The Joe Rogan Experience - #2361 - Graham Linehan
Episode Date: August 6, 2025Graham Linehan is the writer, or co-writer, of several situation comedies, including "Father Ted," "Black Books," and "The IT Crowd." He is also a vocal figure in the ongoing public discourse regardin...g gender identity. https://grahamlinehan.substack.comhttps://www.youtube.com/c/grahamlinehan Go to https:/ExpressVPN.com/ROGAN to get 4 months free! Try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE at https://ziprecruiter.com/rogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night
All day
Yeah
Yeah
So you tell me about the scar you got on your forehead recently
Yeah I got into a bar fight with some
Some guys were insulting a woman
Yeah to take care of business
I had to take care a bit of business
No I fell off a scooter
I fell off a scooter
I was riding around Scottsdale
feeling great and free
because I'd never ridden a scooter before
because I always thought they
we call them scooter nonsense in the UK
and because there was no one around to see me
I just thought oh this is great
I could do this all the time
but I just immediately fell flat in my face by
did you hit something or did you fall
I saw what looked like a ramp
but it was a single step down
so I went flying through the air
and I remember when I landed
there was a weird moment when I landed
where I thought, oh, that wasn't so bad.
I didn't screw myself up too badly.
But then there was a second crunch.
And I remember thinking, oh, I'm dead.
What was the second crunch?
I don't know.
Somehow I fell.
Double.
So you double fell.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, I kind of like it because it makes me look how I feel internally.
Busted up and changed?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So would it break your nose?
No, oh, I did break my nose.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, you know, but, you know, it's one of those things.
Again, as I say, I quite like it.
I think it gives me some cards.
It doesn't mess you up.
Yeah.
You're fine.
Yeah.
You know, it's just a thing.
And I might stick with the story about the bar, you know.
I think you already gave up the goods.
The problem with the story like that is I'm always like, is that better to get the fuck beaten out of you?
Like, maybe it's better to fall down.
It's different if you're a fighter.
I would imagine you wouldn't be too happy about it.
Yeah, I'd be very upset that I got my ass kick.
Yeah, yeah.
Although that's happened many times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The broken nose is a problem.
Did you get your septum fixed and make sure that it's not all clogged up?
I didn't.
I didn't.
I know, yeah.
That is one that I tell fighters, whenever they retire, I'm like, please get your nose fixed.
It'll change the quality of your life so much.
Okay.
Because if you can't breathe out of your nose, you're missing out on a large percentage of cardio.
Right.
And not just cardio, like for athletics, but just everyday life.
You're not breathing out of your nose.
You're not getting enough off.
Oxygen. Sure. You're probably oxygen depleted. And then you become one of them mouth open dudes.
You did a, you did a whole interview with a guy who does that, doesn't he? He kind of teaches himself to only break through his nose.
Yeah. Yes. Yeah. He's got a great book called Breathe for anybody who's fascinated by breathing techniques and how much it can help you.
You can do a lot with breathing. It's just a thing that no one does because it's like, oh, I'll look into that and then you put it off. It never happens.
Absolutely. And I've got to be careful because that's how old age gets you. It doesn't
get you in one go you don't suddenly become this bent old man it it picks away at you things like
falling off scooters and and you know what i mean not getting it fixed things like that or what pick away at
you yeah yeah you got to be you got to be ahead of it yeah you got to be vigilant yeah yeah
stay off the heroin too i hear that's bad for you obviously get old you don't see a lot of old
heroin addicts no there's a there's a punk poet in the uk named uh john cooper clark who is a bit of a
genius and he was taking it recreationally for years and he only gave it up because he said
so many people were worried about me I just couldn't I couldn't deal with it they were just
worried about me but he was one of these guys I guess like Burroughs William Burroughs
he was able to just you know implement it in his life but well I worked well I worked out with
a guy who was a longshoreman and he had this guy that he worked with that would shoot heroin
at lunch every day wow and he was fine he worked fine
on the job. He was totally functional.
He would take his hour lunch break.
He would go sit in his truck.
He'd get a bag from some guy
and then he'd sit in his truck and shoot up.
Wow. Yeah, like real heroin.
Like shooting heroin. What was this job?
He was a longshoreman. Oh, right.
So he worked on the docks.
Holy cow. You'd think you'd have to have your wits about you.
Well, some of those longs, they'd give different jobs.
Like my buddy was a fish fileter for a long time.
So what would happen is you would get these huge trucks
filled with fish and they would just filet fish.
all day long. And he was a boxing trainer. And so he would rub like Vaseline on your face before you
spar, you just smelled fish. Because he was just, he just smelled like fish all the time. He couldn't
get it off of them. Yeah. Yeah. It was just a part of his odor. Yeah. Forever. Right, right.
I mean, cut like thousands of fish a day probably. That's like the old dye pits I read in Toronto in
the job that you didn't want was to work in the dye pits. Because guys, what they'd have to do is they'd have to get
into these, like, human-sized pits filled with dye
and wrestled the dye into material.
I'm not sure which material it was.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
And your whole body be covered in dye?
You would look like the blue man group, you know,
except from the neck down, you know?
And you would always smell of it.
And when you took a shower,
I read this in a brilliant book called The Skin of a Lion by Michael Ondace.
So it never comes off?
No, it does.
What they do is they come in a shower,
and then in one piece, the whole paint just falls on the ground.
like a skin but they never got rid of the smell you know and probably the inside of your
bathroom looks like shit forever yeah it's like dripping no that all happens at work that all
happens oh they do in that work this hour yeah this is in the old days you know way
way must that be for you i know yeah your your skin is an organ yeah so you're you're making your
your organ doused in a chemical all day long yeah yeah yeah yeah well these are the jobs we
used to have you know like what's that thing they say hard times make
Hard people.
Yeah.
Hard people make soft times.
And we're certainly in the soft times now.
Yeah, we're in soft times make hard people.
Oh, there we go.
Or probably make hard times rather.
Soft people make hard times.
So this is these folks working in it.
Yeah, but this would be the new version.
I think in the old days in Toronto anyway, they used to get into the pits.
God.
You know?
So, yeah.
Yeah, man.
There's jobs out there that fucking suck.
I was watching this video today where this young lady was complaining about her job
and that it just consumes her entire life
and she doesn't want to do it anymore.
And then, like, people were complaining
in the comments that she's lazy.
I'm like, no, like, she hates her job.
It's entirely reasonable.
It's a little kind of crazy
that everybody wants to declare to the whole world
what their personal issues are about their...
I mean, social media has made it very weird
that all these people just get attention
for something that you essentially used to just talk about with friends.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that's part of the problem, isn't it?
I mean, every time we...
We make these statements.
We make it to a public.
So everything becomes political.
Yes.
You know?
And suddenly everyone's, you know, moaning at you because you say, I hate your job.
It's such a weird.
Such a weird time.
Time.
And this is one of my things.
It's one of the things I'm obsessed about.
By the way, we better tell people who I don't know.
Yeah.
Graham, you have an...
Well, I found out about you from our talent coordinator at the mothership, who's my good
friend, Adam Eaget, who loves you to death.
And he loves your work.
He loves the shows that you've created.
He's a huge, huge fan.
So this was all because of Adam
This all came about because of Adam
And then I heard the story
It was like, oh my God, they did that guy dirty
They did him so dirty
And it was one of the example
Why don't you tell the story of how it went down
So everybody could kind of get it from your words
Which I'm sure would be better than me
Fucking it up
I'm not really good
I've never been good
I spent the last
You know most of my life
I'm 57 now
And I spent most of my life
forming a sort of
sort of what's the word
you know what's that word
self deprecating humorous
personality so I would come out
and I would make fun of myself
I can't do that anymore
because my situation is so bizarre
that anything I say
that's self deprecating
will just get reported as truth
and all sorts of things
you can't make jokes in my situation
you know it's so weird
let's explain your situation
how it started well I was a comedy writer
I started writing journalism in Ireland when I was very young, about 19 years old.
And I was hanging around with some funny people.
We were writing sketches and stuff like that.
So I went over to UK and I got in, I was just very, we sent our sketches to producers.
We just, we worked very hard to get on TV.
That succeeded.
And then I kept having early success.
I had a sitcom called Father Ted, which was about some Irish priests who were so bad that they'd been ban.
to a tiny island in the middle of nowhere.
That was a huge success, probably my biggest success.
Then I went on to a sitcom, IT crowd.
Black Books was a big one over here.
All of them I co-wrote or wrote on my own.
And people have to understand that for people that are fan of English comedy,
like your shows were legendary.
These are amazing shows.
Thank you.
That's really kind of you to say.
Yeah, they're really big.
They're big over there.
You know, I mean, huge.
Some of them travel over here.
Black Books did very well over here.
And IT crowd, I think, is probably the second most known one over here.
I think we're suffering a bit from content fatigue.
Absolutely.
There's almost too much to choose from.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, yeah, there's no real reason to – I mean, you know, the only reason I would say to watch them is, you know, some of them are –
some of them really hit the target, you know?
Yeah, some of them are great.
Watch them because they're great.
But I'm just saying that the problem with anybody finding out about a new show today, they're like, oh, geez, another one I have to pay attention to?
How?
Yeah, yeah. And I think that that's got a burst soon. I think we're, I mean, AI means the whole, who knows what the landscape will be like next year, you know?
It's weird. Yeah, it's really weird. I watched an amazing video that someone put out today of a small film that they made just with prompts. And it was some, um, cyberpunk thing. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Did you see that? I know. It's, it's insane.
It is the next level. It's so good. It's like I'd watch that movie.
And they just made it in a few moments with prompts.
Yeah.
Like, it's over.
Yeah.
Except, I mean, the interesting thing, though, is I think I better get back to my story.
Oh, we'll get to it.
Don't worry.
This is how we do things.
But the interesting thing is that I think, personally, there might be a revolution in those kind of smaller films that just need a few people.
You know, what's a good example?
Steven Soderberg's early movies, Tarantino with Reservoir Dogs.
Right.
You might find people actually return.
to human beings
because I don't know
I mean maybe I'm sure
it will change
but at the moment
there's a real uncanny valley
feeling from all of these AI videos
Well this one has an uncanny valley for sure
See if you can find it Jamie
Cyberpunk
Somebody released it on X
It is I forget which engine
They used
You know there's a battle
With all these engines
You know
See who's got the best
I'm waiting it out
You know
I mean it's just like
Like I just tell me
What tools I can use
To tell stories
and then I'll do them.
Well, people are, this is it.
Go full screen on this.
Give me some volume.
This is so wild.
Like that woman looks incredibly lifelike.
But a little weird right there with the hair.
I play the music.
It's going to get us flagged.
Okay, we don't need to play the music.
The music is not that good anyway.
It doesn't mean anything.
And there's things with the lighting and stuff
that don't really make sense.
But that's not, I'm being stupid.
I'm being picky.
No, no, no, no.
You're not being picky.
It's like we're being accurate.
Like if you were an expert,
and you were assessing whether or not this was real,
I'd say right there, definitely not real.
This is not real.
This is artificially generated.
But that could also be a style, right?
Like if you think about Robert Rodriguez when he did Sin City,
there's a lot of that that didn't look real.
You know, like you could get weird with filming
just to make the experience, you know, more bizarre
because you're in this crazy sci-fi thing.
You could kind of make it look a little fake and it would be dope.
I think also when you think of what AI is going to do to voice lines,
Like, if you look at a game like Grand Theft Auto, now you're going to be able to have generative dialogue from the characters, you know?
It's insane.
Well, you're also going to have porn where you have any woman that you want that you desire in your life.
Like, you could take photos of someone that you know and turn them into someone who's, like, is so attracted to you and just can't wait to have sex with you.
Like, POV porn from your neighbor.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
I know.
And it's like we're there, we're getting there.
We're about to head into that.
I mean, you've read Jonathan Haight's book about, I can't remember which one it was.
Oh, cuddling.
Coddling.
Yeah.
Like 2007 was when depression in teenage girls went.
Yep.
Self-harm, depression, suicidal ideology, actual suicide went up.
All of it went up in this comparison culture.
Yeah, but also the iPhone.
Yes.
It was the iPhone.
That's what the comparison culture comes from.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the real comparison culture comes from.
Paris and culture, because they're comparing themselves to the
cardiacians and people with
massive amounts of plastic surgery and filters.
But now I saw a guy yesterday
who said, we're about to enter a 2007
moment. In other words, the invention of the iPhone, we're about to have another
big change. And we haven't
even spoken about the last one. I mean, that's part
of my thing. Let me
go back into the story. But basically, I was like a
very successful comedy writer, probably
about as successful as a non-on-screen comedy writer can get in the UK.
I won something like six BAFTAs, I think in the end, five or six BAFTAs.
I'm not being stupid.
I just genuinely can't remember.
And one of them, they didn't give me the plaque for.
I must tell you that in something.
But I won them, got a standing ovation at the Comedy Awards.
And then the moment I started talking about women's rights, they took everything, absolutely everything away from me.
So that's your, this is your version of it.
Yes.
That women's rights.
Yes.
And this is a version, this is why it gets real weird, you know, because as soon as you say there are some men that are going to use this, as soon as you say there are some men who we've known forever have been sexual deviants and perverts and psychotic creeps.
Yeah.
And you're giving them an out.
Yeah. Instantaneously, you're letting them wear dresses and now they can't be touched.
That is a crazy thing to do.
Yeah.
And that doesn't deny the existence of trans people or in any way be transphobic.
It's not saying that a person can't choose to be whoever the fuck they essentially feel they are, their true self.
Yeah.
Well, I don't know how you feel.
I'm not, I don't want to restrict you.
But as soon as you start allowing men in dresses to get into women's spaces and you frame it that way, you say this is about women's rights, then it's chaos.
Then there's no rational conversation when it should be totally rational.
Yeah.
With those factors, knowing that some men are creeps, knowing that women are more vulnerable,
and you're going to allow these potential creeps to have carte blanche and just go into the women's spaces.
Yeah.
That is, that you, the screaming at me and the calling me a Nazi makes me think I'm over the target.
Well, you know, I think, I could be wrong here.
This is a theory.
You obviously know more about it than me.
But, like, I think that when they tried to get you for COVID, I actually think that that was sort of left over from you interviewing Megan
Murphy and Abigail Schreier.
I think they really hated that you were giving them a platform.
Because when you think of it, no one else did.
No one else did.
If you look back at Megan Murphy and Abigail Schreier's appearances,
and Abigail Schreier wrote the most important book about the transitioning of young
women, irreversible damage.
And she's had a terrible time as well.
She has had a terrible time.
Yeah.
And unfairly because it's a real issue.
But this is the thing about a real issue.
When real issues come up, when there's a real.
like ideological debate going on like hey what is actually really going on that's when things get the most hostile because when you can't really defend your position logically then you start using pejoratives and turning everyone into Nazis and everyone into fascists and you start really fucking the argument up in a way that like if you're a normal person I'm talking to you well I'm going to choose to not talk to you anymore because you're not rational I don't like talking to mike he goes crazy and
calls me a Nazi, every time we disagree with something that is logically something that you should be debating, whether or not children have the ability to make these decisions at an early age and whether or not there's some kind of social contagion going on.
That's what Abigail brought up and I think that's super accurate.
Yeah. And I mean, like, you know, this, I don't want to go too strong too early, but let me take an example, right? The word trans people.
I see people using it all the time as if it has a, as if it is a stable category.
And it's not.
It's not a stable category at all.
You know, when most people hear the word trans people, they think transsexuals.
But the number, according to I think a 2016 study, the number of men who identify as trans and aren't having any surgery at all is something like 90%.
Right?
So you have a whole group of people out there who are transvestites, okay, to give them the actual word that refers to their condition.
Or used to forever.
Yes, until it became a pejorative.
Well, then it just disappeared.
All the transvestites just disappeared.
I think it's offensive now.
I don't think they like it.
They don't like it because they know that if you use that term, it reveals the truth.
And the truth is that 90% of these men are putting on it.
and expecting to be given every single right that women have.
And it's an absolute lie.
It's a delusion.
It's a mass delusion.
It's a cult.
It's like, and I genuinely don't think it would have existed without the internet.
You know, the internet superpowered it.
And they gave rise to things like, you see it online, the same repeated phrases over it over again.
Yes.
Trans women are you going to keep men out?
That's one thing they say about single-sex basis.
How are you going to keep men?
men out. Well, you know, we were always able to in the past because most men were decent
and weren't trying to get into women's spaces. But suddenly now it's a problem, you know?
Right. And so basically what we've done is we've created this false kind of civil rights
movement. It's not a civil rights movement. It's a male push to undo every single thing that
suffragettes won over 100 years ago, you know? Have you ever heard of the urinary leash? Do you know
this phrase? No. The urinary leash
was what was called
when the suffragettes, before the
suffragettes won the right to vote
and single-sex
bases and so on.
The women of a household
were not able to go too far from their house
because there were no public toilets.
And all the public toilet, there were public toilets
but they were mixed. So men
would be in them and they couldn't go into
the toilets with the men. So you
had a urinary leash, you had a leash, you had a
leash that kept you close to your home.
Jesus Christ.
And that was one of the ways that men were able to exercise such power over women at that time.
Wow.
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And so...
A urinary leash.
That's what they called it, yeah.
And now we have some, we have members of this so-called civil rights group
who are basically just trying to bring back the urinary leash, you know?
So it's not safe for women to go into a space
because they genuinely don't know if they'll share the space with a man.
So, you know, it's, anyway, one of the problems with this fight
is there's so many aspects to it that it's really, I've been fighting it for eight years.
Did you, so were you stunned by the reality?
Let's bring it back to the original thing that you did, your original offense to the cult.
Yes.
Where they came for you.
My original offense was, I think, sharing a piece by a feminist named Heather Brunschild Evans
that said exactly what you said just at the beginning, you know, a few minutes ago where you said,
yeah, people have things going on in their head.
They need to be respected.
They need to be helped.
And then someone wrote back immediately.
I was actually getting surgery for cancer at the time
and someone wrote back and said
I wish the cancer had won, right?
Jesus.
And this was like sharing a very, very mild piece
that just basically said women deserve rights, okay?
So that reaction, I thought, holy cow.
And then, but the strangest thing was all my friends and colleagues.
They just completely ignored what was happening to me.
Not a single person stood up to say
Hey, I know Graham
I know Graham and he's not a bigot
And I'd made lots of these people famous
You know
Not a single person stood up for me
And the next thing that happened
Was that a sex offender
We found this out later
But a sex offender and kind of serial litigant
In the UK
He reported me to the police
sued me on the same weekend
And
And the police
came to my home
or no, they phone me
that time
and since then I've been basically
the police just visit
every so often
on the orders of these
and this guy was a sexually
assaulted a 14 year old boy
you know
and basically the police
in the UK are working for these men
you know
so he can complain anytime he wants
and they just visit you
yeah and there's no repercussions
no not so far
he's been doing it for eight years
and he's had
women in prison cells overnight, you know?
I mean, it's his hobby, you know?
So this guy was the guy who reported me to police,
and then the Guardian reported that as Graham Linehan
is warned by police for harassing a trans woman.
Jesus Christ.
So now everybody is looking at this and they're thinking,
oh, a trans woman, transsexual.
Poor transsexual.
Again, just a bloke who's put on a dress
and has taken a piss, you know.
So that destroyed my name, thanks to the Guardian.
And then after that, I couldn't get anyone to speak to me.
Like, you know, I mean, Father Ted might be big in the UK,
but in Ireland, it's a bit of a national institution.
You know, it allowed the Irish to laugh at the Catholic Church,
which for years had had a sort of oppressive effect over the Irish,
so they weren't able to laugh at it.
And suddenly Father Ted came out and was a...
a great kind of release to be able to laugh
at silly things. We weren't really
attacking the church. We were just making
silly jokes. Very surreal show
you know.
But nonetheless
it kind of
chipped away at
the Catholic Church
and the Catholic Church just kind of lost
a lot of power in Ireland.
So I thought in Ireland it would be
at least
understood and listened out
people would listen to me
Listen me out.
Is that the phrase?
Yeah, hear me out.
Hear me out.
And no, like, there's a show in Ireland called The Late Late Show.
And, like, I brought out my biography a few years ago called Tough Crowd, which I should plug.
And The Late Late Show, which interviews every single person who's got the letter O apostrophe in their name, hasn't interviewed me.
And all of the Irish media has just pretend I've died.
They just pretend I've died.
all because of their guardian artist
not just because of that
because I just wouldn't
I refuse to back down
they were saying
you know I was I was constantly being told
to apologize and I hadn't done anything
I would have people
people online would do fake screenshots
of me apologising for sending
my pictures of my genitalia to
women on a forum
and they spread that
and rather than my friend standing up
for me people would approach them on Twitter
and say why are you following Graham Lennon
he's a bigot. And they would just go, oh, sorry, and just don't follow me. And so I lost
300,000, 400,000 followers in a few months. And then we went into COVID and Twitter banned me
for two years. So then that became Graham. Did you had, was there a specific post or was it
just because your reputation? It was a combination of things. I was causing more trouble for them by
I don't know.
What did I do?
I went on to the website.
This is a funny,
this connects me with Alex Jones.
Do you know this?
No.
Did Adam not send you this?
No, no, no.
Oh, my God.
So one of the things I did was I went on an app called Her Social,
which is a lesbian app.
And I did it to show that men were joining these apps.
And they weren't, you know, some of them would put on a bit of lipstick.
But most of them were just, they would look like you were me.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
And they go onto this app and they say they're,
They put down their pronouns as she-her.
Oh, boy.
And they call themselves lesbians.
And if a lesbian complains about this, they're booted off the site.
Okay?
So I decided I would go on and call myself she-her and go on the site.
So I did it.
And then I had some friends who put me in Photoshop and did me in different outfits.
And one of them I looked like my mother in the 60s.
She's wearing kind of Jackie Kennedy pink beret.
And Alex Jones was interested in the same story
And I think I said the link to you, Jamie
But like, oh yeah, here it is
Alice Jones, Friday, Grimman, a lesbian app
I'm not usually for transvestites and stuff
This one here, this is a
Oh, and you see the symbol they've got here
You know what that symbol is right there?
Yeah, the symbols all mean something
What does that symbol mean?
I don't know
It doesn't mean anything
fucking Alex
yeah so I fooled Alex
but like like
but the thing is that's not outside
of what you could find on there
no absolutely
that's what's crazy
but I was re-counseled because of it
because they only reported about me
they said grain Linnehan went on a lesbian app
pretending to be a
boy so then you're a pervert
yeah yeah
so and I know you're a hypocrite
yeah and none of my arguments
are making it to the
to the mainstream press because
Oh, God, I wish I knew about this earlier.
I wish I'd sent you my book earlier.
The scandal never made it to the States except for Adam telling me.
My scandal?
Yeah, I mean, to like the comedy community in the States, we didn't hear about it.
There was almost there's too many of them.
And then the thing was with J.K. Rowling, that was so big that they went for the queen.
Yeah.
They're trying to take down literally the most successful author of human history.
Yeah.
Hasn't she sold more copies than the Bible at this point?
Exactly.
Is that accurate?
No, I don't know, probably.
I think the Harry Potter books have sold more or are at least similar to the sales of the Bible.
She just wrote it in her lifetime.
Bible's been around for 2,000 years.
2,000 years head start.
Yeah.
And they went for her.
They went for her.
And there's like seven, I mean, when you think about it, it's like seven or eight generations of kids have read these books.
Best-selling series in history.
So Harry Potter series alone is exceeding 600 million.
copies sold worldwide.
Yeah, it's crazy.
And, you know, and the kids who read her books are the ones trying to counsel her.
The kids who read their books aren't taking on board any of the lessons of the books.
It's very strange.
Well, it's hard to be courageous.
It's hard to step outside of the narrative.
And when there's like a very forceful narrative that's being pushed, like, you know,
what Elon likes to call the woke mind virus, like whatever that thing is,
that has like these very clear rules that you must follow.
Like people get real scared.
Yeah.
And they get real aggressive when they get real scared.
They don't want to get canceled themselves.
They become a, they become some sort of an enforcer for these ideologies.
Yeah.
And it gets contagious.
And it turns into some sort of a weird culture war that's akin to a religious war.
They call it a, the other side call it a culture war to try and, to try and, to try and make
only that, right?
You know,
they talk about it
as a culture war
to try and
kind of keep it under
in a framework
they understand.
But it's not a culture war really.
It's like,
it's women's lives.
You know,
you're talking about 51%
of the population.
You know,
they fought for these rights
100 years ago.
And now they're trying
to take them away by stealth.
There's a nurse
in the UK at the moment.
Her name is Sandy Peggy.
And she,
had a doctor, six-foot-two rugby-playing doctor
who had started identifying as a woman, I think, in 2022, right?
Using the women's toilets in an NHS hospital every time.
She was bothered by this, but she tried not to say anything, okay?
Until finally, she had her period, and she went in, and he was there, and he asked her to leave.
She's now going through the whatever week tribunal.
Wait, he asked her to leave?
No, sorry, I put that wrong.
She asked him to leave.
And he refused.
He took it up as a complaint.
And now she's going through a work tribunal.
Not him.
He's not in trouble for going into women's toilets.
She's in trouble.
And that's the whole of the UK at the moment.
How did this happen?
You're an intelligent guy and you've had eight years to think about this.
Yeah.
What do you think happened where people lost all ability to objectively analyze all the various little things that are at work in this?
It's partly a problem with the internet, I think.
I think it's, first of all, the internet spread it.
One of the things that happened was there was a real supercharged moment for trans ideology when Tumblr banned porn.
Because all the trans-identified kids who were all over Tumblr, and porn was a big thing on Tumblr.
I don't remember Tumblr.
Yeah, yeah, it was a big kind of visual site.
I never used it.
Did you ever use Tumblr?
Didn't use it, but I know what he's talking about
It was big for generations
Was it a social media thing?
Yeah, it was big amongst teenage girls, of course
So you've already got a worry there, you know
Oh, now I remember it
Yeah, okay
And they all came over to Twitter
And that's the moment when Twitter became
extremely toxic in terms of talking about this issue
And so there was a kind of a double thing going on
Like I remember when I was talking to people I knew
about the issue
They simply couldn't talk about it
It was the strangest thing.
They get scared.
I know, but even in personal one-on-one, they can't talk about it.
Well, it's religion, but it's showing itself in a new form.
Yes.
It's religion for secular people.
It's a religion.
It's a religion that's terrifying because, like, the consequences of not obeying,
or you get ostracized and you get attacked, and you get de-platformed and debanked and do this and do that and label the bigot.
I had a West End musical ready to go based on Father Ted.
It was like, you know, you can't really ever guarantee a hit in terms of musicals,
but it was the closest thing to a guaranteed hit you could get.
It was my pension.
I'd worked on it for about three or four years.
They canceled it.
We had it up on its feet.
We had songs written.
We'd even performed it in front of audiences a couple of times just to generate excitement
and interest.
It was ready to go.
So how did so many people go along with it where you can't,
How is it that you can make this reasonable argument on this podcast about why you think this is the case and what you think is going on and this is why you stood up against it?
And why can't there be some sort of a logical debate about this?
Like how is this one issue so insanely third rail where you can't even touch it?
Like people don't even try to touch it.
There's a few reasons for that.
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Rogan. ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire. One of the main reasons is that the language of this
movement is so deliberately obscure.
Like they did a poll recently, they found out that when people were talking about trans
women in women's sports, a lot of people, I think the majority of people, I'm not sure
what the percentages were, but the majority of people thought they were talking about trans-identified
females in women's sports.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
And in fact, even now, when you say trans women, some people are thinking trans men, you know,
and I have to tell, I have to sometimes tell people the way to do it is think trans means
opposite. So if it's trans men, it's a woman. If it's a trans woman, it's man. That's all
it means. It just means opposite. And so this language, which is constantly being used,
if you see a press report about a, you know, this happens all the time. You see a press
report that says something like, I saw a great one that said something like, woman takes cocaine
and then kills Alsatian or something like this. And it's only that we know, it's only that
me and the feminists who are fighting this know that it's a man that tell me it's a man. Every
other, every other person reading that newspaper thinks they're talking about a woman.
It happens all the time. It's happened here. It's happened here when a trans person has done
something. They call it a she, but it's a man that did it. Yeah. Yeah. It's very strange.
And it's the press. It's the press are, I mean, really, when you say, why isn't it possible
to be talked about? It's because the press are helping confuse people, you know. The press are
actually aiding, like if you get a pedophile and you report him to be a man, oh, sorry, a woman when he's
actually a man, then it's even harder to step back and go, we shouldn't have done that. Because
you've actually, you've actually already committed a terrible sin against journalism. Right.
You know, you're not telling the truth. You're not being accurate. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just so strange that
this is so potent that it allows people to give up those, give up their journalistic integrity. Yeah.
It's extraordinary.
But some of them don't even have any in the first place.
A lot of, like, one of the things that happened when I was started talking about this is I started noticing, like, there was a magazine in England called Total Film.
And that was calling me a bigot.
And all these different, and my old magazines that I worked for were calling me a bigot.
And then you see photographs with the guys.
And it's always, you know, they've always got black fingernail polish and they think they're a new kind of human, you know.
It's like you're not a new type of human being, if you were.
And the thing about the internet is allowed them doll group.
up.
Yeah.
Whereas before the internet, it's a very small percentage of people that have autogynophilia or
that, you know, fall into those categories.
And we've always kicked those people out of women's rooms.
And this is one of the really important things when you're talking about like trans bigotry.
It's only about men.
It's not about trans men.
No one cares.
Well, here's the thing, right?
Trans men going into the men's room.
First of all, first of all, right, this, that's one of the earliest.
kind of smears against
the feminists fighting this, who are all in the
UK, by the way, left-wing women.
Classic left-wing, environmental
environmentalist.
Say it, they're coops.
A bunch old childish cat ladies
as J.D. Vance calls on a bunch of cooks.
No, these are the good guys.
These are the good guys. And they've been,
and you know, but they've been smeared as right-wing
bigots, you know, even though they spent all their life
fighting things like Section 28. Oh, I see what you're saying.
So the people that were, yeah.
You know, there's different types of feminism, and I
think that's sometimes appreciated in conservative circles.
Well, this is Megan Murphy.
Yeah, absolutely.
Good friend of mine.
Yeah.
She's a legit feminist.
Yeah.
Like, legit.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hey, this is an infringement on women's spaces.
And immediately, everything, same thing as you, called the big, but she's in a different
space because she's on the internet.
Yeah.
Like her, but she got kicked off of Twitter.
Oh, yeah.
She got kicked off of Twitter for saying, she was off longer than me, five years.
Crazy.
You know?
And being kicked off of Twitter allowed people to further.
lie about me online until my reputation was completely destroyed.
So I went in for a meeting with the people who produced the Father Ted musical,
who also produced Father Ted back in the day.
And I walked in and everybody, I saw someone I worked with for years,
a runner who had grown up with me as I'd worked with them on different productions.
Just looking at me like Elliot Gould.
Who's, Elliot Gould?
No, what was the guy's name?
at the end of Invasion the Body Snatchez.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And I thought, what the hell was that look?
And then I went into the office,
and they offered me 200,000 pounds
to walk away from the musical.
Wow.
And they thought I would take it
because I was so desperate
because I had lost every bit of work I had.
And I thought about it.
And at one point I said,
well, as long as I can come in
and watch the occasional rehearsal
just to see if it's going well, you know.
And they said, no, we want to clean.
break. Wow. And I had brought them the idea. I had more or less written the whole thing.
And they just thought they could do that to me. So I thought, no, I'm not taking part in
any further efforts to black in my own name. So I said, no, I'm not doing it. And they won't
make the musical now. So I know the internet was a part of this. But how did it get so
kooky. How did it get
so kooky where people are
willing to put women in these
vulnerable positions because they don't
want to offend this entirely
tiny, very
very vocal part
of the world? Because, as you say,
because these, this tiny, very vocal,
very, and you know, there's a
I want to make this clear, there are a lot of
trans-identified people who are completely
sane. Of course. Who know what sex
they are. Of course. Who are not trying to
impose themselves in places where they're
not wanted or where they would disturb or frighten women.
They're great, and I'm friends with a lot of them.
And they've existed forever.
Well, you know, when they say...
But there's always been people like that in the world.
Sure.
But, you know, when you come to the current iteration of the word trans people, what does it
mean then?
Like, you know, when you're talking about just transvesticism.
Right, right, right, right.
That's where it gets squirley.
Existed forever.
Did they wear each other's furs, you know, in the caves?
It's like, it's just clothes.
Right.
But there's been historical tales forever.
There was actually a famous one about from the Old West, about this guy that was married to this woman.
And then when the woman died, he was out of town.
And the doctor found out that this woman that he was married to was actually a man.
Oh, sure.
And then, so then he committed suicide.
Oh, right.
Because he couldn't let everybody know that he was banging a dude this whole time.
Yeah.
But my point is, there's always been people that identified as a woman, but there also has always been perverts.
And so to deny the existence of one, while pushing the.
the other. It's like, yes, yes, yes. I agree. There have been people that feel like they're in
the wrong body and the wrong gender. That's always existed. It's a reality of human civilization.
Also, what's that? That's a guy in a dress with a heart on.
Like, there's auto-gynafilia is a real thing. Men get turned on by dressing up like women.
Also, there's certain perverts that don't want to wear a dress, but they know if they do wear a
dress, now they can get into the women's room. They're going to do that too.
Of course they are. If you put the line here, men will come up to that line.
Exactly.
If you put it up here, men will come up to that moment.
You can't.
You can't do it under the guise of compassion because, again, it's only about men.
When you talk about trans men, no one is complaining.
Let me tell you a little something.
In any way.
Let me tell you a little something about that, right?
As you point out, they never talk about trans men.
And in fact, when you think about it, who are the famous trans men?
Very, very few of them.
Elliot Page.
Elliot Page.
A few other.
That's the most famous one.
Right? Because she was a famous actress and then she became Elliot Page.
Yeah. Well, like, actually, let me tell you something about Elliot Page's voice. That'll be of interest.
But what was my point going to be? Oh, yeah. Trans men added a whole trans deal, get the worst deal out of it.
Trans women, all a man has to do is wear a dress. And he is suddenly a trans woman, right?
But trans-identified women, they get double mastectomies,
hysterectomies in their 20s and 30s, you know.
They go, every single young woman on testosterone will go into early menopause.
Early menopause brings with a risk of dementia, incontinence,
itching and all sorts of fucking problems you don't want to put up with when you're...
These young women think they're going to be young men
and they're actually turning into old women.
And no one has told them this, Joe.
Early menopause.
I know it makes a lot of them infertile for life.
Oh, yeah.
You know, it's one of the things that happens is when you take testosterone,
your ovaries confuse to, I'm not sure,
some other part of your internal organs,
and that means it becomes infected,
and that's why you see so many trans men having to have hysterectomies, you know?
If a woman has her breasts removed
and then goes on to have a child later on in life,
if they're lucky enough not to have been sterilized by the drugs,
if they have a child later on in life,
when the child cries,
the tissue in their breasts will ache
because there's always tissue left behind
after those operations.
And it will ache because it wants to feed the baby.
But they can't.
You know?
No one tells these kids that.
You know, the younger men who are,
I've met a detransitioner.
His name's Richard Chulip.
He told me that there are...
Oh, actually, no, let me stick to trans men for a moment,
you know.
The only time that trans men get famous in the same way that trans women do is if they get pregnant, right?
And then it's like they're on the cover of Time magazine or something.
Yeah.
Because, oh my God, a bearded pregnant lady, you know?
Right, right.
And it's just, we've always known it.
We've seen fairgrounds with bearded ladies.
It's just testosterone.
It's just an excess of testosterone.
There's nothing magical or great about it.
In fact, it's very dangerous for women on testosterone to get pregnant because they could pass on.
I mean, this is how horrible it is.
There was a study in the UK published by a gender sociologist, I think she is, who works for Sheffield University.
And the study said, this is, what's her name, Sally Hines, and the study said that even if there's a risk of deformity to a baby,
a trans-identified woman should continue taking testosterone
because there was too much of an emphasis
on babies born with normative bodies.
Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
So preventative medication is a denial.
Yeah, yeah. It's just insane.
Preventative medication would be a denial
because you're denying the existence of people with disabilities
is if they're not real,
if they're not equal.
It's something like that.
That is so crazy.
Basically, they can,
you know,
that's another thing with this debate.
And there's other,
there's,
well,
anyway, sorry,
I want to stick to trans men.
But this is that language
is so Orwellian.
Yeah.
But if you look up,
how great,
but what a crazy way
to justify
potentially harming a child.
Yeah.
So we're putting too much emphasis
on children that aren't harmed.
Her self identity is more important.
That is so nuts.
Yeah.
And I've been trying to tell people that this has been going on for years.
That's the second most shocking story I know in this fight.
Will I just tell you this first one?
Sure.
Okay.
You know WPath?
WPath. What is that?
WPath is meant to be the world leader for trans health care.
It is where the whole world gets their orders for how to treat trans people.
Okay.
It is, this is going to blow you away.
Jill. So there's a woman named Mia Hughes, and she published a piece called, she published a study called the W-Path files. It hasn't been reported on anywhere. No one is talking about it. It's not a, it's, it came and went without causing barely a ripple. She found out that W-Path, which briefly tried to make Unuk a gender identity, right? She found out that they were linking to a website called the Unuk Archives.
The Unic Archives is mainly a repository of about, I don't know, I have it written down,
but it's something like 8,000 short stories, something like that.
And they're just pornography about people cutting their dicks off.
W-Path linked to this site.
Not only that, but something like 40% of the stories are tagged minor.
Okay?
So these are the people who are cutting off young men's dicks
and they are sharing erotic pornography
about cutting off young men's dicks.
And Jamie has all the links.
This may sound that I'm pulling it out of my ass
because it's so hard to believe.
That's another problem we have.
Some of these stories are so hard to believe.
And it's so hard to inform people
because you're only going to hear about something like this
on a podcast.
Yeah, exactly.
The press won't report on it.
And when you think about it and BBC,
The BBC deliberately ignores this.
The BBC is outrageous on this issue.
But what they did with Jimmy Sable?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
But this is like...
Forever.
But this is almost worse than Jimmy Savill
because there's more kids being hurt.
You know?
And the UK is addicted to ignoring scandals
and to hurting, you know,
to allowing children to be hurt.
You know, what's his name?
Kier Starrmer,
the UK Prime Minister.
When he came in,
he said he would end the culture wars.
He hasn't ended the culture.
Whereas he hides from them, while ordinary people still have to fight in court.
People like me and various women who are fighting this nonsense.
He's an absolute coward on this issue.
But the thing about the W-Path files is W-Path, this place that's sharing pedophilic castration pornography,
is the world leader on trans health care.
They're the ones that are bowed to on everything in this year.
And they're the reason why doctors all over the world are,
giving these protocols to kids
because there's a thing called
the chain of trust that Mia Hughes writes about
which is an ear-nose and throat specialist
has to believe that other doctors know what they're doing
and they have to believe that the head
of any particular discipline
knows what they're saying
and what's happening with W-Path
is they're issuing all this stuff
and it's all just crazy nonsense
one thing in the W-Path
files they found out was
There was one letter from, I think, one of the doctors associated with W Path.
And she said, I've only ever refused a transition diagnosis once.
And that's when the patient was having a, that's because the patient had a psychotic episode in my office.
That's the only reason she didn't say, yeah, you're a man, because she was having a psychotic episode.
They tried to transition a homeless guy.
So when you think about it, he has the surgery and the next day's back in the streets with the wound.
that needs to be clean
they tried to transition a homeless guy
that's the W-path files
is it their goal to just transition
anybody? It is
it's purely a kind of ideological
insanity like one of the
one of the people who
is involved in this I can't
her name always jumps out of my head
I can't remember her name
but she suggested that a baby
who fiddles with the buttons on their baby grow
is trans
because they're indicating
they don't like this baby crow
They want to wear a male or whatever, you know.
Oh, my God.
That woman was involved in the satanic panic scandal.
So she's moved from one insane, you know, mass delusion to another.
What was the satanic panic scandal?
Oh, do you don't know this?
This was like 80s, I think, in the middle of, kind of Midwest in America.
There was a lot of places that suddenly started believing in cults that were worshipping the devil
and having sex with children.
And the thing about it was before the internet.
So it didn't actually spread that far.
You know, there were a few towns where it broke out.
Do you remember that three kids who were in jail for years for something they didn't do
and they nearly tried to kill them and it was found out.
And they were just goths, you know, stuff like that.
And it didn't break out of Middle America because the internet wasn't there.
But I have to think now, if you had, if the satanic scandal broke out again,
you would certainly know about it because it would be all over the world.
And this person was involved in this?
Yeah, yeah.
Same, some part, it was something to do, she was something to do in a military base.
I wish I could remember her name.
She, she, as I say, she did this thing about babies popping their mini, they're popping the buttons on their thing, you know, which is.
So this is a crazy person.
Yeah, this is a crazy person.
So a crazy person who is a part of the satanic panic is now telling you that a baby fiddling with its buttons is probably trans.
Yeah.
And people are listening.
And people are listening.
Wow.
And you have a, I mean, one of the things when you said, why is this happened?
Like, another thing that's happened is you've got to understand there's millions of things going on at the same time.
Right.
A lot of very bad men have been empowered, okay?
A lot of very bad men know they can walk into a female only space and at least they may even get a fucking payout if someone complains.
Right.
Right.
But then there's a lot of, you know, really lovely kids who are.
grown up and have been told, like boys who've been told that boys are evil, and they feel
guilty because they think of women in a sexual way.
And, you know, there's stories of boys being castrated because of that, you know.
They do not want to associate themselves with what they see as male toxicity, you know.
So, anyway, oh, yeah.
And then there's other things.
There's like, you know, people like that, grifter, who said that about the baby grown.
There's all sorts. It's like a gold rush. If you create a completely senseless system that has no rules, that anyone can be a woman if they put on a dress and it's just complete free for all. It's going to be a gold rush, you know?
Not just that. If you're a part of that clan, you get to be very aggressive about defending these ideas to the point where you're allowed to hold up pistols and say we shoot turfs. I saw some of that stuff.
going on the UK where it's really apparently
very hard to get a gun. Yeah. But
shoot turfs. Yeah. Oh, that's big.
I'll tell you what a really funny thing as well.
You see British people holding
up posters saying arm trans
people. And it's because they're
completely Americanized, you know?
This term for people who don't know what it means,
it's trans exclusionary, radical
feminism. So you're talking about
shooting a woman. So there is a man
who identifies as a woman holding
a pistol who's about to
shoot the real woman, and this is
openly promoted.
Yeah.
There's nothing else like that in the world.
Imagine if that was instead of turfs,
which is just really a woman saying a man with a penis
shouldn't be allowed to be in the woman's room.
That will turn you into a turf.
And this is a person with a pistol saying shoot turfs.
Yeah, yeah.
And that's okay.
And also, trans exclusionary is such a lie
because these women, they accept every woman,
no matter how they identify.
So if a trans man comes in and says, I need help,
if something has happened to me or whatever,
these groups won't turn them away.
They're not trans exclusionary.
They're male exclusionary.
A trans man using the women's room.
Yeah, that's fine.
But that's a weird thing.
Like, if a trans man was using the woman's room,
what would the women, you know, if we do, that gets weird, right?
People know, Joe.
These are small, tiny women with unconvincing facial hair.
What about a big giant one?
One big Viking lady who gets on the Jewish.
I don't know.
I could see how it could be an issue if it's, there's people that turn into trans men that are very passable as men.
Sure.
Much more so, I think, much more likely than people that are women or male that turn into women.
Oh, definitely.
The effect of facial hair is such a mesmerizing effect.
It's definitely going to change your opinion.
Especially because there's kind of feminine men.
Yeah.
And they'll fall into that category.
But here's the thing.
They also have a bunch of things in common.
They're all lowered in the average height of men.
Right.
And also, their voices are croaky.
Have you ever noticed Elliot Page's voice?
No.
It's very croaky now.
It's like this.
It's a little bit like Kennedy's going to go in there.
Not that bad.
Well, you hear about it for female bodybuilders.
Little croakiness, right?
Female bodybuilders are the original trans men.
Oh, okay.
Because they were injecting testosterone?
Listen, female bodybuilders, we knew a long time ago that you could turn a woman into a man.
Yeah, well, like, at least visually.
Yeah, sure.
So, like, go, give me some female Miss Olympias.
I'm going to show you something that's literally not possible.
Okay.
This is not pot.
Physiologically, it's not possible for a woman to get this muscular.
Because it's not a woman.
It's a science project.
Right.
So it's a biological science project.
And so this is like, give me some crazy ones.
You know, in East Germany, the women who were on steroids and so on.
Yes.
They weren't told.
A non-testosterone.
Oh, I'm sure.
The government...
Show me one from, like, the 90s.
Okay, how about that young lady in the lower right-hand corner?
Look at that.
Look at those muscles.
Bro.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Bro, that is so crazy.
But it does look, like, I got to say, does look feminine in, like, the hips.
No, sure.
But it looks almost like a superhero.
That's another thing.
Hips don't lie, you know.
But there's another, there's another thing that happens.
How about that one, Jamie?
Scroll back.
scroll up a little yeah that one right there right above that one the one where her hands are on her hips in the middle the blue one yeah look at that one yeah bro yeah look at those arms but that's just you know that's just that you know someone who's doing that for competition that's you know and not pretending to be a man right but but my point is like if that person did identify as a man and decided to start using the women's room because you know of their biological sex that would freak some women out yeah
And to be honest, Richard, that's a kind of a gotcha that's often pulled out.
But in the end, the vast majority of the time you know, and it's...
There's not a lot of those.
Yeah, exactly.
Also, it takes not just steroids to get that big.
Yeah.
It takes years being in the gym and steroids for a woman to get that big.
But let me tell you what I was going to tell you about testosterone.
The croakiness.
Yeah, the croakiness.
Do you know why that is?
Why?
Because they have slender women's necks, but their vocal cords have expanded because it's testosterone.
Oh.
And so a lot of trans-identified women have these croaky voices, you know.
I thought it was just the deepening of the voice because of it's both of those, right?
It's probably both, but like the deepening of voice comes because of things like this.
I don't know what Elliot Page sounds like now.
There was something else I was going to tell you about this that was really interesting about the, oh man, what was it?
Trans men.
It's like eight years of stuff just crowding up in my head.
It'll come back to me
It'll come back to me
But yeah
These girls
Oh I know what it is
Okay
Here's another
Here's another fun fact
Right
Okay
Grindr the gay men's
Dating hookup app
Okay
Trans men are going on to that app
Expecting to be accepted
By gay men
Okay
And they're not
And again
If the gay men complain
They get thrown off
Oh no
Yeah
Gays get a hold of your stuff
Get a hold of your stuff
Don't let them do that to you.
But here's what's happening on Grindr.
Well, here it is.
Here's what's happening on Grindr.
Straight men are joining Grindr to predate on those women.
On the trans men women.
Yeah, because some of the women, some of the women haven't yet,
the testosterone hasn't taken over.
Oh, so they catch them while they're vulnerable.
They catch them while they're vulnerable.
They say, hey, I'm a gay, yeah.
Hey, I'm a gay man.
Oh, my God.
That's so.
And so they're predating on these, sneaky.
On these vulnerable, you know, confused young women who've been talking.
that they are literally now gay men.
They're straight women.
Like, how, what percentage?
I mean, how many numbers are we talking about where this is a strategy for getting laid?
I have seen a forum discussion between two guys who were just kind of sniggering about it amongst themselves.
Oh, my God.
It's really, it's really, I mean, you know, these kids, one of the things that gets me about this is that these kids are the kids that I was.
You know, they're a strange, they're not well-adjusted, spent a lot of time reading me.
Maybe sensitive.
A lot of girls who are caught up in this
are the most emphatic, imaginative girls, you know.
And it appeals to them for some reason, you know.
It appeals to them, maybe because it feels so.
They see men as just gliding through life
in a way that they can't.
And also they see pornography from when they're kids
and the women in pornography are treated appallingly.
And so they are saying, no, I don't want any of that.
And they think they can just, but what they're really doing is they're stepping into a world where they have a four times higher chance of having a heart attack if they're taking testosterone than any normal women.
They're going to die younger, you know.
They're going to lose their ability to have children.
And no one is talking about it.
And happening in clusters.
Like that's the most disturbing thing that Abigail brought up.
A lot of these girls are diagnosed as autistic.
Yeah.
And they wind up.
And they wind up doing.
these group clusters of six or seven girls, which statistically speaking is highly, highly
unlikely to be natural.
And it leans towards the idea of a social contagion and no one wants to believe it.
She also talks about how when you do take testosterone, when you're young, it elevates
your sense of confidence, it alleviates anxiety.
It does a bunch of things for you psychologically.
It creates more female school shooters.
Have you noticed this?
It does.
This has been happening recently.
It's a new thing.
Yeah.
And it's like, what I can never understand is why there don't exist people in the world.
I mean, there are.
They are there.
There's a lot of them there.
But no one on a high level, not very few politicians.
Trump, in fact, is probably the only one who will say, hang on a sec.
This is insane nonsense.
We've got to protect these kids.
Yeah.
Let's cut it out.
Instead, there's this constant like, oh, yeah, but you know, we have, like a funny thing
happened when the Supreme Court recently
I mean this took four women Scotland
a group in Scotland years to get
to get through the court but finally the Supreme
Court said no sex means biological
sex you know it doesn't
you know in law yeah
in law sex means biological sex
and all these places
have come back saying it's the most you know
we don't know how we're going to implement this
it's all very confusing and they're really
dragging their heels with it you know it's like
you were able to do it for a hundred years
how difficult is it to write ladies and jens
and put it up in a sign, you know, and enforce it.
Put it up on a door and enforce it.
You know, they are absolutely hypnotized by this.
And they're fully convinced that it is just like gay rights
and that they have to be careful because,
I mean, one of the things that's happened, for instance,
with the police in the UK is that a few years ago,
there was a young kid murdered by some racists,
black kid murdered by some racists.
And I think it was called the McPherson report came out
that described the police as institutionally racist.
and they probably were in that way
that all cops were racist at one point
or at least very much not right on
but anyway it was a big scandal
it had this convulsive effect on the police
and then the police just flipped
and they started putting on pride colours
on their faces and marching with pride
and I genuinely think that
there are police who are complicit
in fact I sent a video
maybe Jamie can pull up but I
sent a video of the police actually walking away from a group of cettled women.
Trans activists had cettled them in this small space.
Their back was up against a railing and there was a huge crowd of Antifa-type guys screaming at these women.
And about four or five police keeping the Antifa guys from the women.
And I arrived and I saw them walking away.
I saw about six, seven policemen walking away from it, you know.
I was like, what the hell's going on?
So I think British police are using trans activists to scare women out of fighting for their rights
because they know that if women gather to meet trans activists will definitely be there to hurt them or harass them.
You really think that?
You don't think that it's just they're scared of the trans activists?
No, because they've been advised for years by Stonewall, which was the big gay rights organization in the UK,
that these women are bigots
and that these women are actually far right
and the police believe this stuff
because they've had it as training for years.
So their training is that these women
that are fighting for women's rights,
these women are bigots,
and you should let the Antifa people have Adam?
Oh, they wouldn't say that officially,
but I believe that's what's happening.
I believe they're basically using Antifa
to control these women.
You know, the flip side of this is ugly.
When people rise up against something like this,
he gets real ugly and real violent.
And that's what scares me the most.
Oh, one of the things we're trying to head off
is the backlash against transsexuals and gay people
who had nothing to do with this, you know?
Gay people in particular, there's a lot of my friends that are gay
that do not like any of this movement.
Yeah.
They do not like any of it.
It's a homophobic movement.
Have you ever heard of anything?
It's more homophobic than a lesbian with a penis.
It's homophobia.
That's all it is.
And for some reason, people have just been held
in this kind of
you know, tractor beam where they're just kind of like going along with it and they're not questioning it.
I guess they're worried that what happened to people like me will happen to them, but there's increasingly less of an excuse now.
I mean, John Oliver and John Stewart both said on their programs that puberty blockers were reversible.
That was a dangerous lie.
Well, I don't understand John Stewart saying that.
I have to assume that John Stewart was misinformed.
Everyone's misinformed because...
But I have to assume that John didn't look into this because he's super reasonable and very intelligent.
Absolutely.
And that's why it's so crushing when someone like that says something like this.
It is simply not true that people blockers are reversed.
It has a direct impact on the development of the child's penis to the point where they might not ever.
And brain.
And brain.
And causes strokes.
Yeah.
It is literally chemical castration that they used to give to sex predators.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
It's even a form of the drug.
A few years ago, they wanted to put Alan Turing on a banknote in the UK, and now they're
telling gay, they're putting gay kids on the same drugs that chemically castrated him.
Yes, and led him to commit suicide, right?
Yeah, exactly.
The guy who invented the test to figure out whether or not artificial intelligence had reached sentience.
Oh, I didn't.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
I always forget about that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think of it more as the Enigma guy, you know.
I mean, but imagine that.
Like, what a crazy contribution and a footnote in history that we're currently,
wrestling with. Like we're grappling
right now with the idea that these things are already
sent in. The thing is we're grappling with
things that we shouldn't be grappling with
when we're actually on the cusp of
what seems to me with
AI to be a huge moment in human
evolution, right? We're about
to move into like
it's, I always think of it like the
thing in Alien that's the
Gorney Weaver
right with the like the
JCB digger up against the giant
exactly. I think that's what AI is for you.
humanity. We're going to be able to step into these things and be much more powerful than we
used to be. Or completely irrelevant and we fade off. Sure. We're not breeding anymore
anyway. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know what I mean? You think about the amount of people that are
having children now, especially in developed parts of the world, it drops off. It always drops off.
But like Japan is at the risk of population collapse. South Korea is at the risk of population
collapse. Then you factor in microplastics, which significantly affect child's reproductive
systems when they're in the uterus. Also, like, lower sperm counts. You look at, like,
the invention of plastics and the start of the use of plastics. And then the correlation,
the giant dip in sperm counts. Wow. We talked about it yesterday in the podcast. There's a woman,
Dr. Shanna Swan, from Harvard, who wrote a book on this. Yeah. About phthalates. And every person
carries literally a fucking spoon, like a picnic spoon, like a picnic spoon, like plastic picnic
spoon, of microplastics in their brain.
Yeah.
So, and this stuff is neutering humans.
It's also causing, I mean, whether it's causing it or where there's a correlation.
So there's a correlation in a larger number of miscarriages for women.
And they think a lot of this has to do with environmental toxins.
Okay.
And a lot of it has to do with microplastics.
So all this is moving us into this genderless direction.
We're going to stop breeding anyway at the same time where artificial intelligence becomes the new alpha life form on Earth.
Yeah, but again...
We just stop breed off.
We just stop breeding.
But one of the things, I mean, we, we, I just feel like there's all these, there are all these tests ahead of humanity, right, from the things you've just been talking about and all sorts of other things, geopolitical and so on.
Why are we wasting time concentrating on this imaginary thing?
It's not a real problem.
It is a mass delusion spread by the internet.
Well, it's a real problem in that men are always a real problem.
Sure.
But my point is...
Most robberies, most murders, most car accidents, most high-speed car chases, most assault
on police officers, most everything.
Absolutely.
And we have to deal with the reality of life if we're going to take this major evolutionary step as human beings with AI.
Because if we continue ignoring the insanity that the Internet has brought about with this movement,
we're just going to waltz right into the next one, you know?
If we don't take time to say, okay, what just happened?
Right.
Why did it happen?
How can we make sure it doesn't happen again?
Because it seems to me now that with the trans thing, the human race with the Internet is hugely vulnerable to these kinds of,
what you might call them, sense-destroying viruses, whatever you might.
I called them. I don't know. There should be a word for what the trans movement is. But I think
we're so vulnerable to it that we have to start developing antibodies, you know? I agree with you
because I do think that something else could come from a different direction, right? So here's
what we saw in our lifetime, this same kind of thinking, the same kind of bizarre, violent
group thinking. We saw it from COVID. We saw people that turned on their neighbors that were
skeptical about the vaccine or people that didn't want to take it.
They were called murderers and plague rats and this craziness where people were ostracized
from social circles because they weren't vaccinated.
And even though in hindsight, they were directionally correct, right?
No one, there's been no course correction, but there was this othering of people for a very
simple thing.
Yeah.
Like you decide, like if that fucking thing works and you take it,
Why are you mad at me if I don't take it if it works?
That means you're not going to get COVID, no matter what fucking happens to me, right?
Yeah.
So it was weird and illogical, just like the trans thing, but violent.
And people were terrified because your life was in danger.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So you saw the most vile reactions from older populations who were calling for people to be quarantined, round up in camps, take away their livelihood, take away their children.
You were hearing it from these old, terrified people.
with fragile health.
And they all got really violent about it online.
They were really, really extreme in their positions on this.
Yeah, yeah.
I didn't notice that stuff so much.
Oh, in America, it was nuts.
Yeah.
In America, it was wild.
And, you know, and it was pushed by these multimedia corporations, these huge news corporations.
It was pushed by them.
It was all nonsense and propaganda, including Rolling Stone and CNN.
Rolling Stone had a whole article.
that was 100% bullshit about people who were waiting in line at the emergency room for gunshot wounds
because there were so many people that were getting treated for horse dewormer
because they took too much ivermectin.
Wow.
Total fabrication with a stock photograph of people waiting in line in August in Oklahoma.
This is supposed to be taking place.
A stock photograph of people wearing winter coats outside in line because they're waiting for the fucking flu shot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so it's a lie.
It's a lie.
And so there's this willingness to lie with no retractions on all the major television networks.
Everybody was like pushing this one narrative.
And everyone at home was locked down.
You couldn't go to work.
You couldn't go to school.
And everyone was terrified because this had never happened before.
Yeah, yeah.
And we got to see how quickly people who are cowards just attack the others to try to keep themselves safe.
It got very rat-like.
I think it's, I think it's, we live in a village.
now, really, when you think about it.
And I often describe myself as a victim
of village gossip on a global scale.
You know? That's it. That's it.
Yeah. But it's written down, so it seems
a lot more real. Yeah, that's the thing. I mean,
when the Bible,
when the printing press
appeared, there was 100 years of chaos
as all these sects and
everyone who had a crazy idea about the Bible
that they'd had themselves, oh, on the
seventh page, it says this, on line 7.
And that would become a religion, right?
And then for 100 years, he's
religions were fighting it out. There was pogroms and massacres and and Protestantism was formed
because of it. We're having a similar moment, right? With the internet. Yes. Because suddenly
every idiot with an opinion is putting it out there. Some of them are great opinions. Some
them are terrible opinions, but there's no difference. And one thing I've noticed with the left
is that with bad opinions, all they do is they repeat certain lines over and over again, you know?
And you hear these things come up over and over. That's why I react.
slightly earlier because trans women have always
been with us. It's one that
you hear a lot, you know? Right. But you also
hear, you know,
just things designed to shut down the conversation,
you know, and you see them over
and over again. They're repeated over and over again.
Whatever you think of the Gaza
situation at the moment, I notice that
it's the same thing. Genocide
over and over and over again.
In every tweet they mention the word genocide,
you know? And I don't
happen to think it is, but like
by the end of it, if you were to stand
up against that and say something against that. It's a difficult thing because you suddenly look
like you're against genocide. You're for pro-genocide. What is the measure of genocide? Like,
when does it become genocide? Like when you're starving people, when you're bombing indiscriminately,
when you've destroyed most of the buildings, when you've killed, who knows how many tens of thousands
of women and children. Wow. Do we want to get into this? Yeah. I mean, we got into it a little bit. I just think
that, you know, Hamas is, I agree with Coleman Hughes, I think it was on your show, where he says
that, you know, Hamas, they've built like a huge network of tunnels underneath people's houses,
they put their headquarters in civilian buildings. It's a form of guerrilla warfare that I don't
think should be allowed to continue. And I support Israel in defeating Hamas. Is there another
way to do it other than to blow up everybody? Is there a way to do it without starving the innocent
people. I'm, you know, again, I just don't know how much of this is Hamas, you know,
comes from Hamas. I don't know how much of it is true. I would suggest that all these
conversations wait until we finally find out exactly what's happened, you know? At the moment,
it's fog of war stuff, you know? But I don't want to get into a big debate. Do you know,
have you ever heard of Eric Prince's idea? Do you know Eric Prince? Do you know he is? Was he the
Blackwater guy? Yes. Yeah. He had an idea that apparently he floated by, but they rejected,
He said, instead of destroying everything like that, you could just flood the tunnel system with the seawater.
Oh, well, yeah, great.
And that was his idea.
He's like, you could flush them all right out.
Like, they're very vulnerable.
Yeah, yeah.
And I don't know whether or not, I'm just, I heard him speak of this.
I believe it was on the Sean Ryan show.
I might be incorrect.
He spoke about it on some show.
I don't know if it would work.
I don't know why they would reject it.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
But as I say, I don't really want to go into it because it's such a, it's, it's,
Again, it's a very, very heated debate, and I've only got room for one.
I understand what you're saying.
I understand what you're saying.
When you're dealing with all this, you lost your entire income.
You lost everything.
You lost your standing in the television world.
Yeah.
You lost a lot of your friends.
Oh, my friends.
No one's stuck with you?
Two people, Jonathan Ross and Richard Iowetti.
everyone else all the people
I'd you know given jobs to
made famous well shout out to those two
soldiers oh they're great rich it's great
it's hard it's hard to
when someone close to you
gets cancelled and you're worried about catching
strays yeah yeah actually I should
say there are a few people that
have stood by me Lisa Evans
wonderful woman who produced Father Ted
and a few other people she's a big
feminist so I shouldn't
be too but but in terms
of my actual old life
everyone just dumped me, you know?
Crazy.
Yeah.
That's the beautiful thing about the comedy community.
Like, we expect cancellations.
Yeah.
You canceal like nobody.
You guys are so interesting.
I compare you guys to the birds that feed in between the teeth of crocodiles, you know?
You guys dance so close to being canceled, but you don't, you don't, it doesn't seem to touch you.
And it's always great to see.
I don't know if you said.
Did you see the Trigonometry interview with Kill Tony, Tony Hinchcliff?
I did not
You gotta watch that
Tony's my boy though
He's my best friend
So presumably he told you about
That Chinese incident
Oh I was there
I was there for the whole thing
I was there for the whole thing
Mind blowing
I was there for the whole thing
What saved Tony was that
He had a recording of the entire set
Including the other guy's set
Yes that's right
And that's what saved him
Yeah yeah yeah
And then it became
I mean but Tony was going through it
Man it was hard
It was hard to watch a friend
Go through it like that
Yeah
But you know
He took like a week off
Maybe two weeks off
And then I brought him on the road with me in Utah.
We did Salt Lake City, which is an awesome place.
Wise guys in Salt Lake City, shout out.
It's one of the best clubs in the world.
So we did this club, and the audience had no idea who was opening for me.
It's just me, right?
And when they announced Tony Hinchcliff's name, everybody went crazy.
Oh, yeah?
It was awesome.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was awesome.
People stood up, they clapped, they cheered, and he went up and murdered.
He had so much material.
on that cancellation it was so good
it was like an amazing moment for him
because like his comedy actually jumped up a notch
he actually got funnier because of it
he like tightened his bits up
and got more aggressive with it
he was like he got really dialed in he was worried
his whole world was going away same with Shane
I mean Shane came up on top of that so
brilliantly it's exactly yeah
I just love I love people who
but for some reason I just couldn't do it
I think because you didn't have a comedy community
like a stand-up community
And also, my job required a cast and a crew and producers and agents.
And funding.
The UK art sector is completely captured, you know?
Well, it's the same as America.
I mean, America is a giant issue with left-wing politics in Hollywood.
Yeah.
You're either on the team or you're outside.
And if you're outside, you don't work.
The only one who works is Chris Pratt.
Chris Pratt's like openly Christian.
But he's such a nice guy.
You cannot fault him.
Sure.
He's such a good guy.
You can't say him being a Christian is an issue.
So strange that they're coming after Christians.
It's like, you know, I can...
Real Christians are the nicest fucking people you'll ever meet.
Exactly.
They really follow Jesus' principles.
Like, if you want to use it as a method, like, if you want results,
like their results are pretty fucking solid, man.
Real Christians really follow it.
Some of the nicest people.
And also, you know, you can disagree with them and not fall out with them.
Right.
Clint Eastwood's grandfathered in
because he's old as fuck
like they still let him make movies
who Clint Eastwood
Oh Clint
Jesus how dare you
Yeah
Clint
I like his late stage though
His late stage of movies
Yeah like
Like those kind of documentary like
About ordinary people
Who get caught up and things
He did one Richard Lewis
I think it was called
That was brilliant
About a security man
Who found an explosive
device at a gig
And because he pointed it out
They charged him with it
I remember that guy
Yeah that guy got smeared all over the news
we all thought that he was the guy who bombed.
Yeah.
Yeah, we thought he was the bomber.
In the film, he said he had one day of being a hero,
and then it flipped to, he's the bomber, you know.
It's so scary when things like that happen to people.
Because, you know, but Clint, he had this one film to me
that is like the answer to the spaghetti westerns.
That's unforgiven.
I think it's the best Western of all time,
because I think it's probably the most accurate
about how fucked up life was back.
Have you ever read Larry McMurtry?
No.
He's a Texan author.
You've got to read Lonesome Dove.
Oh, I started Lonesome Dove, but I got distracted.
There's something that happens about page 100, and you will not be able to put it down after that.
Oh, spoiler alert. Yeah.
Okay.
I'll hang in there.
But those books, those Lonesome Book, the Lonesome Book series by Larry McMurtry,
I watched every Western differently after that because I suddenly realized what these people,
how brave these settlers were.
Oh, they were crazy.
And also he writes about Indians and, or sorry, Native Americans, brilliantly just as well as he writes about everyone else, you know.
And, oh, they're great books.
They're great books.
You just cannot put them down.
You do 800 pages.
You'd read them in a week, you know.
Well, I went through a whole series of Wild West books that I read after I read Empire of the Summer Moon.
Oh, yeah.
No, not Empire Summer Moon.
No, I know which one you're talking about.
You're talking about the Chiroc, the, the, the, the, the, um, God, damn.
How am I saying that wrong?
Is it Cheyenne?
No.
What were they?
Oh, I think I read a bit of...
The Comanche's.
Comanche's, that's right.
But what is the...
God, damn it.
What's that?
It is Empire Summer Moon?
Yeah.
Why am I...
Oh, I'm confusing with that Leonardo DiCaprio movie.
I made the movie afterwards.
Ah, right, right, right.
But have they made Empire of the Summer Moon already?
They're working on that, I believe.
Yeah, no.
I was thinking of the Leonardo...
I was right.
So Empire of Summer Moon, which is all about the Comanches
and all about the settlers
and all about people
that got slaughtered
and you realize
like how insane life was like
and I think Eastwood
was the,
that was the closest,
I think,
to really getting it
because I think
I love those old spaghetti western
don't get me wrong
but they were this kind of like
bullshity
1970s version of the Wild West
and Clint Eastwood never got shot
and you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's more grit in that one.
And it was real.
It was like I believe it.
I believe that the sheriff
was a coward.
Also, it's an interesting thing in it, you might, if you watch it again, you might notice,
but they all know each other.
It's so weird.
They all go, do you know William Darry, or whatever?
And they're going, yeah, yeah, I met them down.
Because it's like, even though they're all spread out, they all know each other.
So it's, I bet you that's based on research, you know?
I bet it is as well.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, they had to know each other.
But you know, it's so few fucking people and there's no laws.
Yeah, yeah.
You have to know who the dangerous people are.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
William Money.
Yeah, that was a great movie.
Oh, fucking great.
No, I love Clint.
But he's grandfathered in as a conservative.
John Voight is kind of on the outs.
Yeah.
But he was, you know.
But, you know, I remember, I even kind of was worried about you in the early days.
Like, I used to be a bit of a left wing twat myself.
You know, I famous, one of the most famous things I did was, do you remember the saluting pug guy?
Yes.
Who got his, yeah, well, I kind of joined in on.
and all that, and I'm deeply ashamed of it.
And I actually apologized to him.
I did a video and apologized at a roast that he did.
Well, good for you.
Because, like, you know, I just, but I completely believe,
this is what I found out.
I completely believed he was a fascist
because that's what every publication was telling me.
Right.
And I was trusting all these people
who eventually came out against me,
and now I look back at it and think,
I was just lied to consistently for all these years.
And it's meant that I have to readdress things that I've spent the last 25 years thinking about.
Like, but I realized now it wasn't really thinking deeply enough about them.
Like climate change.
I was always so terrified of climate change, you know.
Yeah.
And, you know, I've had about 30 years of being terrified about climate change.
And nothing's happening.
Well, go back and watch that stupid fucking movie that Al Gore made.
Yeah.
That movie's so wrong in terms of its predictions.
It's, you know, in the benefits of how.
I was told 2019 we'd all be underwater, you know?
Well, it's not just that.
Have you ever seen one of those aerial time lapse photos of the coast?
No.
Yeah, the bitch doesn't move.
It doesn't move since 1980s.
It's not going nowhere.
The reality is the fucking Earth's climate has never been static.
It's never been flat.
It's never been super predictable.
It's always gone up and down.
Yeah.
And the reality of our life is, yeah, we pollute and it's terrible.
And we should definitely figure out better solutions.
out better solutions.
The reality is, all that stuff that we're putting in the air in terms of carbon dioxide,
that is an issue.
But also, particulates, also, break dust, also, when your tires wear out, where do you think
they go?
Yeah.
They go in the fucking air.
Like that brilliant Bill Burr routine.
When you throw away your apple charger, you know, do you think it just mysteriously
disappears?
Yeah.
No, it ends up a fucking, yeah, or a shark starts wearing it as a scar.
you know that's what it that's what it is you know well there's a lot of birds who eat bottle caps that's a real problem you ever seen those terrifying photos of dead birds with stomach like they're rotted out and you see their stomach full of bottle caps no yeah it's a real issue yeah it's a real all right that's our problem our problem is pollution our problem is waste our problem is destroying of rivers and the ocean and oil spills these are all problems climate change this
This idea, the problem with it has become politicized, and it's become a thing that you have to support, just like you have to support trans rights, just have you have to support this or that or whatever the fuck, get vaccinated.
It's all the same shit.
It's never been more difficult or more, it's never been made more frightening to do your own thinking.
It is now dangerous thing to do.
Well, you're literally told on mainstream news to not do it.
Don't do your own research.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Which is a crazy thing to tell people.
in the age of information, whether you have more access to reality and truth than ever historically, by far with human beings, don't do it.
Yeah.
Don't use it.
Don't utilize the greatest tool that mankind has ever devised for figuring out what the fuck is going on.
Don't do it.
And you see the kind of mainstream news people in the UK, does people like who have podcasts like Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart and these ex-news readers who are on this program.
called the news agents.
And their job is to deliberately not know things, right?
It's almost like, I mean, I think you got the same thing over here with CNN and stuff.
You know, their job is to just express confusion about it.
Why is everything so?
And they cannot actually address the issues because if they address the issues,
they will start saying things that will get them cancelled, you know?
And so what you have is a kind of a chewing gum for,
for information in the UK.
It's not real.
It's not actually information.
It's just these middle class people,
very privileged people,
gabbing away.
They all think there's no problem
with men and women's spaces
because they will never have to use a shelter.
They will never have to use a rape crisis center,
God willing, you know?
So these people who actually are affected
by these issues
are the last thing on their minds.
They are very comfortable middle class people
who do not give a damn
about anyone outside of their experience.
There's also no benefit to rocking the boat.
Yeah.
You have to realize, like, what those people are are mouthpieces.
You're just a mouthpiece for an organization who occasionally, unfortunately for the network,
gets to express their true opinions on things, and usually you find out they're fucking dumb.
Yeah.
Right?
That happens all the time.
Yeah, yeah.
And the really smart ones wind up leaving and going somewhere else and starting podcasts.
But some of them is not their fault.
Like, the thing I was saying earlier about the chain of trust among doctors.
The W-path breaking the chain of trust to such an extent has affected the whole world, you know?
So now we can't trust our news readers to tell us the truth.
They're telling us a man attacked a woman.
A man attacks on people when it was really a woman.
We can't trust doctors because doctors are telling these incredibly damaging things to kids.
A kid comes in with depression.
Oh, you're trans.
I'll tell you, here's a story.
This is a story that really illustrates the problem.
And it's another problem with the press as well.
But in New Zealand, there was a young girl.
She was 16 years old, I believe.
And she was autistic and anorexic.
And her parents were first generation, I think, immigrants.
And I had no idea what was going on, right?
She was suddenly saying she was a boy.
They didn't know what she was talking about, you know?
And so they didn't go with it.
And she left home, right?
Encouraged by what they call a glitter family,
which is a bunch of gay or trans-identified people who love bomb her
and tell her that she needs to get rid of her parents
because her parents are bigots.
So she moves in with this glitter family.
They can't deal with her because she's autistic.
So within a couple of months, she's gone from the house.
She's nowhere to live.
Can't go back home, has told her parents they're bigots.
The New Zealand government, they meet her.
They don't diagnose her as autistic or as anorexic.
they diagnose her as trans
they give her a hotel room
she died in that hotel room
she starved to death in the hotel room
because the New Zealand government
called her trans and
forgot about a young autistic
anorexic 16 year old girl
and at the end of it she was just about
making up with her parents
and she phoned her
mother oh sorry excuse me
don't go down well
she phoned her mother
a few times
and they were just about to make it up
And then she got a call from the police
and she found out that the daughter had been in the hotel
right around the corner from where she lived.
So she left the house, went up into the room
and took a photograph of her daughter dead.
No one would tell the story.
It's taken a year and a half to get this story out in New Zealand media
because no one cares.
No one cares.
It's not that no one cares.
It's a trans story.
So you just can't get it out.
And in every country, there's always one or two activists
who do everything they can.
Like the journalist or the people involved with that story were attacked by, I can't remember his name, but there's an activist over there, very vicious activist, as there is in Ireland and the UK and a few different places, and they're always the parents of trans-identified kids.
You know, the worst people, the worst activists, the most violent activists, Helen Joyce is a brilliant Irish writer and she pointed this out.
They have done the worst thing that you can do to your kids.
They have confused their kids
and sometimes they have actually encouraged their kids
to take these hormones and to go through
these procedures, to be
castrated, to have a double
mastectomy. They will never be able to
accept what they've done to their kids.
And I know there's one Irish activist who's been planning
on transing his kid for at least 12 years,
right? And now the kid is grown
and of course the kid thinks
they're a man because they've lived with
this homophobic parent
who basically doesn't like
seeing gender non-conforming behaviors in their child.
So they say, oh, actually, he's a woman or she's a man, or she's a man, you know.
So these are the people who are, you know, that guy in New Zealand, he, even when the
story came out, he still tried to attack the people telling it.
Still, he put me in some sort of conspiracy of creating a bigger deal about it than it
needed to be.
There's a young girl who died in a hotel room because they called her trans.
and just forgot about her, you know?
Like, how did it take a year and a half
for New Zealand media to report on that?
In a country, that small, you know?
And there's so many stories like this.
Well, I think the dam is breaking
because I think there's been a lot of people
that are fed up
and they realize that there's
irreversible harm being caused to people
that are being tricked.
There's these stories of the detransitioners
and them being attacked online
for telling their story
which is true.
Yeah.
It's a true story
about them being confused
and being told
that they were trans
and going through these procedures
and deeply regretting it.
Yeah.
And then going back
to their biological sex,
they get destroyed online.
They get treated worse
than anyone else
because they are living proof
that it's not innate.
It makes no sense.
There's no compassion.
There's no kindness.
And I'll tell you what else.
And also I'll tell you what else.
I have an iPhone, right?
And whenever I write
the word detransitioners on my iPhone, which I have caused to do quite a lot, it underlines it
in red because it will not recognize the word exists.
But is it because it doesn't know the word yet?
Yeah, but how long is it?
It does it with cunt, too.
Yeah, but detransitioners isn't a dirty word.
Actually, it doesn't do it with cunt anymore.
Right.
But they used to...
Well, detransitioners is a dirtier word.
Let me see if it works in America.
Do you have an American iPhone?
No, I'd be curious.
I'm going to text to me right now.
People like want to go away and try it, try writing detransitioners and see if it underlines it.
But, you know, and but my point is that one of the...
Yeah, underlined it.
Yeah.
Motherfuckers.
There you go.
Let's see if it gives me some suggestions.
No replacement found.
You have no idea what you're talking about.
Exactly.
It's playing dumb.
And that's what Wikipedia is the same Wikipedia is moderated by trans activists.
But that's kind of crazy.
Yeah.
I wish I had my Android phone here.
I'd want to check that.
Yeah, that'd be interesting.
But Wikipedia has been, there was a war within Wikipedia, I believe,
where all the trans ally moderators won.
And now my Wikipedia page has basically been vandalized for years, you know.
And if I complain to press authority that they call me anti-trans,
they go, well, it says it on your Wikipedia.
And we've tried to change it, but it reverts back within 15 minutes every time.
So if anyone would like to do a class action suit against Wikipedia, I'd love to be involved if that ever.
Just for the record, cunt doesn't show up with a red line.
Okay, there you go.
D-transitioner does, cunt does not.
There you go.
There you go.
I wonder which is it the actual...
But my point...
Actually, sorry, the reason I bring it up is because a lot of tech guys are tech because they're autistic, right?
And a lot of coders are...
You know, you spend all your time writing in the dark and coding stuff.
Your interests go that way.
So the trans thing has come up a lot as well from kind of manipulation by these tech guys
who are, a lot of whom identify as trans.
So we're living in a world now where, like the underlying D-transitioner,
they are controlling what we think is normal and what we think is unusual.
So to everyone now, we write down D-transitioner, you doubt yourself
because there's a red line underneath it.
Oh, it mustn't be a real word, or it's D and then a space maybe or whatever.
But no, you're right.
It's just these fucking tech guys are trying to confuse you, keep you unbalanced, you know, so that you can't discuss this issue.
That is a weird one, because when did D-transitioner first start being used?
When did the term?
I don't know.
I mean, you know.
The term is clearly when you only use it with sex, right?
You're only using it with gender or whatever you want to say, sex or gender.
That's the only detransitioning anything from something to something else.
That's not ever done before.
I don't remember ever using that term detransitioner in any other way.
That's interesting, possibly because, you know, the trans thing is not, as I say, it's not real.
It's an artificial and human invented thing.
Yes, and it kind of implies regret.
Yeah.
The detransitioner stories are never happy ones.
You know the American Southern Law Center, have you ever heard of them?
they have named Clow Cole
you know Clow Cole the detransitioner
She's doing brilliant work
They've named her as a far right
Simply because she's going around
Telling her story
I think I'm far right too
They say I'm far right too
They say everyone's far right
If you're if you're if you're
If you say anything that diverts
From what a bunch of lunatics online
If agreed is the truth
Then you're far right
Yeah
You know
Yeah you can't
Everyone's politically homeless
We have to realize that.
Start a shelter.
Yeah.
It's called the center.
But I don't think the systems we have are going to be, are going to last much longer.
I think AI is going to change everything.
I think you're right.
But I think reluctantly, because there's people that are in control of the system right now that are extracting enormous amounts of money, you know, with just fill in the blank of all the different special interests that have a hand in how much money gets distributed this way and that way.
There's so much of that that really fuels the decisions that are being made in this country.
It's not really the will of the people.
It's not really trying to make America great again.
I mean, yeah, it is.
But also, if you really wanted to do it, you wouldn't do it this way.
Yeah.
If that's what your main goal was, if your main goal was to make money and give the illusion that we're fixing all the problems that America has,
while fixing some of them, well, then that's what you're doing.
Because that's what your goal seems to be.
Your goal's not.
The real goal should be like letting AI have a look at everything.
Like, what's the best way to distribute all these resources and is it really fair that this corporation gets to pollute the fucking ocean?
Like, let's figure out what's the right way to do this.
Yeah.
And that's going to be horrifying for anybody in any position of power.
It's like people say about your show, you know, reason Kamala wouldn't, didn't come on it.
Simply because there's a certain breed of a politician who are, I think,
dying out, who are the kind
of politicians that couldn't survive three hours
talking to you, you know?
Right.
And they, I don't think they've long left
because things like this are the way that people
get their information now. So, you know,
you get these like,
and it's the only reason why people,
oh, I've got a good thing to tell you about AOC as well.
It's the only reason why people like
AOC and people like this
are able to continue spouting nonsense.
It's because they don't go on shows like this.
Here's an interesting thing. At one point,
in my, I still haven't told you half the things
I was going to tell you, but at one point a streamer
did a, I managed to take some money,
I managed to stop the charity mermaids
from getting funding from the national lottery in the UK.
Mermaids used to be a good organisation.
Dysphoria was very rare
and they treated it as you should, right,
with things like affirmation as a final step,
not the first step, okay?
surgery and drugs. Final. That's what it should always be. And they were great. And then a woman named
Susie Green came on board. And Susie Green... Does Susie have a penis? No, but her son did. Her son
did. And Susie Green took over at Mermaids, transformed it into a mental institution. And she
took her son to Thailand on his 16th birthday to have him castrated.
You know?
And now, and this kid has been brought up since they were four, five years old
because there's a famous TED talk where there's a hilarious,
you've got to see this TED talk.
She does this TED talk and she's got the, you know, the TED talk thing.
So she looks like an expert.
And she's doing the hand movements like they all do on TED talks, right?
So you think this is someone who knows what they're talking about.
And she just admits that the kid like playing with girls' toys,
the husband didn't like it.
She decided it was really a girl.
And that's the TED talk.
There's no explanation of what trans is or anything like that.
Or gay.
It just got, yeah, exactly.
Well, this is the reality that they don't like.
Yeah.
The reality they don't like is if you leave them alone and you don't encourage transition,
the vast majority of them become gay men.
It's something like 60 to 90 percent.
Yeah.
It's like leave them alone and they'll be fine.
The fastest cure for dysphoria and teenagers is leave them alone, let them go through puberty.
Because puberty is like a wonderful flushing.
of all the things that make you uncertain about yourself,
to come to the end of the puberty is to get rid of all that stuff.
It's still there in traces and so on.
But that's what puberty does.
It cures itself.
So these people are trying to fucking stop it, right?
Have you ever heard anything so demented?
It's like a James Bond villain.
Something's so demented about stopping puberty,
this brilliant process that turns you from a child into an adult,
and they're stopping it.
These people are dangerous.
They're stopping in their line that,
The effects are reversible.
One person at the Tavistock, one doctor at the Tavistock said that she was sure one of the parents who came in was a paedophile and wanted to keep their child in a state of arrested development so they could abuse them longer.
You know, this is doctors at the Tavistock.
And again, this stuff is not well known.
If it was well known, it would be over, you know.
Yeah, our fucking news has failed us.
It really has.
It's allowed this to go on for 10 years.
It's, do you know about, did you see what Andy knows investigation into Trantifa, the, this gang of, actually, Trantifa is a more general term, but there was an actual gang of trans-identified guys and women.
And they, they went to this guy's, this guy was, this guy was, I think he was an old rancher or something.
And they blinded them in an attack, you know.
And then he went out to, he was going to testify at the trial.
And they killed them.
They killed them.
So what we have with this group, I can't remember what they were called, I wish I could remember.
But what we have with this group is because no one has been doing their jobs, including the press and not talking about this properly,
an entirely for fake terrorist group that thinks it's a civil rights movement has formed out of nothing.
These are middle class white guys, right, who normally.
would be, I don't know, going to gigs
and stuff. And this
kind of violent civil rights group
has formed for nothing.
It's not defending
anyone. It's not helping anyone.
It's simply there to get men into women's
toilets, you know? And it
just, we've created it. And now
we have to deal with it. You know, this kind of
mirage of a civil
rights movement, you know?
Sorry, I'm not really being very clear
because there's so much to say.
It's just so disturbing. Yeah.
But it's just you're sticking your neck out and talking about the worst aspects of this whole thing.
One of the things that it used to happen to me was I would talk about very specific people.
Like, for instance, there was someone who worked in Stonewall who helped create their trans policies named Amy Chaliner.
And Chaloner, it was discovered that Chaloner was the son of a bloke who had tied up and tortured a little girl in the attic.
of their home.
And he still continued to work with Stonewall.
He continued to use his father as an election agent.
And when he was, when he was, when he was reprimanded, they said he had absolutely no understanding
of what was wrong, of what he had done wrong and so on, you know.
These are the, this person was central to the trans movement in the UK.
And there's so many examples of this.
There's a guy called Peter Tatchell.
Tatchell has a long history of literally promoting paedophilia as a, as something that's
sometimes enjoyed by the child.
That's how he puts it.
It's a famous letter he wrote to the Guardian where he said, I have many friends who say
they have experiences that ranged from 9 to 13, where they had entirely good outcomes with,
what are you talking about?
Nine, nine is rape.
13 is rape.
What are you talking about?
It doesn't matter if they say they had good experiences.
They were groomed, you know?
And this man is a fairly significant figure in the UK, you know.
It's a no investigation into these writings, no kind of talk about it.
Again, it's just completely ignored.
Because as I say, the UK is addicted to harming children, not talking about it,
and only kind of saying, what could have happened years later?
I just don't understand
why it's not a larger population of people
that have gotten completely fed up with this.
It's because the press sits on it.
Most people don't know what's happening.
Most people in the UK think I just went mad.
They think I went mad,
I started harassing women, some form of women,
and blah, blah, blah.
And they believe all the stories
that have been reshared and reshared about me
and, you know,
and they just don't know
because no, I've never,
in the eight years I've been fighting this
the only time I appeared on
like mainstream TV to talk about
this issues and I sent this to Jamie
was when they ambushed me
and they just berated me for five minutes
journalist named Sarah Smith did the interview
who's now the head of BBC in North America
I should say and
how'd she berate you would she say
well I was saying she just simply
didn't believe it the funny thing was
some of her journalists were working on a story
about the Tabastock at the time
and I was just saying
you know kids are being hurt
kids are being hurt in these gender clinics
and it should be stopped you know
and she was like you're seriously saying
that doctors are blah blah blah blah
and she just couldn't
it was so weird she just couldn't
and the stuff I'd known to be true
that I'd been studying for years
she just wasn't across it
you know so the journalists
aren't across it because it's not worth their while
to be across it
and they're actually
slowing down the understanding
of what this is about
You know, because they approach it so gingerly and they don't offend anyone and they don't want to be canceled.
So there's no conversation about it.
There's no conversation about what's really going on.
Well, the journalists have no security because it's not, let's be honest, to be a talking head on the news, it's not that difficult to do.
And there's a lot of people out there that are handsome and beautiful and they would take your role.
And so you have a salary where you make X amount a year and it's pretty nice.
I mean, you get to be the presenter on television.
They don't want to rock that fucking boat.
There's no benefit to rocking that boat.
It's the people who go the extra mile.
Like, I was, you know, people who, I can't bring my old friends who worked with me into this fight.
I can't say, look, you've got to stand up for me, you know.
But I have begged people to help, you know.
Did you go on any podcast in the UK?
Not really, no.
Again, the online space, because it's so audience-facing, they would have just got tons of abuse for having me on, you know.
Even Trigonometry?
Oh, no.
Trigonometry had me on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But like in terms of, you know, yeah, there's a few, but I don't know.
It just never quite broke out.
In fact, to be honest, which I've been, I've been thinking of this opportunity for the last eight years.
Come on here?
Yeah.
Why don't you reach out earlier?
I'm an idiot.
I just didn't think it would be.
I thought you'd have a backlog of years and so on.
Well, I do kind of, but I do it all based entirely on who I want to talk to.
Okay, cool.
That's the whole, from the beginning of the podcast, it's all, you know, this is an interesting story.
Yeah.
This guy's fascinating.
She's got a crazy thing that she studied.
Sure.
Like, let's talk.
Oh, and I should say also, you know, while I was going through COVID and canceled, I did write this book, unpaid because I was promised there'd be a back end.
And then the book came out and all booksellers started hiding the book in book shops.
So if anyone wants to help out, my book is called Tough Crowd and is available on Amazon.
Did you do the audio?
Yeah.
The audio is good, actually.
I'm happy with the audio.
I'm sure if you did it.
It's great.
That's great.
That's awesome.
Yeah, I'm always very happy when, especially like someone's telling a story about their own life.
Yeah.
No, I'm proud of it.
It was really good fun.
And, you know, quite interesting to read out your own story.
So weird, you know.
Yeah.
Have you thought about leaving the UK?
I've left.
You have left totally.
I've had to leave.
I'm on trial next month in the UK.
For what?
A trans activist has brought another, as complained to the police about me again, you know?
And so I have to go back to UK to be tried at the start of August.
Because the police are complicit with these guys, you know.
And what is this complaint about?
It's a complaint, how much, I can't really talk much about it because my bail conditions are not to talk about it.
Oh, my God.
But I'll be talking about it.
it when it's done, I'll enjoy that, you know, because this, the whole situation is so hilarious.
When people find out what's really going on, are going to be, I can talk about, there's one
guy who's, oh yeah, there's, there is a connection with the guy I was telling you at the start,
the very first guy who the Guardian wrote about, you know. So it's like, it's just basically
a gang. I compare, it's been, it's been like being attacked by Batman villains for the last
eight years. Do you know what I mean? The most bizarre group of people have been,
able to sue me and
there's one
actor, Scottish actor, who destroyed a gay business
who's suing me at the moment.
I've been in litigation
for about eight years
for one reason or another because
I'm never, because I don't have the money
to sue people. So people are
constantly suing me,
reporting me to the police. I've been
visited by the police three or four
times. You know, I was one of the things
that really scared my wife when they sent the police
to my house, you know? And
And it was pressures like that that broke us up, you know, along with not having an income.
So, and now the people who did that to us make fun of me because I'm divorced, you know.
So it's like, it's, it's, it's just a really evil bunch of like, you know, I don't, I guess it's, it's, it's, it's a natural part of the internet in some way to have a hate figure, you know.
but by God it should scare everybody
how easy it is to become a hate figure
when you've not done anything wrong, you know?
Yeah, and if you don't have a voice,
how difficult it is to defend yourself.
And you know, and also...
And people are like shying away
from your ability to defend yourself.
They don't want you on
because they don't want to catch strays.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like there's a guy who I first put on TV in the UK,
you may know him, Graham Norton.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, yeah.
And like, I gave him his first TV appearance.
Okay, and Father Ted.
And he went on TV and said something like,
cancel culture didn't exist.
It's consequences culture.
And he knows very well what I've been through.
And he knows very well that I'm not saying anything bigoted.
And yet he still says this,
as if I haven't had my life completely destroyed.
He knows all this.
And it was in reference to you that he was saying that?
No, I don't think so.
I think he just, he just, you know.
He's spouting the narrative.
He's spouting the narrative, you know.
Yeah, he's showing that he's a good boy.
Yeah, yes.
He's going to follow the rules.
Exactly.
And that's what's scary.
A lot of people fall into that that you would hope wouldn't.
Well, that's what I find so inspired.
That's one of the reasons why I came here.
I can't live in the UK anymore.
As far as I'm concerned, free speech does not exist in the UK.
Certainly as far as I'm concerned.
Well, we've highlighted on the show how many people have been arrested.
Like when Constantine from Trigonometry gave me those figures, I couldn't believe it.
It was mind-boggling.
The UK is involved.
Basically, the UK likes nothing better than sweeping stuff under the rug.
Well, not just that, but...
That's why Rotherham went on for 30 years, you know.
What went on?
The Rotherham abuse scandal.
All these taxi drivers, Pakistani taxi drivers,
were abusing kids over 30 years,
like local girls, local white girls,
doing the most appalling things to them.
And it was just, everyone was scared of being a racist.
So they just let it go on.
And it's the same thing with this.
And, you know, I always think when we were talking about Oliver and Stuart earlier,
Like they said the puberty blockers were reversible about two years ago.
How many kids since then have gone on puberty blockers?
Partly because of what they said, you know?
It's like people who've got to realize, you know,
Graeme Norton saying that about council culture,
John Stewart saying that about puberty blockers.
Their words have consequences, you know?
Yeah.
And real people can be hurt, you know?
People just spout off stuff.
And not people that deserve it.
No.
And this is this thing, this casting of,
othering on people
instantaneously. I had
I never had a pro
I've never had anyone accusing me of anything on a set
I always got on great with all my actors
I knew all my crew's name
that was one thing I always I developed a skill
because I'm terrible with names normally but I
learned every crew member's name I've not
been in any way controversial until
this and then the moment I started
saying hey hang on a sec
and all of my friends you know all the friends
who betrayed me
the hat trick and my friends on the
TED musical, all they had to say was, of course women deserve fair sports. Of course women deserve
single-sex spaces. That's all they had to say. And they can't do it. They can't do it. It's such an
obvious moral thing, you know? Obvious. And that's what's amazing about the power of cults. And people
do not like to think that they're in a cult. But if you have no room for objectivity and logic
and you hold things as doctrine that don't make sense.
They could be easily argued against.
And if you get very violent, when someone argues against that, you're in a cult.
Yeah.
But also, there's people who don't get violent, but they're also in a cult, but they don't realize it.
Because, like, when I was talking about the chain of trust, right, if you're a newsreader
and you get a piece of copy that says, talks about a newborn baby and uses the word assigned at birth,
the sexes, the sex they were assigned at birth, right?
That's ideological language.
Your sex is not assigned at birth.
Your sex is observed in utero, usually, a few months before birth, okay?
So assigned at birth is ideological language.
So what you have is a lot of people now using the word assigned at birth, they don't know why.
It's because that was decided to be the correct terminology.
And it is nonsense, you know?
Full nonsense.
Yeah.
Biological nonsense.
Yeah.
We've known it forever.
You could check chromosomes.
Yeah.
It's not hard.
But it's like, it's like, you know, we've become hypnotized by appearances to such an extent that, you know, you get a, like every single.
There's a very funny thing.
You mean, appearances of like virtue and appearances.
No, I mean, avatars.
As a human.
Yeah, I mean, actual avatars.
It's the idea that you're a woman, if you look like one, is like, when did that come from?
Where did that come from?
And especially in a world where people can use filters and all sorts of things.
One of the guy who, the guy who came after me in the UK, his latest female name is the third or fourth name he's had.
It's just he hid on one that he could report people to the police if they said, hey, hang on a second, you owe me money from three months rent.
He would report them for anti-trans harassment.
Oh, my God.
You know?
And so, you know.
Nuts.
They're just nutty people.
Yeah, and it's just appearances.
If you're a dude and you change your name more than once, you even.
you change your name once.
Yeah.
Unless you're a boy named Sue.
The whole thing.
I need to know why you change your fucking name.
Exactly.
Hang on a sec.
If these people are becoming who they really are, why are they cutting off pieces of themselves?
That's not them, that's someone else.
Why are they cutting, you know what I mean?
It's like if they're being who they really are, why are you changing your name?
Right.
Well, this idea of affirming, like gender affirming care.
Yeah.
call hormone replacements, castration.
The craziest one is the penis that they make out of the leg muscle.
Oh, I didn't know that one.
Oh.
Yeah.
Dude.
Yeah.
It's horrific.
Shane Gillis one night in the green room of the mothership.
Yeah.
Started pulling out all these pictures.
Oh, yeah.
No, I never watch.
I never look at pictures.
Because of the internet now, we have a lot of data on what this is.
And they do it so they can stand up peeing.
That's it.
You can't.
Oh, the.
freaking fake
fake penis thing
exactly
falloplast
do you know what
the worst I saw was
what
okay
we've noticed
that when you see
these girls
they often take
photographs
just after the
double mastectomy
okay
yeah
and they're
they're smiling
and they look
delirious with
happiness
because this thing
they've been
bargaining
with their parents
for for years
they finally got it
and they've got
these terrible
looking
you know
wounds over their
breasts and so on
and they're just
kind of
um
you know, they're still out of their mind with the drugs that they've been taken to go on them.
Oh, fuck, I forgot why I brought this up.
What were we talking about just before that?
Fake penises.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, and we've noticed in these photographs that a lot of the girls have self-harming scars all over their bodies, okay?
And this fucking double mastectomy, this unnecessary double mastectomy, is the latest one.
These bastard doctors just carried out on her.
Anyway, I saw a penis that had been, you know the way they take the flesh off the arm?
Or the leg, yeah.
Or the leg?
Yeah.
I saw a penis that had been made out of the arm of one of these girls, and these self-harming scars were all over the penis.
Oh, God.
You know?
Did you know the first vaginaplasty was carried out by a Nazi?
I got into trouble because I compared, because a magazine in the UK misreported something.
thing I'd said and said that I was comparing trans activists to Nazis.
And, you know, when did this happen, the Nazis did that?
Oh, no, what happened was, I think his name was Erwin Gorpardt, and he was working in some clinic
before the war, and then he went on to, joined a Luftwaffe, and then he became, he was one
of the scientists who tortured people at Belsen.
That's the first person who did a vaginoplasti.
Jesus Christ.
So these are literally Nazi experiments.
that are now, you know, that we're now arguing that kids should do, you know.
It's a crap.
I kind of thought this conversation, you would make that face a few times in this conversation.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's just, and the thing is.
I went down a rabbit hole one night when I was watching people talk about their dilations,
how they have to keep something in there to keep the wound from closing up.
It's a Kronenberg movie.
You know Kronenberg?
David Kronernerberg.
It's just like that.
Yeah.
It's horrific.
It's just, it's wild.
What's this?
Institute for Sexual Research served as a worst first train clinic by 1930.
It performed its first modern gender affirming surgery.
So it's 1930?
That's a, yeah, but I don't think that's the place that's being, that I'm talking about.
Yeah, no, that's the Magnus Hirschville.
Magnus Hirschville.
This is a big thing the trans activists say that there was all this, the Nazis destroyed all this, all this trans history.
It's not true.
They, they, they went after him because he was a Jew.
That's why they went off.
after him. The idea that the first transclam, if you look at the first few pages of Google search results, if you put in anything about trans, you'll get three or four pages of absolute nonsense, you know, of stuff that, another thing, Fred Sargent, I'm just remembering all the stuff I wanted to say to. Fred Sargent, you've got to try and get him on. He's getting on. And he was like, he's a, he's a gay guy who was there at every single night of the Stonewall riots, you know. And he is still on Twitter.
still fighting. He's fucking great. He went on to, he arranged the first pride march in New York.
He was highly instrumental in gay rights in the US and in winning civil rights for gay people
in the US. He's had to watch as these trans activists just make up lies about any transvestite
who happened to be in the area. There's one guy, oh, I forgot his name, Marsha, Marshall,
Marsha or something.
And I'm sure you've heard all these
this thing. Again, it's another one of these
kind of thought terminating cliches
that, you know, trans people
won you your rights and trans people
were through the first
bracket at Stonewall.
It's bollocks, you know?
Like the Marsha person they're talking off was
purely peripheral character. And the person
who really kicked it off who has been
sort of, is being
gradually erased, was
a lesbian who's
Ah, her name, because again,
been raised from my memory because I haven't
used it so long. But it was a lesbian
who shouted out to the crowd
as she was being forced into a police car.
Why aren't you guys doing anything?
And that's what kicked off the riot.
And that history and that
contribution by lesbians and gay men
is being erased by trans rights
activists in front of Fred's eyes.
So Fred is on Twitter saying,
no, that's not true, just over and over again.
You know, he lived it.
He was right at the centre of gay civil rights.
in the U.S., and in his last few years, he has to watch these idiots pick apart and lie about
the true history of gay rights America.
Well, the thing is, we're dealing with an oppressive hierarchy, and if you're more oppressed
than anybody, you take the supreme position, you're the person to be cherished, and anybody
underneath you, regular gay people are below trans people in the suppression hierarchy.
Trans people are the apex.
Oh, yeah.
They're a sacred class.
A sacred class.
Yes.
And that's what's weird because that is kind of homophobic.
Yeah, of course.
And also, one of the things we learned with Ireland, right, and the Catholic Church scandal,
is no sacred classes.
There should be no sacred classes.
Because sacred classes have a lot of power, and power is misused all the time.
Always.
Yeah.
So the idea of a sacred...
Like, I don't know whether you know this.
but girl guiding in the UK.
What does that mean?
You know the scouts?
Yes.
Yes.
Girl guiding.
They have a rule, very strict rules for men.
Okay, men cannot go over, spend the night overnight in a tent with girls, go on trips, all this sort of stuff.
There's all sorts of very sensible rules to do with men in girl guiding because you're dealing with kids, okay, young girls.
Those rules, they don't just soften for trans-identified.
men, they disappear.
So if a man says that
he's a woman, as a transvestite,
all those rules that
are so important
for protecting kids disappear.
And trans-identified men
can now take girl-guided
groups out on trips without any
of the kind of... In the woods.
Yeah, I don't know where they go, but yeah.
I imagine if you're camping.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, you know, it's...
And what's insane about it is because, you know,
know, people who are saying aren't being interviewed or being, losing their jobs, losing
their voices, no one can raise the alarm about this, you know?
And we're only...
The vast majority of people listening to this would highly disagree with all these
policies.
Yeah.
The vast, vast majority.
Exactly.
It's a very small and very, very vocal minority.
Yeah, but that's the thing the internet makes giants out of, you know...
Well, it's also people go along with it knowing it's a part of the ideology that they adhere to.
That's all it is.
They get locked into, I'm a left-wing progressive person, so therefore I support that.
Yeah.
I'm still astonished that tribalism can go to such an extent that you would harm children.
You know, I find that extraordinary.
It is extraordinary, but it just shows you how powerful it is, how powerful tribalism really is,
and how people will justify the most horrific of things if it fits into this narrative that they have decided is a part of their identity.
Yeah.
And a lot of people do that, man.
There's a giant percentage of people that their political identity, which includes that.
If you're progressive, it includes all this trend stuff.
Your political identity is more important than your family.
It's more important than anything.
People ostracize family members if they don't agree with the ideologies.
Isn't that interesting?
That's a big thing.
Another story for you.
I met this journalist.
I think she's also a therapist, but her name's Tina Traster.
and she wrote a piece for Psychology Today
she'd already written some articles in the past for it
and she wrote a new one
and this is like, you know, established magazine, Psychology Today
and she wrote a piece
about how trans-identified kids
were becoming homeless
but they weren't homeless because their parents had rejected them
they were homeless because they'd rejected their parents
their parents had misgendered them one too many times
or couldn't really take it seriously
or whatever it happens to be.
These kids leave
these kids leave and they go off
and they become homeless
or whatever it happens to be
or they move in with glitter families
or whatever it happens to be
but they lose contact with their parents
and she said well this is usually
the choice of the trans identified child
the piece
was taken off the next night
and all her previous pieces were removed
because she wrote that
oh my God
you know
and there's so many people I know in this
and it happened in like wonderful woman
named Sasha White who was in publishing
and she lost her publishing career and is now
same as me. I had to go back
to journalism and I
should plug it. I have a website called
the Glinner Update and my website
along with a few others, Redux and a few
others, are the only
websites cataloging all this
insanity for the last eight years?
You know, we're the only ones doing it.
No one else is covering it. So I think
that when
you know, when people tally up the
score at the end of it, you will
be surprised as how many people have a similar story to mine.
You know, it's not like, like I was counsel, but I'm a, I was, I had a something of a name,
but I know so many people, police women who've lost their jobs, um, prison wardens, you know,
um, uh, people in all walks of life, ordinary people who are constantly running a foul of
these lunatics because they're not being backed up by the adults in the room.
It's so bad that in the United States, there's men who identify as women with fully functional
penises that are locked up in women's prisons.
Yeah.
It's like, and I saw Joyce Carol Oates today, who's a writer, suspense writer, and she
occasionally dips her toe into this subject just to show how little she knows about it.
And then she doesn't talk about it again for a few months.
But, but, what was, how did someone put it?
They said, they said something like the pot, someone, someone joked about her, say,
she refused to believe that there were men in women's prisons.
How many are, you know?
hundreds is the answer
but you give all the answers
they just ignore them
they never take it on
they never take it on board
but like these
these policies
are so bizarre
that the people supporting them
don't even believe
what they're supporting
does that make sense
she she thinks
that there's no issue
that it's not a problem
that trans people are all great
because she has one lovely trans friend
who's never been rude to her
right but the truth is that
There's so many different types of people in the world.
And again, if you move the line for criminals,
you don't think criminals will take that opportunity?
I read an interesting thing about when cops are looking for someone.
If they hear, for instance, they're parked at a supermarket.
Their target is parked at a supermarket.
The first thing they do is they drive around all the disabled spaces.
Because criminals love parking and disabled spaces.
Because they think, well, that's just for the ordinary guy.
And, you know, that doesn't count for me.
So the first thing they do is they check out the cars in the disabled spaces to see if it matches their thing.
That's what the criminal mindset is.
So if you suddenly say, well, now our sex is actually internal and it doesn't depend on appearance and so on,
you don't think criminals are going to go, hang on a second.
That means I could just waltz into place X and have a look at, you know, the women in there and no one will throw me out.
And it's true. It's true. That is the situation.
And progressives will defend it online.
Yeah.
Including videos of women screaming at men to get out of women's rooms.
Yeah.
They'll call that woman a bigot.
Yeah, yeah.
The famous we spy incident, which the Guardian misreported three times, you know, calling it a hoax.
And it was a sex offender named, I can't remember, Darren, something.
But it was a sex offender who was getting his dick out in front of these women and kids,
because it was like an open thing for women and kids, you know, and they'll defend it.
And they did defend it.
That guy with the mustache, do you remember him?
I think you're being a bit of a bigot.
I think he deserves, you know, how did they even know?
Maybe he's not, maybe he's not saying he's trans, you know,
but they will automatically defend a fucking sex offender
over a woman complaining about it.
Which is wild.
A woman with a child.
It's wild.
Yeah.
It really is.
It just shows you how much gets thrown out the window
and how much rational thinking and how much logic
and how much reason and how much objectivity.
It all gets thrown out the window if it doesn't align with your ideology.
Yeah.
That's what's so bizarre about, you know, again, what Elon calls the woke mind virus.
I think that's the right term for it, because it is like a mind virus.
Oh, yeah.
Just like a virus, it fucks up your computer.
It fucks up people's minds.
Yeah, yeah.
It's, it's, it's wreaking havoc.
And people won't realize it until, I would say, maybe 10 years when the first, when the generation of kids who've been taught since they were very, very young.
There's one comedian in L.A. who said,
that her, her, who said that his child, uh, announced he was a, uh, the opposite sex at four.
Right. And he's now got a second trans child. Okay. So this, that's not, that's abuse. That's
abuse. Okay. Let's let's call it what it is. It's abuse. If you confuse your child that you
spend years convincing them they're the opposite sex, you know, what is that? That's psychological abuse.
This is this virtue flag that they'd love to fly by saying that they have trans kids.
When you look at the percentage of people in Hollywood that have trans kids, it's off the charts.
Oh, do you see the Cynthia Nixon video?
Oh, I did, yeah.
My child is trans. Their friends are trans.
She doesn't seem to put it together with double mastectomies and all the other horrors to do with this.
They live in this very bizarre ideological bubble where you're allowed to think about things in a very narrow scope.
Yeah, yeah.
This is very strange.
It's very strange that this thing that was very, very unusual in the past is now very prominent.
Yeah.
And the worst thing that happened to it was they gave it a label.
It's like if they called anorexia something more attractive, you know.
If they called it something like, well, I think they do actually.
On some forums, some pro-ana, I think they call it, where people get online to discuss the way they avoid eating properly
and the way they regurgitate food and so on, you know.
It's what they call a community, right?
But it's not a good community.
Well, there's a lot of bad communities.
There's communities of minor attracted persons online.
Yeah, exactly.
And that's another thing that's kind of gradually getting chipped away at as well with all this stuff.
Because if a child can decide at 9 or 13 or whatever happens to be that they're trans and thereby lose their future fertility and so on, then what other decisions can a child?
child make, you know? And of course, those children aren't making those decisions. The parents are
making the decisions for them. Right. I mean, the reality of human beings that were very
malleable to culture, very malleable to the whims of society. There's a great reason
for that, though. Oh, sorry, I don't mean to come across it. Well, you know, we're very
imitative species and part of the reason why the human race has survived to the extent that it has
and thrived to the extent that it has is because we are imitative. So when, for instance,
we started moving into the Ecuadorian forest.
We started making blowpipes and canoes and stuff like this.
You know, it was passed on, you know.
Now, that's a wonderful part of human survivability and evolution.
But what happens when the internet gets involved, right?
And you get that iterative or not iterative, mimetic kind of behavior that human beings are so prone to.
Of course, it's going to lead to something like the trans movement.
you know because what are you promising with trans
if someone decides they're trans what are you promising
you're promising to be love bombed by all your friends
you know to be to be praised at a hilt in the press
and to you know women as well
women fawn over trans-identified men
unfortunately a lot of this is driven by women you know
women are the ones fighting it
but also there's a lot of women involved in pushing it as well
it almost seems to be like a kind of self-sacrificing
I'm so good that I don't mind if men come into my spaces
and they don't seem to realize that yeah you can agree for that for yourself
but you can't agree for that for everyone else you know
so and apparently women are on you know when we're talking about the
memetic quality that that the human race has
there's also a quality apparently that women have where they will
they tend to go along with the majority viewpoint whatever the majority
viewpoint is and the reasons for that are quite
understandable, you know, you have a part of the human race who is smaller, weaker, you know,
they have to be more amenable.
They have to be more accommodating, you know.
And that empathy is being weaponized against them, you know.
And same with gay people.
Like if you, I'm a great believer in what they call queer spaces, because I think of things
like Warhol's Factory
and
John Waters
films like
you know his
kind of trashy movies
John Waters
he made
he's a gay guy
who made all these films
in Baltimore
he made more
what did he make
hairspray
that was his most
famous
but in the early days
he had a film set
that was just filled
with outcasts
and criminals
and you know
he'd have the craziest
people carrying
the equipment
and stuff like this
it was a
it was a welcoming
space for outsiders
and that's what
a lot of
gay spaces are like, okay?
And that's why there's a lot of sympathy for trans-identified people.
But, again, that sympathy and that inclusion is being weaponized against the people
who are, and it's destroying these spaces, you know.
When the first things I heard was a young woman who wrote to me, she said she was in a gay bar
with a trans woman and who she'd known for ages.
She'd considered him, her, a friend, him a friend.
and she was a lesbian
and he said to her
would you ever consider a relationship with me
and she said no sorry I'm only interested
in you know female people
he slapped her across the face
and walked out
that's the level of entitlement
these straight men have to lesbians
he slapped her across the face
in a gay club
and if anyone had found out
the reason she would have been thrown out
well they don't there's a thing that's going on too
that don't think that it's a man
attacking a woman.
Yeah.
They think it's a woman attacking a woman.
It's insane.
And it's part of the reason why I've been so...
Because when you put the word woman on anything, it sounds like I've been harassing women.
Right.
Right, right, right.
It's a weird distortion of the truth.
Yeah.
It's just weird that it's so accepted.
It's weird that it's not pushed back against.
In this day and age, where so many people have a voice.
And again, the chain of trust is broken, you know?
Because like, you...
Comedians can't joke about it, you know?
I saw...
Well, comedians are probably the last people that can't.
can joke about it.
Yeah, but I don't see it a lot, even over here.
Come to the show tonight.
Oh, I will.
Oh, if there's a show, I'll come.
But the thing that I tend to see is there's a sort of, I saw Anthony Jessenek doing this.
He said something like, we know so much more about trans people now.
I was like, no, you don't.
You know, you know just as much as he did 10 years ago, even less, because there really is no such thing.
You know, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a non-stable category that's been applied to,
Everyone from fucking criminals who are trying to get an easy time in prison to young girls cutting their breasts off.
Nothing connects these people, you know?
Nothing connects them.
So comedians are still on unsteady ground.
They don't really know how to talk about it, you know, because you're like everyone else.
We're all slightly bamboozled by all the language and so on, you know.
So I find that even in America, I find that trans issue doesn't come up a lot, but maybe it comes up.
Right.
Yeah, it comes up a lot more in America, I think.
Yeah.
Well, we don't have to worry about going to jail.
you know the reality is you you people are getting thrown in jail for Facebook posts yeah no it's true
and not a small amount no thousands every year yeah and it's so selective you know it's so selective
you get you get what do you think is the ultimate goal of this there's no don't think people that
are reasonable and sensible just going to bail out of the UK and leave it a mental institution
I don't know I mean I had to I had to I last few months I was in the UK I felt so paranoid and
afraid because I just thought
I barely exist as a person
here. I exist only to get sued
and for the police to visit me.
You have to go over there to deal with the lawsuit? What if you
never want to go back? Well, you know.
Can you say fuck that place? No, because
I tell you what, it's such, I can't talk much about the case, but it's
going to, it's not going to go well for the police. And I'm hoping that it will
open up a lot of people's eyes. How good is your legal system over there? Is it rigged?
Well, this guy, as I say,
this kind of guy who's a sex offender,
he has been able to use the legal system
to harass his enemies
for about eight years, and no one
seems to be able to stop him.
You know, so it is what it is.
The whole play, but again,
it's because of the empty chair at the top,
because Kier Starmor is such a coward
and his labor MPs,
like one MP, David Lammy,
who's now the Foreign Secretary,
he thought men could grow a cervix.
There was another...
How did he think he think?
That was going to happen.
He said, I don't know much about it, but my understanding is trans women can grow a cervix.
What?
I know.
Boy, that would be an interesting paper that someone would write.
You don't know what I mean?
I can imagine if that could actually be done, which is probably going to happen within our lifetime maybe, but surely in the next 100 years, they're going to be able to artificially manipulate a person and actually turn a man or do a woman.
Yeah.
Probably.
Yeah, well, I mean
You probably only do it once
Like one way
You know, you can't go back
No detransitioners, yeah
But that's the position
A lot of these detransitioners are in
They're all, you know
They've been castrated
You know
And Richie Chulip who
Who said it was almost like a dream
He was just being
You know, he thought he was trans
People were telling him he was and so on
And he said he remembered
Just before the
Before the anesthetic took hold
He remembered just before he closed his eyes
He did this mistake
Oh, no. Oh, God. Oh, God.
Isn't it horrific?
He had to apologize to even more people than me
because he was a big trans activist
and he had to ring people up and apologize
for losing them their jobs and stuff like that, you know?
Oh, my God.
He's a really, really good bloke.
So, yeah, anyway, I can't remember how we go on to that.
Well, it's just the strangeness of our time
where this is a controversial thing to talk about
that this can get you in trouble
and that there's so many cowards out there
that don't recognize
that everything you're saying rings true
that they won't talk to you
cast you out of their social circle
won't support what you're saying
which super logical stuff
I have a therapist friend
Stella O'Malley
someone who has
been there for me throughout all of this
and she nearly lost her license
just for talking to me online
you know
I mean that's how bad it is
even in exchange
that's nothing to do with the subject
can be used as a
oh you know Graham Lennon
so they tried to take her license
she's one of the people who are actually
fighting the real fight
she's part of a group called Jen Speck
and they you know
they recognize it as a mental illness
and they try and treat it as gently
and
without harming the child as they can
you know and she's another person
who's been vilified and lost
opportunities, I'm sure, but, you know, if you're a parent and you're going through this stuff,
Genspect is the place to contact, you know, because they will show you how to deal with it properly.
I think for people in America to hear this is important because this is why the First Amendment
is so critical here. Your ability to express yourself is so critical. And this is why social
media can really help, because you can't just let people get destroyed for something they're
saying that makes total sense. You can't.
That doesn't make any sense, and you can't just stand oddly by and watch that happen and not open your mouth.
It's crazy.
That's how more of this is going to happen.
Yeah.
It's just a very bizarre time we're in right now.
I've never seen.
I mean, I've spoken to people, you know, in their 70s and 80s and said, have you ever seen anything like this?
You know, this level of confusion around an issue and threats and the press refusing to talk about it.
And have you ever seen anything like it?
And the answer is always no.
You know, it's been unprecedented.
And I think, you know, again, beyond the actual debate itself,
we really have to talk about the internet properly.
We've all just floated into this world that's totally different
where our every pronouncement is potentially political.
If you walk down the road and someone takes out of smartphone,
your life might be destroyed, you know?
And we've just accepted it.
We're just accepting it, you know.
There should be a little bit more thought around it.
There's a lot of thought.
but there's nothing to do.
It's the genie's out of the bottle,
and we're headed towards the cliff.
We're running.
We're a bunch of fucking buffalo
running towards the edge of the cliff.
There is no stopping technological innovation
at this point,
because it's of interest in national security.
You cannot stop the AI race
and allow China to achieve AI
before the United States does.
Whatever, they've achieved it.
But I mean, whatever we want to call super intelligence.
The arms race.
The AI arms race.
That thing is,
is happening whether you fucking like it or not.
Yeah.
At this point in time, I think anybody,
anybody rationally looking at this would accept that.
You know, my, another thing that happened to my kid's school,
my kid once came home to me and told me that,
he said, why am I studying?
I was like, what do you mean?
And he says, well, you know, society is going to,
and his teacher had been telling him the economics,
society was going to collapse in 20 years, you know?
And it's like, this kind of thing is not helping a young kid.
It's Al Gore talk.
Yeah, but it's also like.
It's Al Gore talk.
about the economy.
Sure.
Sure.
And also, we have no idea what the economy is going to look like in 10 years because the AI
is going to change that as well, you know?
A lot.
Yeah.
It's going to get super weird.
Yeah.
And whoever's in control of AI is the amount of power that those people, you think tech companies
have a lot of power now?
Oh, yeah.
Just wait until AI controls the entire government.
Oh, yesterday I had a conversation with perplexity, which is a part from this, a really
good platform, you know.
It has all the AIs in one search box so you can switch between models, you know.
I was arguing with, I've never argued with AI before, but I was actually having a full-blown
argument with it because it simply would not give me back the information I needed in a non-ideological
way, you know?
What was the question about?
I was looking into more history of what was known online about the con man who's come
after me.
And it's so different.
It's almost like he was, the AI was acting as his.
PR guy.
Really?
Yeah.
It was straight.
And it's because AI uses the information that's on the internet and the information
that's on the internet is information that this guy and a lot of trans-identified fellow
travelers who work in computers have managed to keep in the first few pages of the
internet, you know?
So it's really interesting.
I found that an interesting exchange because for once AI wasn't telling me how brilliant I
am.
But do you think that AI is?
in the infantile stages, like right now, it's in the adolescence of its, you know, understanding
of how people manipulate facts?
And would that be a hurdle that it can overcome?
Oh, that's interesting.
You know what I'm saying?
Could it recognize that the sources of these particular articles are very biased and leaning
towards this person because these people wrote it are trans activists and this and that?
And this is the understanding.
Yeah, I'm sure that could happen.
You're dealing with like a 13-year-old kid right now, whereas one day it's going to be a 50-year-old
professor. Sure. And it's going to be feeding not just off the information that's available on
the internet, which is, or freely available or conveniently available, it's going to be feeding
off much deeper. But I think there's things like... It's also going to be able to translate all
languages instantaneously. So it's going to be able to understand the Chinese understanding
of, you know, technological innovation in terms of their applications of electric vehicles and
stuff that they jump far ahead with. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's going to be able to understand
exactly how people are speaking in Russia, in Ukraine.
I already use it as a translator.
I put it between us and I say I'm going to be talking to a Spanish person in a few minutes.
Could you translate?
And it will just, everything said in English, it would say back in Spanish.
It's nuts.
Vice versa, yeah.
It's nuts.
It's great.
So good.
And you have to trust it.
It's literally a tower of babble in your pocket.
Did you hear they're communicating with each other?
Oh, yeah.
It's Sanskrit.
The owls thing?
Did you see they switched to Sanskrit?
No.
Yeah.
These AI systems are communicating with each other and they stop using English and switched to Sanskrit.
No.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
The one I heard.
They used emojis.
The one I heard was they got an AI obsessed with owls.
They fed it tons of information about owls, right?
And then they asked the AI to communicate with another AI using only numbers.
Okay.
So the AI used numbers to communicate with this other AI.
The other AI started getting obsessed with owls.
Oh, my God.
And there was nothing in the numbers that suggested to anyone outside of the conversation
that anything about owls was going down.
We're watching it become a thing.
We're watching it become a living thing.
Well, you know, you look back at all those science fiction films.
I remember I used to just enjoy them.
What's the one? Terminator, most famous one.
Oh, yeah.
And now you just think, holy shit, yeah.
we are in that. There's a very funny
cartoon of two robots
and they're about to kill someone and
once says to your
no, he said thank you
and you cut to an old AI chat conversation
and he's going thank you for the information
that you gave. He said thank you.
And that's what it feels like a little bit.
Wow. Yeah, well it's
something. I mean we're just
guessing as to what its physical form
is going to look like or what the results
what it's going to, what kind of effect
it's going to have on civilization.
It might not be negative.
It might not be.
It might be able to figure out an end to a lot of things.
Like, what if super intelligence figures out, like, a real clear equation of how to completely eliminate the idea of impoverished communities forever, forever.
Like, this is totally fixable.
Sure.
And starts allocating resources.
Crime drops radically.
People going to universities increase radically.
people that figure out things that they want to do with their life,
they're encouraged through a better school system that understands the human mind
because it's all run through AI instead of ideologically based by these people
that are professors, don't want to even teach it one way forever.
What if it figures out a better way to teach people?
What if it figures out jobs that human beings are capable of doing,
what are you interested in because AI can't do these things?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Because AI can do literally everything else.
There was an interesting, I see some people arguing,
about its use in creative work, you know.
But I find it really useful for bouncing ideas off
and stuff like that.
I enjoy it a lot, I enjoy using it.
It's like having a writing partner.
Right, right.
But I was watching a movie, I can't remember what was called.
Ray Liotto was in it and this actress, Jennifer or something.
But anyway, it was like a raunchy sex comedy,
probably the last raunchy sex comedy they made.
And there's a bit in it where she is talking
to the love interest of the film,
and she's being all sarky and coming up with these snappy put-downs, right?
It could have been written by AI.
It was written about 20 years ago, but it could have been written by AI.
So I think the people are really scared of AI are the people who write like AI, you know?
For sure.
Yeah, for sure.
If you're writing some CBS drama bullshit.
Generic bullshit.
Yeah.
If you write that, you're going to lose your job.
Those writers are going to lose their jobs.
But if you have a point of view, that's unique and interesting.
you'll never be in trouble, you know?
Well, also, I think people are always going to want to see, as a human being,
I want to see a thing made by a human being.
Yeah.
I still do, I always will.
Sure.
I want to see a frying pan that a human being forged, a real, you know, I'll buy a cast iron frying
pan.
I'll buy a hardwood cutting board that some guy made.
Yeah, sure, sure.
Like, I like stuff that people make.
Yeah.
I think that's important.
It makes me feel better.
Yeah.
You know, and there's going to be a lot of that stuff.
It's live performances are always going to be a thing.
People are always going to want to see bands live and comedians live.
You don't want to still see stuff.
People are still going to want to see musicals and see plays because there's a magic to live
performance.
Yeah.
But boy, the actual art of making a film, there's going to be an opening where a lot of
interesting creative minds, like some of these people that are making the funniest fucking
memes, you know, like, who made that?
Yeah, yeah.
They just, someone just showed up in my text message.
Yeah, yeah.
Somebody sent me a thing.
and I'm laughing at it.
I have no idea what the origin is.
Sure.
I have no idea what fucking nerdy genius was sitting at his community.
I don't know.
This is really funny.
I'll put Trump in the situation where it's a dildo in its hand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All of a sudden, everyone's laughing and everyone's passing it on.
So what about films?
What about some genius person who's kind of a little out there?
Can't figure out a way how to politically navigate Hollywood.
But they have these ideas for stories in their heads that are fucking wild.
And they sit down and they bang these things out.
The only thing, the only worry I have with it creatively is that sometimes the strictures around a thing are actually good, right?
Like, that's why I personally, I hope you, but personally I prefer Seinfeld to curb your enthusiasm because.
How dare you?
Because, because for me, the strictures they had under the studio system were so tight that their creativity came about and how they got around it.
So you had the famous masturbation episode and never mentioned a word.
Right, right, right.
Whereas once you lose those strictures, you can be a lot freer and sometimes messier and so on.
Now, with Kerb, Larry David did great, but someone who doesn't know the business or someone who doesn't know that, hey, not everyone who says this doesn't work hates your work and wants to destroy it.
It's actually because that bit doesn't work and you should change it.
You do sort of need people like that.
If my shows went out the way I originally wanted them, no one would watch them.
You know, because I would make bad decisions.
Well, that's why editors exist and when you're writing a book.
And I had this brilliant producer who we just wanted to be funny when we wrote Father Ted.
So our stuff was just really wild.
And we had this brilliant producer.
And we had Jeffrey Perkins's name was Lovely Man, who passed on a few years ago.
And we wanted this silly, stupid theme music because we were saying, no, we're making fun of sitcoms.
This is an anti-sicom, you know?
So we want this plinky-plunk stupid music.
and he looked really hurt
and he said
why do you want to make fun
of your characters
people will love these characters
and that was the moment
I realized
oh okay
not everything has to be funny
not everything has to be
all guns out
bam bam bam laugh laugh
right
a bit of heart
a bit of heart is good
a few other things
to keep people
you know
yeah
actually that's the other thing
I wanted to talk to you
about which was
which was news radio
because you
you of course
are a veteran of studio sitcoms
yeah
And you worked with Hartman, who, but the funny thing about when we were starting writing comedy is that we were hugely influenced by these DVDs of Saturday Night Live that would only show tiny clips of the people involved.
So we had the best of Phil Hartman, the best of this, the best of that.
And the best of Phil Hartman, we would just see these tiny moments out of much longer sketches because they couldn't afford to pay the star again.
So you'd just see these tiny moments.
And it's one of the funniest DVDs.
to love it.
He was great.
He was so good.
I'm so sorry that it happened to.
It was a terrible tragedy.
Our main actor and Father Ted, he died the day after the last episode was shot.
Oh, boy.
We had the rap party.
He went home, died the next day, you know.
And we were editing the show while he was dead.
So he was still alive in the show, and we were editing it, and he was gone.
It was the craziest thing, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I think that when I watch Phil on.
TV.
It's strange.
Well, someone said on the Simpsons team, they said they couldn't write the Lionel
Hutz characters and all the other characters he played when he died because they would
just hear his voice and it didn't sound right if it wasn't in his voice, you know?
It's a real sad.
Yeah, it was the saddest.
Yeah, the sketch I remember on Saturday Night was him reading the sex book by Madonna
as Charlton Heston.
I like my vagina.
It's so funny
He did a little stand-up
Did he?
Yeah, he would warm up the crowd sometimes
He had bits
Oh, okay
Yeah
They loved it when he would come out there too
And do it
He was such a loved guy
Yeah
Yeah, I bet
A professional too
Like made it all of us feel lazy
He would have like a clipboard
So he would take the script
Whenever he would get it
And he had a hole puncher
Tchonk
And he put it in like one of those
Folder boards
And he had tabs
for where his scenes were
and he'd open
like different colored tabs
for different scenes
and have notes written
on the script
I'm like Jesus bro
I believe that's what
Nicholson's like
on the set
he's like
yeah they wouldn't shoot
you know
when they shoot the other person
he wouldn't scarper
and go for lunch or something
he would stay there
and do the scene again
and someone said
why do you keep doing it
you don't have to do
every scene
when it's on people in the
in you know like a crowd scene
of the jury or something
And he said, you don't understand.
I love acting.
You know?
That's awesome.
Yeah.
Have you ever seen the video where he's getting warmed up for the scene and the shining
where he comes to the door with the axe?
That brilliant Kubrick documentary, yeah.
He works himself into a frenzy in the hotel room.
Yeah.
It wasn't a documentary, yeah, it was a documentary, right?
That's right.
That's right.
Arena, I think it was.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I always felt he was miscast in that, though, don't you?
Really?
Do you really?
Well, he was never the ordinary guy.
You're supposed to be possessed.
according to the Stephen King book.
Well, Stephen King thought that, but yeah.
Yeah, but if you just take the movie as...
Oh, it's an extraordinary piece of work.
I think there are two different things.
The Stephen King book is great, but the movie is so fucking good, man.
Yeah.
And Jack Nicholson plays a guy that's kind of barely keeping it together until he gets to the house,
which I like that version of the story.
The Stephen King one is very different.
The guy's not that fucked up.
He becomes way more fucked up as the book.
It's like...
It's a gradual...
He's very much an alcoholic in the book.
But he's not that violent and crazy.
Like, it takes a while to work him into that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so, yeah.
No, I love...
I love...
The thing about Kubrick that always confuses me, though,
was, you know the famous thing about him getting the two secretaries
to write out all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy?
Do you not know that?
Did he really do that?
He did this, yeah.
That huge pile was written by two, I think, secretaries.
So that huge pile was really all...
typed out by two women.
Yeah.
Why don't you have a fucking copier?
I know.
But it's because he felt...
Well, exactly.
But then, then, because that's like verisimilitude,
but then he shoots Vietnam on the London docks.
It's like, wait, you wait, these two women write out all work and no play,
and then you're shooting Vietnam and, you know, in London.
What movie was that?
He did that.
Full metal jacket.
Really?
Yeah.
He was scared of flying.
He was scared of flying.
He lived in the UK, and so he didn't want to fly.
So that's why it was shot there.
Wow.
Is that crazy?
That's crazy.
Yeah.
So, anyway.
That dude, he's a fascinating character, man.
Yeah, he was really interesting.
It was interesting.
It was quite sad.
Malcolm McDowell felt a bit betrayed by him when he finished
Cockwork Orange.
Why?
Because they had a very intense relationship as actor and director when they were
working on it.
And as soon as the film was over,
Cuber just lost interest, moved on.
and, you know, Malcolm McDowell was this young actor.
Oh, he wanted to be his friend?
Yeah, yeah.
Margaret Warren...
Oh, okay.
Oh, it was one woman.
Margaret Warrington to type it on each one of the 500 odd sheets in the stack.
What's more, he also had Warrington type up an equivalent number of manuscript pages in four languages,
French, German, Italian, Spanish for foreign releases of the film.
For these, he used idiomatic phrases with vaguely similar meanings.
Wow.
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
That was one of them.
Don't put off until tomorrow what you can do today.
The early bird gets the worm.
Even if you rise early, dawn will not come any sooner.
Wow.
You see, there's things I don't like about Kubrick.
I don't like that he did that to that moment.
That's nuts.
Why'd you do that to that lady?
It's a terrible waste of her time.
Yeah, yeah.
He had a grudge against her for sure.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a nutty thing.
But he was a nutty dude, man.
It's like all these weird symbolism that he'd put in his films and, like,
All the different things in the shining that lead people to believe it's some sort of an expose on the moon landing conspiracy.
Oh, really?
I didn't know that one.
There's so many wild things.
Because people knew that he had, like, symbolism in his films that was hidden.
And everything was very clever and layered.
There was so much stuff to it.
You know, I can't believe Stephen King didn't like The Shining, though.
To me, it's like, God, it's so great as a film.
I get it.
It's not what you wrote down.
Yeah.
But damn, that's good.
Yeah, no, it is a great adaptation, I would say.
It's so good.
It's such a good movie.
You just can't think of the first, where it came from.
You know, you can't think of the first story.
You've got to think of it as a whole.
It as a whole is amazing.
Oh, yeah.
I always felt, you know, when people adapt things,
if something doesn't work in the book,
I hate it when they bring it over to the film.
I mean, you know, people will, again, disagree with me,
but I hated the ending of No Country for Old Man.
Did you really?
Yeah, because you've got a whole film that sets up
the final battle between
what's his name, that main actor
who's great, I love him and everything,
and Banderas
or whoever did, it wasn't Banderas, who was it,
the guy who did the crazy guy, right?
The guy with the big...
Yes, Javier...
Javier, Wachie Wachgoyah.
How do he say his last name, Jamie?
Javier Bardem. That's him.
The whole film's been set up
as a showdown between these two guys.
Right.
And it happens off-screen.
It doesn't even happen off-screen.
He's killed by some random people.
And I get that he's saying violence is unexpected.
You can't defend yourself against it.
It's not something that has a neat story ending.
But I still didn't like it.
I want to see that showdown, you know.
But I know I'm missing the point.
I know what you're saying.
And I agree.
And yet I still love the movie.
Yeah.
Well, up until then.
Because it was so good.
I gave it a pass on the weirdness of the ending.
Yeah, yeah.
I get it.
Because it was so good.
It's amazing up until that point, I think.
Yeah.
I mean, the book is actually great as well.
The book is written just like that.
It's just someone's asked the Coen Brothers, how do you adapt a film?
And I think Joel said, Ethan holds the book open and I'm at the typewriter.
And basically they just write it out again.
Adapting film, I mean, what they've done, when you look at the course of their career,
so much of their stuff was so absurd but yet dead on, believable.
like ridiculous but still
I'm with this I believe it
and also the strange thing they did
in later films where it's almost like
they're creating a fake
Hollywood where Clark Gable plays
chain gang members
and Bogart is plays a barber
you know they they almost
created a sort of shadow
Hollywood
which I really love the you know the hudsooker
proxy which is basically a Preston
Sturge's film
with all the fast talking dames and all this sort of
stuff, you know, or Frank Capra.
No, not really Frank Capra, but Sturge and Billy Water and people like that.
And it's just great.
They just kind of, they love movies.
I've always, I've always, I've always, I've always adored them.
There's always going to be a place for that, right?
There's always going to be a place, no matter what happens with AI, I'm going to want to
know that some people made something.
Yeah.
Point of view.
That's the thing.
That's the thing human, AI can't give you.
There's going to be a bunch of people lying, too, saying that they didn't write it with
AI and then they definitely did.
There's going to be a lot of scandals.
There's going to be a lot of scandals.
Well, now they can find it out.
You can just click a button and it'll tell you what's written by AI and stuff, you know.
But that's only if you're lazy.
So that's if you're lazy if you copy and paste.
Yeah, you can put a bit of thought into it.
But if you just copy it, I bet it's not going to really know.
No.
It'll suspect you.
Like, how'd you learn how to write this good, you motherfucker?
I think that's what everybody's thinking now every time they read.
I have noticed that good writers are becoming better.
and brilliant writers are becoming incredible.
Well, it's a challenge.
There's a weirdness that's going to happen,
this uncanny valley of not going to be able,
you're not going to be able to tell in writing as well as in visual stuff.
But I think they're going to pass that real quick.
Yeah.
I think it's not just going to be that.
There's going to be another problem.
And the other problem is immersive experiences.
I think the moment they create a human neuro interface,
immersive experiences are going to be so difficult to walk away from.
If you think that you're addicted to your,
phone now, wait until you wear it on your head and it makes you orgasm.
For real.
Yeah, no, like that's coming.
All this stuff is coming.
You're going to be able to exist in a world that doesn't, that's not real.
And once they figure out how to get images in your mind that you can see, and they've already
started doing stuff like this.
This is very experimental in terms of shapes and showing people different things, so allowing
people to see things that aren't there.
So this is Pong, right?
Doot-Doot, do, do, do, do.
And now we have the Unreal Engine.
Which is insane, where you have
video games that look like real life, they look like
a movie. This is what's going to happen
with us, and it's going to be immersive.
Someone said an interesting thing.
Can you imagine being a schizophrenic
in these years? Oh, good point.
You know, because they used to say,
they used to say,
you know, oh, there's microbes
in my beard that are transmitting things.
to the government, you know,
you might be right.
Might be right.
Yeah, there's a chip in my head
and Elon Musk is talking to me.
Well, actually, to bring it back to my...
Couple people, maybe.
To bring it back to my talking,
my hobby horse,
I saw, there's a brilliant woman
who would be,
who you should definitely at least follow on Twitter.
Her name is Exulansic.
How do you spell that?
E-X-U-L-N-S-I-C.
And her name on Twitter, I think,
is TT Excellantic.
And all she does is she plays videos by trans men
who are talking about the medical complications.
And that's all they do,
and none of them seem to have any insight
into the fact that they didn't actually have to do any of this,
that they didn't have to get these procedures,
that they could be,
and all they do is they catalog the amount of time,
they have to keep going back into the hospital
to get something fixed.
Because there's no such thing.
as a successful trans surgery.
You know, there's people who are happy with it,
but that reminds me of something else.
I wanted to say one thing about Jazz Jennings.
But anyway, these girls, they just talk about their endless medical problems.
They don't seem to realize it's because of their trans identity, you know.
And there's one girl who appeared on, and my God, this really blew me away.
She, you know, she has the facial hair that comes with being a trans man and stuff.
And she's talking, it's actually one of the more recent ones.
You can actually show it.
It's short-ish.
But she's saying that one of the things that I didn't realize I'd be getting
is a bug paranoia.
Because she has all this facial hair growing in different parts of her body
that she didn't have before.
And she's feeling it itch and tickle at different in a way that she's not used to.
She's become convinced that there's a bug on her.
And you know the way most, you know, a lot of women are scared of bugs.
Can you imagine that?
Now you're in, you've put yourself into a situation
where you're going to have this bug feeling
for the rest of your life.
Do you know what I mean?
That's the least of your problems.
You can just shave your beard.
Well, yeah.
The problem is the beard is part of the identity, right?
These detransitioners.
Yeah, detransitioners.
I mean, you know, there's a lovely woman I know
in a Scottish woman who detransitioned, you know,
and she has to shave every day, you know.
She's just got a delicate woman's face.
She has to shave every day, you know.
And I've heard another, another,
There was another trans-identified person
who desisted, but they looked
like a balding middle-aged man,
you know, in their 20s, right?
But they've got rapid balding, whatever.
From taking testosterone?
From taking testosterone, yeah, you know.
And, oh, damn, I forgot what it was,
my point was going to be about that.
Sorry, sometimes there's so much stuff to say.
They de-transitioned.
They detransitioned.
Oh, yeah, I know what it was.
And she said that she, one thing she misses,
and she didn't realize she was saying goodbye to it
was the easy company of women
because women are guarded in her presence
and different because she looks like a man.
So she's lost that connection to women, you know?
There's so many awful things to this movement.
I could talk for another five hours
and never get to.
Do you feel like it's consuming your life?
Well, it had to in a way
because I wasn't allowed to do anything else.
I tried to do comedy.
They wouldn't let me.
I tried to...
I had this musical that would have.
It would have been my pension, as I say.
They wouldn't let me do it.
Would you say you try to do comedy?
You tried to do stand up?
Oh, no, I did stand up.
That was just for fun.
I did stand up for a while.
What would you mean?
You mean comedy sitcoms?
Yeah.
Your original work.
Yeah, I've basically been blacklisted, you know?
So, you know.
Because you'd be a great comic.
You'd be fun.
Oh, thank you.
I think you'd be great at it.
I did a bit of stand-up and I enjoyed it.
You got the mind for it, clearly.
I'm 57, you know.
I get it. So am I.
Yeah, but you have had a lot of, you've come up through the clubs and you've done your proper.
It's fun.
Yeah.
It's fun.
Maybe I'll keep doing it.
You'd figure it out easy.
Okay.
Yeah, you get the hang of it.
Yeah.
You get it.
Yeah.
Well, I did enjoy it.
It was nice.
The thing I don't, I find hard to get used to is saying the same thing as if I've just thought of it.
Right.
I like to.
You have to think about it.
It's a mindset.
Yeah.
So what you have to do is every time I think about, every time I'm talking about it,
thing. I just only think about that thing. I don't think, oh, my, I'm saying this again the
exact same way. I know how to say it, but what I'm thinking about is that thing, like genuinely
thinking about that thing. Right, right. So they know you're actually locked in. People can tell.
They can tell. Then you're saying the words but thinking about something else. They can tell.
There's a weird thing that's going on with comedy that's unaddressed. You can't measure it.
Can't put it on a scale. But there's a sense.
that people have that's not being addressed,
whatever it is, I don't think it's entirely visual,
I think there's a feeling, there's a vibe you get.
So you know when someone's not bullshitting,
and that's why comedy works.
And you miss that vibe on television, unfortunately.
It's weird.
Like, watching television stand-up comedy
is like 60% of the actual show, maybe 70%,
it's still great, you know,
when you get a chance to see someone like Dave Attell,
who maybe don't get a chance to see in the clubs,
you haven't been able to see them live.
Or Chappelle.
Yeah, or any of these guys.
It's great, but trust me, see him live and you'll be blown away.
It's like taking water out of your ears and now you can hear music.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You get the whole thing.
You get this thing that's going on where he's hypnotizing everybody.
Yeah, yeah.
I was looking enough to see Chappelle a few times in London, you know, and that was a treat.
Oh, that's great, too, because you've seen him in London, too.
You're seeing him in an arena, so you're seeing him, like, with that polished lockdown set.
I saw him both ways.
I saw him in a small secret club as well
because he was rehearsing his Saturday Night Live.
That was really special.
He's the best.
Such a good dude, too.
He did something I have not seen him do since,
which is one of the funniest things I've ever seen,
which was,
who's the Johnny Be Good guitarist?
Chuck Berry.
Chuck Berry sex tape.
Oh, yeah.
That's so funny.
When he says I didn't even know Chuck Berry was in it
until he appeared.
Oh, God, that was funny.
He's like, I love, I love him.
And he's been great throughout as well because he's been, he's been someone who says the same stuff in a very funny way and expresses like, you know, he was.
He's a very thoughtful person.
He's a very thoughtful person.
And he said that great thing where he said, I know trans rights activists make up words to win arguments.
And that's what it is.
You know, you call, if you start calling real women, cis women, then it's an easy way to dispeliorate.
barraged them and to put them off, you know what I mean?
So, yeah, anyway.
Is there a way to live a normal life for you right now?
I mean, you're on this battlefield, this constant, consistent battlefield.
I mean, you must, I'm going to ask before if you felt like you consumed you, but I mean, is there a way to...
Oh, no, well, I'm over here.
Transition with for lack of their terms to a healthy life.
Yeah.
No, I, I, Rob Schneider, who has just shown me incredible kindness.
and brought me over to work on a few projects for him.
Oh, that's great.
Something I always wanted to do anyway.
I've always enjoyed film rewrites and stuff like that, you know.
So, yeah, so that's going to, and that's helped me out because it's getting me, my visas
three years, and my aim is to become so useful to the Americans that they won't let me go, you know?
Well, hopefully this podcast will help me.
Hopefully, hopefully.
Hopefully people will realize how fucking nutty it is over there.
And this is what I was scared of over here when tech censorship was in full bloom.
When what, sorry?
Tech censorship.
Right.
Before Elon Musk bought Twitter, when people like Megan Murphy were banned for life, for saying a man can never be a woman.
I was banned for the same thing.
I said men aren't women, though, and she was banned for saying men aren't women.
Yeah.
Nuts.
Men aren't women, though.
Banned for life.
And because Twitter banned me, that was again reported in The Guardian, as if I've been harassing people.
Yes.
Twitter actually said he was misusing the platform.
and they never explained what that meant
you know misusing
so misusing but everyone just thinks
oh he was abusing people
yeah it's um
it's insidious
and it was
all encompassing
there was no social media
that was free of it
and the only places that were free of it
for me feels like they got attacked
and this is what I mean by that
like if you went over
to any of those alternative places
like gab or any of these
They were flooded with racism and xenophobia and homophobia and flooded in a way where I don't necessarily believe it's all organic.
I think it's a great way to sabotage a platform that might attract, like if you wanted to have a platform, if you wanted to, if you were running a platform and your platform is incredibly left wing, like fully censoring pertinent data.
that would help Trump or help the right-wing people,
if you were running that platform and also a new platform came about
and a bunch of people were talking about jumping ship,
how hard would it be to just sabotage that platform?
I guess.
And just start just the most horrible, racist things.
You say it over and over and over again, flood it.
Flood it with hate.
Flood it with terrible messages.
Flood it with disinformation and bad faith arguments and just outright lies.
You can do whatever you want.
If you have a good computer, you have a good computer crew that knows how to code things, you can use AI to push a specific narrative.
They've already done it.
Like people have done, they can crowdsource and attack on someone that's entirely bought created.
Why wouldn't you do that where there's a new social media platform?
So no social media platform got to exist that was free until Elon bought Twitter.
Because by that move, which a lot of people don't appreciate.
for how spectacular the result was.
What a big difference it made.
Oh, it changed my life.
Because no one, everyone was addicted to Twitter already.
Even the people that hated the idea that he was doing this.
And they were still going to use it.
They're addicted.
They're locked in.
So it's genius, really.
And then you let it go buck wild.
Yeah, yeah.
And you watch people just freak the fuck out.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, you know, I notice a few things on Twitter I don't like.
I notice a little bit of racism and all the usual.
You notice a lot of that.
There's a lot of that.
I don't know how much of it's organic, though.
Some of it for sure is.
Right, right.
I know what you're saying.
But I think there's a lot of fake arguments that are designed to keep people at each other's
throats and distract from the greater issues that we all have to deal with.
Yeah.
I think that's a real strategy that's being used not just by people in the United States,
but by people outside the United States on the United States.
But the funny thing about it is you almost don't need to sabotage something to that extent.
Because like if you were to destroy a country's ability to know right from wrong, truth from lies, all these things, what better way would there be of doing it than the trans movement where you can't even accept the evidence of your own eyes and say that's a man or that's a woman?
Like it is a destabilizing, it's destabilizing Western society, you know.
And I think it will, I think that type of thing could easily be weaponized against us.
Well, I think there's a certain value in destabilizing a certain amount of society.
You want to keep people weak.
You know, you want to make it so that a revolution is very difficult to obtain.
Yeah, you know James Lindsay's theory about, I find out a very compelling theory he said about what happened with,
Marxism and so on in the last 20, 30 years is that they gave up trying to persuade working class people to have a revolution because their lives were too good under capitalism, right?
No one wanted to be a revolutioner.
So what happened, he thinks, was that all these Marxists, all these left-wingers who really believed in the left-wing project or the communist project, whatever you want to call a socialist project,
They all started going into teaching and cultural places because they wanted to change of culture that way.
And it's been incredibly successful, if that is true, you know.
It makes sense.
Yeah.
Well, this is Yuri Besmanoff talked about that in the 1980s.
Right.
He talked about using that on the American people.
Yeah, yeah.
The work had already been done.
He was saying in the 1980s.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I think that's what Lindsay's.
That's what Lindsay says about.
There's a lot of people that think that.
There's a lot of people that have went through that university system and then came out on the other side and try to be independent thinkers and realize how easy they get attacked.
Yeah.
And they're just like, there's something going on here.
This is not logical.
I'm worried about my kids are going into university and half me wants to just protect them from it because, you know, like I know so many stories of people who went to university and came back with a trans identity, you know.
So, but, you know.
It's just easy to get indoctrinated in any kind of a group.
Yeah.
You know, it's when you're a young person, you can get sucked in.
Well, one of the big problems, I think, is that it feels to me,
I don't know if it feels like this to you,
but, you know, the 50s, they call it the invention of the teenager, right?
60s, 50s, 60s.
So we had the 50s, 60s.
Then the 70s, people started thinking of rock music as art and so on.
And it continued like that for a while,
and there was always a very, very healthy youth culture, right?
Bowie is a good example, okay?
All his fans would go out dressed like, you know,
in gendered-on-conforming ways, you know.
Now there's no figures like Bowie, you know.
What we have instead is a political ideology
instead of the old days where it used to be music, culture,
where you could take your personality and find your tribe
and throw yourself into a culture, right?
That doesn't seem to exist to the same extent that it did for kids.
It could be wrong, but it doesn't seem,
there doesn't seem to be like who, who's,
I believe recently, it was the first time in forever that,
I think the first time since there were charts maybe,
that there was no band in the charts, right?
No actual musical band.
It was all individuals, you know?
So, you know, the whole thing about bands,
about being in a gang, all that cool stuff, it's gone.
Do you think that's a side effect of social media?
Yeah, definitely, because why, you know.
Because you don't have to find your tribe
in like a physical form
where you all get together
and enjoy something together
you know like insane clown posse
they all go and they have
they're crazy
what does that call it again?
They get together
The Griff Gathering of the Juggaloos
The Juggaloos
That's it
Yeah they go crazy
They get together
They like they call it family
Like they feel like
They're around other misfits
and they feel great
And a lot
You know one thing I definitely want to make clear
is when I'm talking about
trans activists being evil and so on
I'm really not I'm not talking about all of them
You know, there's a lot of good people who are mixed up with this, and they see their trans friend, and they, their trans friend is lovely, and they want to protect them and think that, you know, people like me are hateful and will never accept them as human beings and so on.
That's not the case at all.
It's the ideology.
It's the ideology.
It's a lot of trans activists.
But as for trans people themselves, there's a whole range of different people with different opinions.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know.
In all walks of life.
But the problem with it as a movement is they want.
won't call out the bad actors, you know.
And they have to, if they're going to, basically,
my friend Artie Morty, who is a gay guy, Canadian gay guy,
you know, he says the only reason that gay rights got accepted
is because when Nambla, right,
the North American Man Boy Love Association,
and PIEE in the UK, the paedophile information exchange,
similar groups.
But like, I always thought pedophile information exchange,
they possibly shouldn't have called them,
themselves, the paedophile information exchange.
Well, man-boy love association isn't any better.
A bit of a giveaway, you know?
Yeah.
But anyway, these two organizations started to argue that pedophiles should be a protected
class just like, you know, gay people.
And gay people ejected them very loudly, very clearly, and said, we don't have anything
to do with that, you know?
And unfortunately, the same thing isn't happening at the moment.
There has to be a move from...
But that all happened before the internet.
Yeah, yeah.
I think that's what it is.
No, I think that's what it is, man.
I think it's just the fear of being attacked.
It's so strong for people that they just never man up, for lack of a better term.
But there is also a huge reluctance to, like one of the things, one of the reasons is ironic that I get called toxic is one of the very first things I did in this fight was I signed a letter to Stonewall, the big gay organization in the UK, asking them, could.
They recognize that there's a plurality of beliefs in this issue and could we all work together to reduce the toxicity, right?
So I signed this letter along with a bunch of other people.
They said no.
Within the day, they said no.
And cast us all as bigots again, you know?
So it's like there's a problem with legacy gay organizations.
They have to be ridded of all these people who can't answer biological questions, you know?
They have to be, because they're endangering the whole cause of gay rights.
Like however many years, what is it now, 60, 68, so 30, 55, over maybe 60 years of gay rights, okay?
And they're in danger of throwing it all away because of their sudden obsession about a bunch of straight people, you know, because most trans-identified men are straight, you know?
All these, all these trans men, these young girls going on to gay apps, they're straight.
They're straight women.
You know, it is bananas.
Well, listen, Graham, I'm sorry all this happened to you,
but I'm glad that we could have a place where you could tell your story
because your story is, it's very eye-opening.
And this is not what we'd want from a polite, respectable,
and even a progressive society, especially from a guy like you.
Oh, thank you.
I really appreciate it.
My pleasure.
I'm glad we got to do this.
Let's do it again in the future when you've won your court case.
I forgot to bring my book.
I got your book at home.
It's right by my bed.
I just started it.
Okay.
I appreciate you very much, man.
It's called Tough crowd.
Tough crowd.
Thank you.
You can get it on Amazon.
You can get the Kindle version of it.
You can get the version of it that has audio, audible.
Yeah.
There it is.
Oh, thank you.
I'm also on Twitter at Glinner.
I'd like to get back some of my 400,000 followers that I left.
How do you spend?
What is it?
Oh, G-L-I-N-N-E-R.
That's your Twitter.
That's my Twitter name as well.
Yeah.
Excellent.
All right.
Thanks, brother.
Appreciate you.
Thank you.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
Bye-bye.