actually. It was like, you know, this is what we need to do.
This is how we need to get around and sort it out. And absolutely digital ID was there.
A lot and an awful lot about AI and about how important AI is going to be in controlling everything and upgrading everything.
But it was like a program, a program for the government.
And he's not a member of the government in any formal sense.
It reminded me a bit, you know, for pre-Putting Russia,
where you have all these sort of shadowy figures who exercise control
without having any actual formal role in the government.
And in his own self-conception,
he clearly sees himself as now, you know, at pole position, the central person who's in overall charge.
His comments about Stama at the beginning of the article were, I thought, incredibly cursory, very perfunctory, barely acknowledge the fact that Stama is actually the leader of the Labour Party and the actual prime minister of this time.
So it's certainly a person to watch.
What about the rival parties, the new parties on the left and the right?
Because you were a bit skeptical about Farage before.
You're wondering whether he might in fact be part of the system or whether, you know,
the Russians are getting at this really useful expression of system politician and anti-system politician.
It doesn't necessarily mean that an anti-system politician is a revolutionary,
but as somebody who isn't quite within the inner circle.
What is Farage?
Is he within the inner circle or is he outside?
Well, I mean, as we talked about last time,
you know, how much is Farage containment working for the system
and how much is he not?
I have to say, his comments on Ukraine shortly before the election,
to me, firmly put him on the outside
because there are a few topics,
and foreign policy is probably the biggest,
topic that the regime does not
break any dissent on. And
the fact that Farage
started talking up about
essentially telling the truth about
the Ukraine war.
You know, this was,
you know, the media treated that as if he
had committed heresy. And
I was telling people at the time, you know,
all of us, we're used to watching
you guys and having a variety of news
sources, but you have to remember that
over in the media,
they only get one
side of the story. So, I mean, it's like, I don't know, they were calling it revisionism and
things like that. So I do think Farage may be more of an outsider because of that than some people
may imagine. I think basically his role is going to be, you know, he's going to provide a lot of
soundbites from Parliament. You know, he's going to give us a lot of dramatic moments where he calls
out the Uni Party, essentially, much like Galloway did before he went. I mean, I know he lost his seat.
And he's going to provide a lot of moments like that. He's also not going to let Labor forget about
his commitment, their commitments on reducing immigration. I think the main way to think about
Farage is as a single issue politician. He was a, you know, his issue was Brexit and now his
issue is immigration. Yes, there were other things in the reform manifesto, but the key one is
immigration. And as long as he's there, he will, as a threat, basically, the Tories will not be
able to relax. I mean, in a way, he's going to drag them, kicking and screaming, to say the sort
of things that he is saying, you know, otherwise they are going to end up like the French
centre rights.
You know, that's their destiny if they don't adopt some of these talking points.
So that is what Farage will do.
Over on the Labour side, they lost a number of seats to essentially Muslim candidates
who were outspoken about the Gaza issue.
I'm not sure how the Labour are going to deal with that.
And I also have wondered about whether, with as many seats as they've got,
Can Labour just say, well, we don't care about that now?
Are they going to write off the Muslim vote in the short term?
I don't know.
One thing I do know is that, and the Muslim community will know very well,
is that unlike the speculations of some of the right-wing press,
the Stama government is going to be absolutely steadfast in their commitment to Israel.
There's just no doubt about it.
I mean, they cleared the way for that.
They purged the party of any.
dissenters at all, including, you know, for trivial things like liking a tweet 10 years ago
and things like that. So that is going to be, I mean, the best thing to happen for Labor
would actually be for some resolution to come in the Israel, in the Israel-Gaza conflict in the
next five years so that it's off the table. It's no longer a question. Whether that's going to
happen or not, I don't know. But there is some...
something else as well about the Labor vote, which I noticed to your point earlier on,
Alexander, which is that this McSweeney chap, a lot of his kind of behind the scenes thinking and
rhetoric was basically that the Blairite Centre has become too technocratic and out of touch,
so it doesn't reach, quote-unquote, normal people. What that meant was that the Labour Party
spent a lot of time trying to appeal to disaffected white working class voters in this election.
As far as I can see that utterly failed, I do not think that the disaffective working class
who've been turned off the Tories went to Labor.
I think those were all the reform voters.
So it's hard to see like where, I mean, I don't think Labor picked up, didn't really
pick up any votes.
They just were the default beneficiaries.
So that's going to be a problem too, because if Labor do anything to move to appease
the kind of Muslim block vote that is formed in the Midlands especially,
and in parts of London, they will lose those white working class voters.
You know, because politics, democracy especially,
does boil down at some level to patronage.
What are you going to do for me?
What things are you going to, you know, what have you done for me lately?
And the fact that they set up the NHS back in 1945 or something is not going to,
is not going to cut it in in 2024 if groups see other groups getting those goodies instead of
them. And the last thing I'll say, I don't want to monologue too much, but the last thing I'll say
on the issue of the NHS and Tony Blair is thus, I think the left are going to go apoplectic
when they find out what Labour are going to do to the NHS because they've put Alan Milburn in.
Blair has basically already, through his institute, detailed, very detailed documents they produce,
their plans for the NHS, which is essentially selling parts of it off to Microsoft and Oracle
and these sorts of companies to run on the government's behalf, basically semi-privatization.
I mean, this is, you know, if the Tories did that, they'd be a revolution.
But Labor, due to various reasons, they can get away with these things.
So I do think that when that happens, that's going to be an interesting question too.
And people like Angela Rainer and so on may break ranks at that point, you know, when they,
because that's a sacred curve to the left in this country, the NHS being fully state funded.
So, yeah, anyway, there we go.
And also I suspect some of those white working class voters, particularly the older ones,
who will not be happy
if it seems that the Labour Party
is handing out parts of the NHS
to its friends,
which is how they'll probably see it.
On your point about
patronage,
my aunt, who was a very successful
politician in Greece,
always made that point to me.
She said the politics is 90% patronage.
The key is
to carry out,
to dispense patron
in a way that looks ideologically consistent
and which makes the recipients of your patronage
feeling that they're receiving something that is,
that they're ethically entitled to.
She said it much better than I've just said it,
but she was, she understood this very well.
She understood how absolutely important patronage actually is in the system.
What about this other issue, which is one that constantly comes up,
up in comments that I get about the election and about the Stama government, which is about
Britain's relationship with the EU.
Stama has a history of being a fervid supporter of the EU.
He was very, very much at the centre of all the intrigues to try and get a second referendum,
as it was called.
He played a major role in the Brexit wars that were fought out in Parliament, in Parliament.
after the referendum. What's he going to do? Because he now says there's not going to be Brexit
in his lifetime. Much of the Labour Party wants Britain back into the EU. Is he going to go along with
them or is he going to hold back? And of course, if he does go along with it, again, a lot of those
white English working class voters that he wants to win over are not going to be happy or so it seems
to me. Yeah, I mean, I think that he will, he's probably telling the truth where they're not
going to reverse Brexit, but I, i.e., they're not going to formally go back into the EU. What I suspect
they'll do is basically legislate Brexit into irrelevance, you know, I, passed so much domestic
legislation that we are essentially tied to Europe anyway, you know, so we'll get, you know,
what they call Brexit in name only, you know, that's what we will end up with, I think.
and I think they'll probably make it so that there's just harmony.
You know, the EU rules and the British rules are the same.
Right.
So, you know, we won't formally reenter any of the old arrangements,
but we'll just replicate them, which was something that they were discussing even,
you know, four or five years ago.
I have heard, I mean, in some of the more conspiratorial parts of the left,
they believed that Starma,
Stama's Remain stuff,
was actually there to undermine Jeremy Corbyn.
That, you know,
because clearly, now, viewed from now,
Stama was playing a long Machiavellian game.
He was never a Corby night.
And in fact, neither was David Lemmy,
who was another person who's really surprised me.
You know, for me, David Lemmy was a,
was a kind of BLM supporting, woke, you know, typical,
typical kind of far left type person.
I have now discovered that, you know, he is not, now he's the foreign secretary.
God, God help us, but he is, he has reinvented himself as a realist, as a Machiavellian realist, David Lemmy.
So I was kind of looking into his background and, and thinking, well, actually, no, all of these people were playing a long game.
They were essentially pretending to be Corbynistas, ready to take the mask.
I go, aha, we were, we were Blairites all along or whatever.
So there is that possibility that a lot of the strong Stama rhetoric from five years ago on Remain was a deliberate, you know, neoliberal strategy to destroy Corbyn.
And in fact, there are, it's not too much of conspiracy because I remember there was a leak that happened around the time, you know, they were called the Labor leaks where there were just logs of people who were meant to be.
there helping
Corbyn
who were just
deliberately undermining him
his own comms team
were trying to undermine him
this McSweeney chap
who I mentioned
was part of this
was part of a movement
even back then
looking to
gain back control
so yeah
I'd be very surprised
if Labour formally
take us back into the EU
I think they want
that issue done and dusted
it belongs to the past
by the way
Lammy has just written a massive
article for foreign affairs
which is in the United States
in which he talks about something called
progressive realism
which is quite an interesting
concept but anyway
it's worth the read actually
there's been already criticism
written of it by various people
but anyway he is
a progressive realist
or so we're telling
I don't suppose he was quoting John Mia Schama though was he
no he was not crowding
where are we going from here
because the Conservative Party is not dead
it's just it survives
like as you said it's there
just holding on
the Labour Party is
well it's in its pomp
with his 400 seat majority
but it isn't really very popular
the Lib Dems have made a big
inroads in the West
countries, the Western England, as you've correctly said, describing the area, which I know
quite well, by the way, exactly correctly. I mean, that is exactly what it is like. It's exactly
the sort of place where you have middle, middle class people, well, affluent people, look to call
the middle class, well off, very well off people with their range rovers and their garage and
their big houses and whatever, but they, of course, they couldn't really, you know, dirty their
fingers with some of the things that the conservatives have been up. But where are we going?
Because nothing looks very substantial anyone. Nothing looks very stable. A government, a labor
government, which probably has its own internal tensions, a conservative party, which is weakened
and has its own internal tensions. I accept, it may revive. We have, I think, a phase
on the left, actually. I don't think that any real left-wing party as such actually broke through.
The Greens did well in a few places, but they hardly did so with a huge upswing of support.
And, you know, where the Muslim vote went, it was all basically on one issue, which was Gaza.
So what is the future? I mean, this is my difficulty, because I,
I don't actually see, you know, a strong, single political force to take things forward.
I mean, you mentioned Farage, but you said that he's uniquely successful as a single-issue politician, Brexit, immigration.
But we don't know how he would manage things if he were ever to achieve power.
And it's unlikely on the facts that he will.
So where are we heading?
I mean, are we going to,
it's like we're treading water in a kind of way.
Well, I mean, what I expect the Labour government to do,
and you have to take this with a pinch of shot
because I barely believe it myself,
but what I expect them to do is to,
is essentially to dial down the heat on many different issues,
to put culture wars issues away.
I've said it many times to put the woke away.
I noticed, by the way,
that when they announced their cabinet,
it was an all-white cabinet and David Lamy.
And they made a big deal of saying,
well,
the thing is,
this is the smallest amount of people in the cabinet
who haven't been to public school.
So therefore,
this is the most diverse cabinet ever.
But everybody else was thinking,
hold on a second,
you're all white.
So this is just an early sign of
a lot of that kind of woke stuff
that gets people's backs up,
that kind of, you know,
it's so aggressive.
and in your face and, you know, it turns people off.
They're going to stop doing all of that,
which is one of Blair's bits of advice in that article as well.
He said, you know, you don't do the woke thing.
So that's one thing I expect them to do.
Another thing I expect them to do is actually be seen at the very least to fix some of
these problems, to be seen to bring immigration down,
to be seen to fix the potholes or whatever.
And, you know, if they can show all of them,
that on paper in four or five years time, that's a scenario where Labor will have been successful.
I was listening to LBC on the day before the election, and a chap rang in who was voting
Labour, and he said, listen, Kea Stama is a boring bank manager.
Okay.
If he's done well, the next time I ring into this show, we'll be talking about gardening.
Right.
So that is the win.
That is the win condition, I think, for the Starma government.
The loss condition is if the control, the centrist's control in the party, is not strong enough.
And they cannot discipline.
They're more radical elements.
They can't stop Angela Rainer from running her mouth.
They can't stop Jess Phillips from saying stupid things.
They can't stop backbench rebellions from left wingers.
they start actually thinking, do you know what, we do have the mandate?
Let's do all the crazy left-wing stuff.
If they do that, their next election, they'll be toast.
They are not going to win another election.
This was a unique election, the one that we just had, and it was all about the destruction
of the Tory party.
If the Labour Party are seen to be worse than the Tories, i.e. more of the same but worse,
which is what many on the right fear,
or, you know, dialing up all of those things that have got people upset
or increasing immigration,
then I think we'll be facing a Labor zero-seat scenario in five years' time.
And, you know, we talked before about the liberals going extinct in the early 20th century.
I actually think that it could turn around if Labor do a bad job here,
that rather than the Tory is going exist,
extinct because they always find a way to come back because they are the permanent government,
it will actually be Labour who cease to exist because without the working class,
you cannot have a coalition of, you know, metropolitan liberals in London and, you know,
a non-white population that increasingly doesn't like what you're doing in the Middle East.
I mean, that's not a coalition.
So, yeah, I think it's, the thing is, the situation is the situation, the situation,
is existential for Labour still. Even though zero seats didn't happen, the same incentives still
apply, basically, if Labour mess up, in my opinion. So there we go. I agree. I mean, a government
with 33% of the vote on a weakened, on a lower turnout, is actually in a very fragile position
indeed. It looks strong, but it really isn't. And there was an article I remember reading that
saying that this might be Labor's 906 moment,
that the Liberals won this huge landslide in 906,
in unique conditions.
And they didn't manage it well.
And 20 years later, they were basically gone.
And they were out of power,
and they've been out of power basically ever since.
So anyway, we'll see.
Dr. Balvini, I'm going to stop at this point.
I'm going to hand over to Alex.
I'm sure he's got questions.
And if you want to add to your thoughts as well, of course, please do.
Yep, we've got many questions.
Let's begin with Sparky.
Is it easy for an MP once elected to change parties?
If so, will Reform UK get some more MPs from refugee Tories or from other parties?
My understanding is that they can switch.
and in fact that has happened already
we got some before the election
we got some Tory to Labor switches
and it happened around the time
of Brexit I seem to remember
various different MPs either forming new parties
so they can and I think Lee Anderson
did it as well didn't he with the reform MP
so it's possible just switch
right from G1416
would you three maybe be
interested in a stream about elite theory, the Machiavellian's book,
writings by Curtis Yarvin, etc. This would be amazing.
The elite theory.
Well, I mean, I just recommend people read my book, Populist Delusion,
other than going over all the things I talk about in there for the hundredth time.
You know, if people were interested in such a stream, I'd be up for it.
But, you know, if you're interested in elite theory, it's all in there, basically.
All the links are in the description box down below as well to Dr. Parvini's books.
And yeah, maybe we do something like that.
Absolutely.
I think we'll be very interested, actually.
And I think they'd be very interested in discussing it with you and having your comments as well.
Just saying.
But that's fantastic.
Yeah, absolutely.
Let's see.
Ralph Steiner says,
Britain's new foreign secretary said that Marie Antoinette won the Nobel Prize
and Henry the 7th succeeded Henry the 8th.
How do you see Lamey dealing with Gaza and Ukraine wars for the British Empire?
I mean, I don't see Lamy having, I don't see the Stama government
having any difference from the current, from the Tory government on foreign policy.
You know, that's why they were allowed to win.
I mean, this is, I mean, I've said it before,
the elites are prepared to trade off domestic policy for foreign policy.
as we saw with Maloney in Italy.
And, you know, everything else is on the table to trade up,
but not Israel and not Ukraine, as far as I can see.
Another brick in the wall says,
George Galloway, Sikir Stammer will make the UK at war within a year, your thoughts.
Yeah. Do you want to go for that, Alex?
I don't think he will.
I do think he's going to bring the UK into war.
I do think this is what he's about.
I don't think he has that kind of level of interest and engagement in this.
He's going to do exactly, he's going to do exactly the same things that Rishi soon acted in foreign policy.
No more and no less.
And if you want to see that, read this impossibly long, tedious article that Lammy has actually written in foreign affairs.
He sets it all out.
He says on the one end, we're not going to have another.
Iraq war or another, you know, Libya war or anything like, oh, no, no, no, we can't possibly
do any of this, but, you know, that's, that's the realism, if you like, but everything else,
it's, it's more of the same. It's exactly the same as what we've seen. And I think he's not
going to take us into war in the way that the Galloway says. I know Galloway slightly. I think on
this he's wrong. Ralph Steiner says, Kirstammer believes in strong immigration policy and hopes to
increase the number of immigrants. Do you see this as a future problem for Britain?
I mean, I mean, did he say that he's going to increase immigration? Because I read that he
was going to decrease it. It's already, I mean, let's be frank, it's already a problem in the UK
immigration. It was, I mean, it was a problem going back five or six years. There was a burst
of immigration after, after COVID, which I, I mean, I, I mean, I,
have speculated, I wrote an article a while back called human quantitative easing. I actually
believe that the reason we've got this huge burst of immigration after COVID is because they
printed so much money to pay for furlough and things like that in every single country
that they needed people to soak up that excess money. If that is true, it was only a short,
it was only a short-term fixed.
And that's why I can see a hardening line on immigration moving forward.
Partly that's reality, i.e. they have to do that for things to carry on going.
If Stama increases immigration and if they increase immigration in places like France and elsewhere
moving forward, there's going to be severe problems, we could even see, you know,
the problem will reach a point
where we'll be facing
like 1848 style revolutions
or even 1778 star ones.
Elza says,
has Lord Cameron become unemployed?
What's next for him?
Will he keep his title?
He will be missed in Clown Rogue.
What's going on with Cameron?
He's no longer Foreign Secretary.
He's no longer shadowed foreign secretary either.
He's gone.
He's gone.
away from all that. But of course, he retains his title. He's a member of the House of Lords.
He's perfectly well. Don't worry about him. He's still around.
I do think this election does mean, though, that Cameronism is dead.
It's no long. It is politically non-viable after this result.
I agree.
From Sir Mug's game, according to David Starkey, special act of parliament passed to protect
Stomers, multiple pensions. Nice work if you can get it.
You know, one of the things that we forgot to mention earlier on when we were talking about
what Stama will do when he was in government.
And this is something that Starkey has talked about quite a bit and is true.
They're going to move a lot of decision making outside of Parliament back to the Sofa
style government, back to the quangos, back to these independent bodies.
And, you know, we were talking about Blair, thinking that he's actually the leader.
This is what he's got in mind.
Take that, I mean, even in that Times article, he said, listen, the government needs outside help,
i.e., outside help from me and all of my friends, all of those people sitting outside parliament.
And they're going to do that more and more.
It's going to be a kind of technocratic managerialism from outside of the official avenue.
It's going to be this informal kind of style where, effectively, I mean, I see Stama making
executive decisions, then informing the Labour Party, then informing the public,
about what he's already decided.
So anyway, carry on.
Life of Brian says the political class was happy with identical parties and a demoralized public.
They are incensed with, they are incensed with, they are incensed.
withhold
Trump Farage's political
entrepreneurialism and
wish going forward to criminalize
politics
that
life of Brian
from Ralph Steiner
now that Sunak has been
dispatched is the
Damoclean sword of a forced military
draft removed
I would say yes
I don't know what Dr. Pavini thinks but I don't think that was ever a
popular idea
amongst young people, really.
And I don't think that it's going to happen,
but I don't want to talk about anything.
I actually think that nothing to do with the military ever happens by accident.
And there was probably a psychological operation
to get people thinking about recruitment again.
Okay, the idea of national service was a joke,
but now everybody's thinking about military recruitment,
the ideas in their head.
I noted, by the way, that the American news cycle had exactly the same story two weeks after Britain.
Biden or somebody floated the idea of national service, and they had the exact same news cycle in America where everybody was like, as if, what a joke.
But now it's out there.
And I've also noticed that the military recruitment ads, there was a NATO one that was doing the rounds earlier today.
featuring young women in serving for NATO, presumably against Russia.
I have noticed that the diversity-laden ads of a few years back have now receded,
and many, many of the people in those ads are recognizably, let's just say,
heritage Europeans, heritage British people, heritage Americans.
And that means that somebody somewhere is thinking,
strongly about military recruitment. What that's for, I don't know, but that's definitely happening.
Yeah, I noticed that too. You're 100% right. Basically, well-fed says labor will be a scourge
on the English folk. And Russell Hall says the left, no, their tenants are fundamentally
at odds with most people's interests. So they work first to and vigil their way into power
and then consolidate.
And Ian says,
will there be amnesty for all illegals under labor?
And labor putting legal and illegals
before the British population?
Well, it's the opposite of what they're saying.
I think these are ideas that are American.
You get them in America.
I don't think they're current in Britain at all.
Bear in mind that in Britain,
as I understand it,
the great majority of immigration is legal, not illegal.
It's the opposite in the United States.
And let's do one more.
We got one more from Life of Brian.
Political patronage of the civil service left gave the illusion of mass participation.
The vacuum on the right hurt the illusion of competition.
Patronage is an immensely complication topic in terms of politics.
All politics, all the politics involves patronage to a very great extent.
It can take many forms.
It can work through tax policy.
It can work in much more direct ways.
And to be a successful politician is to know how to handle and operate patronage effectively.
Dr. Parvini.
I would just say that it's the patronage question.
I know we're talking about the British election,
not the French election,
but it seems to me that in the French case,
it's near naked,
i.e., you've got three,
you've got these three different blocks,
the far left, the neoliberal center,
and the so-called far right with Le Pen.
Each one of those looks to give patronage
to their own voter base.
And it's, I mean, in France,
you can see it,
on the map. You can actually see it on the map. It's Paris, around Paris, and then the rest of the
country. Absolutely. That's exactly. All right. Those are the questions. Thank you,
once again, too. Dr. Parvini, I have his information in the description box down below.
I will add it as a comment as well. Dr. Parvini, what is the best place where people can
find you and connect with you? Yeah, I'm on YouTube here as academic agent.
which I'd encourage you to check out.
I actually have a stream later on tonight.
So if you know where we'll be covering lots of different things.
Another place, I have a website called the Academic Agency
where I offer courses in things like the Tribium,
the classical trivium, rhetoric, logic, and writing.
Other topics, I have a Shakespeare course coming up.
And if you're kind of fed up with the state of education,
you can pick up a course there
and you can get hold of my details on that site as well.
Fantastic.
And those links once again are in the description box down below
and I will add those links as a pin comment,
including the link to Dr. Parvini's YouTube channel.
Definitely check out his YouTube channel
and check out his stream later on this evening.
Dr. Parvini, thank you so much for joining us once again.
Thanks, guys.
Thank you. Take care.
Alexander, let's answer the remaining questions.
Yes.
Let me pull them up.
Great live stream with Dr. Parvini.
O.G.Wall says, good day.
Al J. Wall.
Valies, thank you for that.
Super sticker.
And let me see which other ones.
Sparky says,
Speaking of Niger, whatever happened with American troops
expelled from Niger,
whom I heard went to Cote d'Ivri Coast,
displacing French troops,
is Cote d'Avri, now an American,
neo colony.
This is very much what I've heard
that the Americans went from Lijer to Côte d'Ivoire.
And I think that is indeed where they're going to be.
And I think they are going to displace the French.
I mean, the French are losing control
of their positions in West Africa.
They've been squeezed out on every side.
The Africans don't want them.
The Chinese and the Russians are moving in,
and the Americans are picking up the pieces.
Ralph Steiner says initially,
Raus Steiner says initially Kirstama
supported a Palestinian state
but now he stands behind the Zionist Israel
will this stance damage to Britain's
pristine image of fraud?
I think so.
Are you going to say something?
I think that Kirstama is not very interested
in foreign politics.
I think this is a fundamental difference
from someone like, say, Boris Johnson
who was very interested in foreign policy, indeed.
I don't think Kirstama is not to anything
like the same extent.
BMK asks
Alexander, does Alexander
do a periodic China related podcast?
Well, I do
programs with
Sophie Midkiff, which
are published
in China specifically, and which
often do deal with Chinese topics, yes.
And where can they find?
We'll put a link to that.
This is a very, this is a very
new thing. It's only been going for a couple of weeks and it's an evolving thing. So eventually
we'll be having those as well, no doubt. Yeah. Yeah. Okay, Miriana, thank you for
becoming a member. Feb 18th, 2020. Thank you for joining the Durant community.
Let's see, if we have any more questions here, Alexander.
GSP says,
I spent my children's
quote,
I spent my children's
inheritance is a boomer, bumper
sticker and their epitaph.
Yeah, true enough.
Nick, thank you for that.
Super sticker.
Sparky says, do Brits
realize that immigration
they're concerned with
is driven directly or indirectly
by globalists in or connected to
the US government and its outgrowth. Brits are so quick to defend Israel.
Which Brits do you mean? If you mean the British population, large numbers of British people
are very unhappy about immigration indeed. And they are starting to make those connections,
some of those connections that you mentioned. That explains why Reform UK has done as strongly as it
has in this election. If you're talking about the political
the needs. Of course, they have a completely different agenda.
From Harry C. Smith, either you have to increase wages, benefits, and extend free education
and access to housing so people can have over two children per couple to sustain working
age population, or you need young, skilled immigrants. This is exactly what people say in
Britain, at least it's the policy in Britain. But of course, the point of
is that we do get the immigration and gradually all those things that you've been talking about
are fading away. They're being whittled away. And the justification we be offered is that you
need the immigration to generate the economic growth to provide the taxes which will pay for
those other things, except as I said, that they're actually shrinking.
And from Matthew, Alexander, regardless of who is in power in the UK, is there any end to the Ukraine war in sight?
Yes, I think there is actually.
A Russian general, Abdi al-Dinov, who is actually Chechen, says that he thinks it's going to end this year.
If you follow the war very closely, as I do, you can see that we have got through a,
point now where it's not only clear who is winning, but it's clear that there is no real way
that this trajectory of the Russians winning and the Ukrainians losing can be reversed.
And that in itself is starting to create its own momentum.
It means that within Ukraine, people are losing belief that the war can be won, and they're
not fighting in the way that they do.
All right, Alexander, I think that is everything.
No, wait.
We got one more from Brulaham.
Wonderful conversation with Nima.
If viewers are wondering why he is Yaddi Yadda, some on the convoy.
It is because he could go in depth for hours, which he does on his shows and books.
I hope to see Dr. Parvini on a regular conversation stream with both of you, Jets.
I would love to do that actually
Absolutely I think it would be a great idea
Yeah and maybe we will
We'll do more things with him in future
I just explained by the way on the Chinese thing
That I am a guest of Sofia Midgift
So I think this is an important thing to understand
This is not a
It's another turn
It's not a joint project
It's she has her thing
And hosts me
and I go onto her show,
which is, as I said,
specifically focused towards China.
And we do it there.
But it is an evolving thing.
And we're gradually, I think,
thinking of developing it
and extending it,
making it more available to people in,
well,
in the West as well.
But as I said,
she broadcasts to China
and has me as a regular guest.
that's the best way to understand it.
Yeah.
And from
from
Randolph White Wolf,
how can EU governments motivate citizens
to fight Russia when they won't defend their
own people from mass migration?
True enough.
But they can't. I mean,
all the opinion polls show that people
do not want to fight Russia.
I think this is, I mean,
even a very manipulated
opinion poll that came out a short
time ago showed this.
Alexander, what do you make of the security guarantee with Poland?
I've discussed it at length in my program for my channel.
It's the most ominous and frightening development.
I think it's the first step towards trying to set up some kind of no-fly zone in Western Ukraine.
I think that Zelensky was getting increasingly down.
desperate, is looking for ways and means to draw the West into the conflict.
And he went to Poland.
He got tasked to agree to this.
I don't know to what extent the Americans are involved.
But I suspect with this situation that we have in the United States,
with Biden, obviously, shall we say, with other things to worry about.
I think that this is happening almost by stealth, and it is very, very dangerous indeed.
I mean, it's one of the most alarming things that has happened up to now.
I didn't see Tusk as too confident in this planet.
He seemed to try and want to walk it back.
That's the impression I got.
I'll speak with NATO.
I'll talk to the NATO member states.
I agree.
I think the initiative of PORI came from Zelensky.
And as I said, what he's trying to do is he's trying to draw NATO,
first Poland and then NATO into trying to set up a no-fly zone over Ukraine.
And because the Western leaders are so weak and so disorganized
and so aggressive at the same time,
this is this idea which should have been scotched,
from the outset has been taken much further, far more dangerously than it should have been.
And who knows, there's a risk that Zelensky might get some of what he wants.
Yeah. Tapernax says, why don't nations who have de-dollarized sanction the U.S.?
Because they are opposed to sanctions in principle.
They say that they are against sanctions.
And because they are against sanctions, which they consider to be illegal, they are offering an alternative financial and trading system, which will be open to everybody and which will be sanctioned proof, completely sanctioned proof for anyone who chooses to participate.
Alexander, I think those are all the questions and comments.
Thank you once again to Dr. Parvini for joining us on this live stream.
Any final thoughts, Alexander, while I do a final check?
I have a fascinating program.
And, well, I am actually more skeptical about the Conservative Party's future than Dr. Parvini is.
I personally think that a party that has the support in this election
of 4, 13.8% of the British electorate, which is what they actually got.
13.8 people with the right to vote in Britain voted for them.
I think that's a strong base for a governing party to work with,
or a party that aspires to govern to work with.
There it is.
Okay.
Tabernak says risk is unnecessary when your enemy is in Zug's Wang.
True enough.
Very true.
All right.
Thank you, Tabernak.
Thank you for every.
everyone that joined us on this live stream.
Thank you to our moderators.
Valies,
moderator with text that has to be Lady Blunderland, I think, but I'm not sure.
Valies, thank you for moderating.
Zariel, Reckless Abandon, Alan Watson.
Thank you so much for moderating.
that has to be you, right?
Yeah.
Can't read the handle.
Sparky says,
to allay your fears about Biden's mental acuity,
I want to point out that he's still the most competent member of the administration.
Absolutely.
That goes without saying.
Totally true.
Thank you, Sparky.
We will end it there.
Thank you to everyone that watched us on Rockfinn, Odyssey, Rumble,
YouTube and the Duran.
Dot locals.com.
Take care.
