Great video analysis Morgoth, I have just finished reading Turchin's "End Times" in it, one of the conditions he gives for civil unrest and for revolution is "mass immiseration". When I first read the term, I couldn't help but think, that this could actually be the dictionary definition of the "Yookay". You ask in the video "what age are we now in?" well it is the age of mass immiseration, and we can only hope that Turchin is right and a revolution is on the way. Unfortunately the other condition he gives is that of "Elite Overproduction" we do indeed have a overproduction of politicians and bureaucrats, but I refuse to countenance them as "Elites" as they are so friggin useless.
Thanks again for the video, and the nod to shitty agency jobs, about 25 years ago I had more agency jobs than hot dinners.. :-)
The term Elite means those chosen by El or Al also known YAHWEH (YHWH), they are El-ected, S-el-ected ect. We don't need Elites we need Leaders and Rulers.
So the Word EL is another name for YAHWEH, (just in case I didn't make it clear for anyone else reading this), and this creature (I refuse to say God) is the Volcanic Creature that is shown in some art work of Ancient Israelites sacrificing both their own and their enemies children to said flames.
You won't find the Meanings written down anywhere but there are words that take the same sound or Syllables to pronounce said words.
Our English language must be purified from Latin and French influence as it carries connection to such words.
Here's a useful resource for searching the meaning of words:
Listening to it now. Betz is saying what I have been talking and writing about for over two decades. Not that I need any outside validation because I don't. Academics are usually late to the game...
Having grown up on a council estate in the South East a good few years ahead of you, I can somewhat relate to your perceptions of the north/south divide from the Midsomer era and I t’s interesting to hear such a different perspective on a period that holds only fond memories for me. Nonetheless, I think the UK is serving it’s intended purpose and, far from uniting four great nations, is successfully pushing power and agency further away from it’s people and into the hands of globalists for whom Brexit was little more than a bump in the road. The nation states are fading and long gone are the flags, identities, distinct cultures and traditions of the shires and counties.
I think the fond memories and nostalgia you’ve reminisced on in many of your essays and discussions speaks to the strong culture we share of a people who value their heritage and traditions and are naturally stoic and content. It is these characteristics that have made us vulnerable to these globalist parasites and allowed them to bring us to this place you call “Yookay” on our way to God knows where. But there is always hope for people with that strong sense of place and I believe that for you and I the answers lie in finding our way home to England via her common law constitution which still stands despite being shrouded by the bureaucracy of the socialist legal system. The communists won’t let go without a fight but that’s on them.
You’re right to highlight that the 50s and 60s weren’t all mini-skirts and blowjobs. Most folk back then had outside toilets and got the bus to work every day, all weathers. Anyone under 40 these days got driven to school!
The modern world has been equalised so everybody gets to deficate in a warm, dry, safe space. But this minimal comfort comes at a great cost.
I think the collective West will survive (perhaps not completely, but at least partially) the current onslaught; however, it will be brutal and a lot of people won't survive. What will be necessary in the aftermath of what is to come will be a harsh reckoning for the people who supported and enabled all of this to happen to us.
I'm so ignorant that it's taken me years to get there is a difference between England, Britain, and the UK. I hope you'll forgive us Americans, it's honestly not intentional. We are just woefully unexposed to some parts of British / European culture. I've taken it upon myself to keep learning and studying into adulthood but not everyone does that.
This is not intended to be rude or insulting, with that said I won't hold my punches, we are not the same and we have nothing Truly in common, the Pond we casually refer to as not such (I know you know this) but is in Truth and Ocean and therefore it is a Great Wall of sorts that separates us.
Because of this we Will drift away from each other Genetically given time, and as such we will become different peoples who will find it every harder to understand one another.
I say don't despair at this but be happy we can talk now with what little time one is given, but remember you will be needed to fight for your Own Folk and their Way of Life, and there Will Not be anyone else that will come to help.
I almost wish you didn't bring the Midsomer Murders to my attention lol. We're halfway through the season one, missus and I, since you posted the essay. Twenty five seasons to go! Much as you, I would probably have hated a show like that in my late teens or early twenties but now twenty odd years later I find watching it "soothing" :D And you are absolutely right about Cully / Laura Howard being hot!
I was relistening to this on my walk today and basically your reaction to Midsomer Murders is the "We are more similar than previously believed" meme. Here: https://postimg.cc/3dCpgKyG
My (working class) background in the South was different to yours but I remember the same feelings of envy or alienation from my own countrymen of different locales and classes (Howard's Way was particularly incendiary in my house). How naive and pointless it all seems now when faced with the real Other. These tiny gradations of difference are laughable.
This is still some of what motivates the pro-immigration views of those who live in Scotland or Wales or anywhere else that has so far escaped a lot of enrichment. They are playing out those old resentments towards the "English" or "those Southern bastards", or "farmers" or "Scousers" or all the other old battle lines that were familiar to us. Not realising we are in a completely new paradigm.
On a positive note, having personally been through front line experience of mass immigration, I now feel a deep love of my people - ALL my people. Yes even Tom and Jan Howard. This is something everyone will get to experience before this era if over. It will be transformational for the society that is to come.
I highly recommend that you listen to Louise Perry’s interview with University College London military historian who specialises in civil war, David Betz. He’s lectures advises governments on the causes of civil war and in no uncertain terms he believes it’s coming.
This is spot on. Living just outside of Bradford and having to drive in to the centre once or twice a day, I despair at what I see around me. City of Culture 2025, they call it. The city centre has been almost entirely pedestrianised over the past year, complete with bollards and huge chunks of rock where roads meet places where people might congregate (to deter cars from mowing down people, I am told by a high ranking council official - I kid you not). Most of the real estate is empty.
The local paper informs us that an application has recently been made to the council to install a 'space for unity, belonging and shared experiences' in front of City Hall. A 'series of arches are inspired by both City Hall and the original archways that surrounded the holy Mosque of Mecca, and bring together Western and Eastern architectural styles'.
On a Friday or Saturday evening at around 6pm, the streets are almost empty and there is a sense of unreality. And yet, there exist a small handful of (maybe three or four?) thriving pubs/speakeasys in the centre where our kind can relax and be temporarily transported back in time to a more authentic and wholesome period.
Yes there absolutely is. You recognise it in the body language. However, the fact that these few holdouts exist brings with it a certain tribal sense, akin to being part of an unspoken 'resistance'. What's also interesting is that two of these pubs are actually located underground in old cellars.
This chimes in nicely with what you were saying about there not being any satire about the current status quo, unlike in the 80's and 90's, in your previous video. It's as if everything is full steam ahead and it is not being recorded or documented for the masses, intentionally of course. It is Blair like in its attitude...something needs to be done and everything else is seen as getting in the way.
Oddly enough, I have started to write my first article and it is about my home town that I revisited last year after an 18 year hiatus. It is in North London and had two sides, coal fired power station, rubber factories and other noxious delights, intersected by a trunk road. On the other side is where the money used to be and still largely is. We used to call it the affluent side of the Borough, as opposed to the effluent industrial side where I lived.
If you, as a ruling class, can divide people to the point of individuality, then you take away their power. People are powerful when they can act along with others.
'JD Vance is perfectly clear on what America really thinks about us. We are no longer the continent of Shakespeare or Goethe, Churchill or Metternich – not even of JK Rowling. What interest international observers still take in our affairs revolves not around our constitutional or cultural strengths but our imminent collapse.'
'Yesterday a car was deliberately driven into a crowd of bystanders, injuring 30. Attacks of this nature – violent, random, nihilistic – have become commonplace, even mundane, in Europe; the identity of the alleged perpetrator (reported as a Afghan failed asylum seeker) grimly predictable even as the motive remains obscure.
That this particular attack received so much coverage reflected less the scale of the violence and more the location and timing: in the centre of Munich, a day before the Security Conference.
Perhaps it may have given some pause to the delegates of the liberal Western order, travelling to the city to discuss Europe’s external security threats, to be reminded in such a brutal fashion that the greatest danger to our civilisation operates within our borders. Or perhaps not: much easier to offer thoughts and prayers, and turn our eyes to the undoubtedly urgent questions of the future of Ukraine and Nato.
But one attendant – arguably the most important, and certainly the most closely-watched – did pay attention to the chaos on the intersection of Seidlstrasse.
As attendants waited for clarity on America’s new position on Russia, JD Vance railed against European complacency of a different kind: “why did this [attack] happen in the first place?” How much more blood must be spilt before “we change course, and take our shared civilisation in a new direction?”
It is hard to overstate the significance of a US Vice President attacking the suicidal immigration policy favoured by his country’s European allies. But Vance would go further: EU commissioners were rebuked as “commissars” unable or unwilling to recognise the importance of “democratic mandate”.
What little strained applause Vance had so far garnered from the audience retreated into a stunned silence. He went on. “The threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia. It’s not China, it’s not any other external actor. And what I worry about is the threat from within”.
In a phrase, Vance flipped the attention from abroad to home, laying the blame for our increasingly unstable and fractious world solely at the feet of our governing class.
European leaders responded to America’s populist turn with revulsion, accusing Trump of a form of democratic backsliding. What this meant, however, was always uncertain. Europe is no stranger to attempts to subvert or outright overrule democratic decision making: the success of the AfD in Thuringia provoked the co-chief of a rival political party to push to ban it, while a constitutional court in Romania recently cancelled a presidential election to prevent the expected victory of the hard-Right Calin Georgescu.
Our own country is no better. We shared a populist moment with the US in 2016 with the success of the Brexit referendum. Our political class, like their Atlantic counterparts, responded not with introspection but in the spirit of shameless reaction, demanding a second referendum in order to obtain a better result.
Each social ill – and the subsequent reaction from voters – can be dismissed by invoking the magic word of “disinformation”. Feverish conspiracism over foreign intervention, be that Kremlin-controlled “bots” or Elon Musk’s dastardly algorithms, can be engaged with in polite company with hardly a raised eyebrow. We have wilfully blinded ourselves to our own insanity.
JD Vance is perfectly clear on what America really thinks about us. We are no longer the continent of Shakespeare or Goethe, Churchill or Metternich – not even of JK Rowling. What interest international observers still take in our affairs revolves not around our constitutional or cultural strengths but our imminent collapse.
We are a continent that jails protestors for praying outside of abortion clinics, systemically downplays the mass rape of women and children for the sake of upholding “community relations”, and terrorises our own citizens for daring to insult politicians on the internet. Europe is the birthplace of liberalism; it seems only right that it dies here, too.
Our reactionary order does not understand that nations that have betrayed their own people are not worth defending. Expecting Europeans to fight against Putin’s tyrannical regime as our own civil liberties are wantonly cut away is as delusional as demanding that America continue to play the role of global policeman against the wishes of its voters. JD Vance has given our leaders a brutal wake-up call: change now, or be replaced.'
'JD Vance is right: the anti-democratic West is no longer worth defending
Europe is the birthplace of liberalism; it seems only right that it dies here, too'
Great video analysis Morgoth, I have just finished reading Turchin's "End Times" in it, one of the conditions he gives for civil unrest and for revolution is "mass immiseration". When I first read the term, I couldn't help but think, that this could actually be the dictionary definition of the "Yookay". You ask in the video "what age are we now in?" well it is the age of mass immiseration, and we can only hope that Turchin is right and a revolution is on the way. Unfortunately the other condition he gives is that of "Elite Overproduction" we do indeed have a overproduction of politicians and bureaucrats, but I refuse to countenance them as "Elites" as they are so friggin useless.
Thanks again for the video, and the nod to shitty agency jobs, about 25 years ago I had more agency jobs than hot dinners.. :-)
I think it's time I read Turchin.
First half of the book is good stuff, after that I felt a lot of it was sort of "State the Obviousness" but overall good stuff.
The term Elite means those chosen by El or Al also known YAHWEH (YHWH), they are El-ected, S-el-ected ect. We don't need Elites we need Leaders and Rulers.
I didn’t that, interesting.
So the Word EL is another name for YAHWEH, (just in case I didn't make it clear for anyone else reading this), and this creature (I refuse to say God) is the Volcanic Creature that is shown in some art work of Ancient Israelites sacrificing both their own and their enemies children to said flames.
You won't find the Meanings written down anywhere but there are words that take the same sound or Syllables to pronounce said words.
Our English language must be purified from Latin and French influence as it carries connection to such words.
Here's a useful resource for searching the meaning of words:
https://www.etymonline.com
Just watched this over on YouTube. Someone in the comments referenced this podcast with David Betz - https://www.louiseperry.co.uk/p/the-coming-british-civil-war-david
Betz says all the ingredients are coalescing for a conflagration. It really is an important listen for all of us.
I watched it, and I'm still mulling it over. I'm amazed she posted that on YouTube to be honest.
Glad you have listened. I'm amazed that Betz still has a job at KCL.
It's a white pill.
Listening to it now. Betz is saying what I have been talking and writing about for over two decades. Not that I need any outside validation because I don't. Academics are usually late to the game...
Here is a link to the paper on 'Feral Cities' from 2003: https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review/vol56/iss4/8/
Having grown up on a council estate in the South East a good few years ahead of you, I can somewhat relate to your perceptions of the north/south divide from the Midsomer era and I t’s interesting to hear such a different perspective on a period that holds only fond memories for me. Nonetheless, I think the UK is serving it’s intended purpose and, far from uniting four great nations, is successfully pushing power and agency further away from it’s people and into the hands of globalists for whom Brexit was little more than a bump in the road. The nation states are fading and long gone are the flags, identities, distinct cultures and traditions of the shires and counties.
I think the fond memories and nostalgia you’ve reminisced on in many of your essays and discussions speaks to the strong culture we share of a people who value their heritage and traditions and are naturally stoic and content. It is these characteristics that have made us vulnerable to these globalist parasites and allowed them to bring us to this place you call “Yookay” on our way to God knows where. But there is always hope for people with that strong sense of place and I believe that for you and I the answers lie in finding our way home to England via her common law constitution which still stands despite being shrouded by the bureaucracy of the socialist legal system. The communists won’t let go without a fight but that’s on them.
Recently I've been watching Billy Moore's All of Nothing channel on YT. Couldn't get much further from Merry England if you tried.
What's been done to the British Isles is a tragedy.
Great vid, and quintessentially Morgothian.
You’re right to highlight that the 50s and 60s weren’t all mini-skirts and blowjobs. Most folk back then had outside toilets and got the bus to work every day, all weathers. Anyone under 40 these days got driven to school!
The modern world has been equalised so everybody gets to deficate in a warm, dry, safe space. But this minimal comfort comes at a great cost.
I think the collective West will survive (perhaps not completely, but at least partially) the current onslaught; however, it will be brutal and a lot of people won't survive. What will be necessary in the aftermath of what is to come will be a harsh reckoning for the people who supported and enabled all of this to happen to us.
I'm so ignorant that it's taken me years to get there is a difference between England, Britain, and the UK. I hope you'll forgive us Americans, it's honestly not intentional. We are just woefully unexposed to some parts of British / European culture. I've taken it upon myself to keep learning and studying into adulthood but not everyone does that.
This is not intended to be rude or insulting, with that said I won't hold my punches, we are not the same and we have nothing Truly in common, the Pond we casually refer to as not such (I know you know this) but is in Truth and Ocean and therefore it is a Great Wall of sorts that separates us.
Because of this we Will drift away from each other Genetically given time, and as such we will become different peoples who will find it every harder to understand one another.
I say don't despair at this but be happy we can talk now with what little time one is given, but remember you will be needed to fight for your Own Folk and their Way of Life, and there Will Not be anyone else that will come to help.
Glory to the Dead
Honor to the Living
Fame for the Folk
Gods blessings be with you.
The Yookay vs Clarkson's Farm
How man divn’t knock Killy flats!
Hahaha
I almost wish you didn't bring the Midsomer Murders to my attention lol. We're halfway through the season one, missus and I, since you posted the essay. Twenty five seasons to go! Much as you, I would probably have hated a show like that in my late teens or early twenties but now twenty odd years later I find watching it "soothing" :D And you are absolutely right about Cully / Laura Howard being hot!
I was relistening to this on my walk today and basically your reaction to Midsomer Murders is the "We are more similar than previously believed" meme. Here: https://postimg.cc/3dCpgKyG
My (working class) background in the South was different to yours but I remember the same feelings of envy or alienation from my own countrymen of different locales and classes (Howard's Way was particularly incendiary in my house). How naive and pointless it all seems now when faced with the real Other. These tiny gradations of difference are laughable.
This is still some of what motivates the pro-immigration views of those who live in Scotland or Wales or anywhere else that has so far escaped a lot of enrichment. They are playing out those old resentments towards the "English" or "those Southern bastards", or "farmers" or "Scousers" or all the other old battle lines that were familiar to us. Not realising we are in a completely new paradigm.
On a positive note, having personally been through front line experience of mass immigration, I now feel a deep love of my people - ALL my people. Yes even Tom and Jan Howard. This is something everyone will get to experience before this era if over. It will be transformational for the society that is to come.
"The men of my own stock,
Bitter bad they may be,
But, at least, they hear the things I hear,
And see the things I see;
And whatever I think of them and their likes
They think of the likes of me."
Accurate as always Morgoth.
I highly recommend that you listen to Louise Perry’s interview with University College London military historian who specialises in civil war, David Betz. He’s lectures advises governments on the causes of civil war and in no uncertain terms he believes it’s coming.
I did listen to it, I was amazed she got away with that on YouTube to be honest.
This is spot on. Living just outside of Bradford and having to drive in to the centre once or twice a day, I despair at what I see around me. City of Culture 2025, they call it. The city centre has been almost entirely pedestrianised over the past year, complete with bollards and huge chunks of rock where roads meet places where people might congregate (to deter cars from mowing down people, I am told by a high ranking council official - I kid you not). Most of the real estate is empty.
The local paper informs us that an application has recently been made to the council to install a 'space for unity, belonging and shared experiences' in front of City Hall. A 'series of arches are inspired by both City Hall and the original archways that surrounded the holy Mosque of Mecca, and bring together Western and Eastern architectural styles'.
On a Friday or Saturday evening at around 6pm, the streets are almost empty and there is a sense of unreality. And yet, there exist a small handful of (maybe three or four?) thriving pubs/speakeasys in the centre where our kind can relax and be temporarily transported back in time to a more authentic and wholesome period.
Is there a sense of being under siege in the pubs? Does it affect the atmosphere?
Yes there absolutely is. You recognise it in the body language. However, the fact that these few holdouts exist brings with it a certain tribal sense, akin to being part of an unspoken 'resistance'. What's also interesting is that two of these pubs are actually located underground in old cellars.
Thanks.
This chimes in nicely with what you were saying about there not being any satire about the current status quo, unlike in the 80's and 90's, in your previous video. It's as if everything is full steam ahead and it is not being recorded or documented for the masses, intentionally of course. It is Blair like in its attitude...something needs to be done and everything else is seen as getting in the way.
Oddly enough, I have started to write my first article and it is about my home town that I revisited last year after an 18 year hiatus. It is in North London and had two sides, coal fired power station, rubber factories and other noxious delights, intersected by a trunk road. On the other side is where the money used to be and still largely is. We used to call it the affluent side of the Borough, as opposed to the effluent industrial side where I lived.
If you, as a ruling class, can divide people to the point of individuality, then you take away their power. People are powerful when they can act along with others.
A worthwhile opinion piece from the Daily Telegraph:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/2025/02/14/jd-vance-is-right-the-west-isnt-worth-defending/
'JD Vance is perfectly clear on what America really thinks about us. We are no longer the continent of Shakespeare or Goethe, Churchill or Metternich – not even of JK Rowling. What interest international observers still take in our affairs revolves not around our constitutional or cultural strengths but our imminent collapse.'
And I think collapse is now unavoidable.
Any chance you could copy and paste the whole article here in the comments, Joel?
'Yesterday a car was deliberately driven into a crowd of bystanders, injuring 30. Attacks of this nature – violent, random, nihilistic – have become commonplace, even mundane, in Europe; the identity of the alleged perpetrator (reported as a Afghan failed asylum seeker) grimly predictable even as the motive remains obscure.
That this particular attack received so much coverage reflected less the scale of the violence and more the location and timing: in the centre of Munich, a day before the Security Conference.
Perhaps it may have given some pause to the delegates of the liberal Western order, travelling to the city to discuss Europe’s external security threats, to be reminded in such a brutal fashion that the greatest danger to our civilisation operates within our borders. Or perhaps not: much easier to offer thoughts and prayers, and turn our eyes to the undoubtedly urgent questions of the future of Ukraine and Nato.
But one attendant – arguably the most important, and certainly the most closely-watched – did pay attention to the chaos on the intersection of Seidlstrasse.
As attendants waited for clarity on America’s new position on Russia, JD Vance railed against European complacency of a different kind: “why did this [attack] happen in the first place?” How much more blood must be spilt before “we change course, and take our shared civilisation in a new direction?”
It is hard to overstate the significance of a US Vice President attacking the suicidal immigration policy favoured by his country’s European allies. But Vance would go further: EU commissioners were rebuked as “commissars” unable or unwilling to recognise the importance of “democratic mandate”.
What little strained applause Vance had so far garnered from the audience retreated into a stunned silence. He went on. “The threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia. It’s not China, it’s not any other external actor. And what I worry about is the threat from within”.
In a phrase, Vance flipped the attention from abroad to home, laying the blame for our increasingly unstable and fractious world solely at the feet of our governing class.
European leaders responded to America’s populist turn with revulsion, accusing Trump of a form of democratic backsliding. What this meant, however, was always uncertain. Europe is no stranger to attempts to subvert or outright overrule democratic decision making: the success of the AfD in Thuringia provoked the co-chief of a rival political party to push to ban it, while a constitutional court in Romania recently cancelled a presidential election to prevent the expected victory of the hard-Right Calin Georgescu.
Our own country is no better. We shared a populist moment with the US in 2016 with the success of the Brexit referendum. Our political class, like their Atlantic counterparts, responded not with introspection but in the spirit of shameless reaction, demanding a second referendum in order to obtain a better result.
Each social ill – and the subsequent reaction from voters – can be dismissed by invoking the magic word of “disinformation”. Feverish conspiracism over foreign intervention, be that Kremlin-controlled “bots” or Elon Musk’s dastardly algorithms, can be engaged with in polite company with hardly a raised eyebrow. We have wilfully blinded ourselves to our own insanity.
JD Vance is perfectly clear on what America really thinks about us. We are no longer the continent of Shakespeare or Goethe, Churchill or Metternich – not even of JK Rowling. What interest international observers still take in our affairs revolves not around our constitutional or cultural strengths but our imminent collapse.
We are a continent that jails protestors for praying outside of abortion clinics, systemically downplays the mass rape of women and children for the sake of upholding “community relations”, and terrorises our own citizens for daring to insult politicians on the internet. Europe is the birthplace of liberalism; it seems only right that it dies here, too.
Our reactionary order does not understand that nations that have betrayed their own people are not worth defending. Expecting Europeans to fight against Putin’s tyrannical regime as our own civil liberties are wantonly cut away is as delusional as demanding that America continue to play the role of global policeman against the wishes of its voters. JD Vance has given our leaders a brutal wake-up call: change now, or be replaced.'
'JD Vance is right: the anti-democratic West is no longer worth defending
Europe is the birthplace of liberalism; it seems only right that it dies here, too'