Buck Brief - Why Do Democrats Coddle Islamic Terrorists?

3/12/202624 mincomplete
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3:05You're listening to the Buck Sexton Show podcast.
3:07Make sure you subscribe to the podcast on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get
3:12your podcasts. Okay, so in New York City, there's an anti -Islamic terrorism protest, and
3:21Islamic terrorists show up, throw a bomb at people, and the big problem that our
3:27media seems to have is with the protesters, who they say said mean things.
3:32They said the mean things.
3:33Okay, what's really going on here?
3:35First time on the show, Jade Warwick joins us, cultural warrior, Western political commentator.
3:40You see her on Newsmax.
3:41You see her all over the place online.
3:43Jade, welcome, welcome. So, you know, you can also bring the British perspective to this
3:49a little bit because you guys have your own Islamo -fascist issues to unspool.
3:57But let's just start with this one.
3:59When you see that a lot of people in this country, in the media, immediately
4:03jump to the conclusion that the biggest problem isn't the bomb throwers, but the people
4:08who said the mean things, does that surprise you?
4:13Um, no, they're just becoming like the United Kingdom.
4:17You know, everyone has white guilt and colonizer guilt, and that is the seed of
4:21the problem, I believe. So, they, like, go into that a little bit more, though.
4:27So, in the UK, I know that there's, first of all, you don't really have
4:32free speech, right? So, people, let me ask you, are these videos where you see
4:37people getting arrested for posting on Facebook, like, we've let too many Islamic radicals into
4:42the country, or whatever. Those are real, right?
4:45These people are actually being arrested by sort of meek -sounding, but authoritarian in their
4:51intention, police officers? Yeah, so it's around 12 ,000 Brits per year are arrested for
4:59their online speech. And there are several UK laws that restrict free speech, one being
5:06the Terrorism Act of 2000 and 2006, the Radical and Religious Hatred Act of 2006,
5:13Online Safety Act 2023, that's a recent one, Malicious Communications Act of 1988, Communications Act
5:20of 2003, and the Public Orders Act of 1986.
5:241880s. Now, those are all anti -speech.
5:27They restrict. And the only legal protections for speech are the Human Rights Act of
5:341998 and Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which is not absolute,
5:40and the restrictions outweigh the protections.
5:44Yes, that seems to be the case when you have people who are getting in
5:48trouble and getting sent to prison even for Facebook posts.
5:51Facebook posts that aren't calling for violence or anything like that.
5:54They're just saying things that are naughty under the UK framework of you can't offend
6:01some people. I'm sure you could say, has anyone in the UK been arrested for,
6:05you know, white people are terrible and need to apologize always and forever for their
6:11terribleness? Like, you can say that, right?
6:13You just, you can't talk about Muslims.
6:14You can't talk about non -white people in any context whatsoever, or else you can
6:18be arrested. Yes, well, nationalism, especially white nationalism, is classed as a far -right extremist
6:27movement and actually is under the PREVENT Act in the United Kingdom.
6:32So if you speak out about white replacement or being pro -Western, pro -white, you're
6:39actually considered a terrorist in the UK.
6:41And, you know, I live in America now, so I often speak out against these,
6:46you know, communication acts. And I'm very pro -Western, and if it wasn't for being
6:53an American, being protected by the Constitution, if I went back to the UK, they
6:57would arrest me. If I lived in the UK, I'd be in prison now.
7:02That's astonishing. Have you by any chance seen, you might appreciate this even if you
7:06haven't seen it, Have you seen the, I think it's Apple TV made it, but
7:10Slow Horses about MI5? It's a series about the, you know, British MI5.
7:16So that doesn't really matter, but what does matter is, in the first season, the
7:21bad guys are, no surprise, white nationalists in the UK who capture and then threaten
7:31to behead a brown guy.
7:34Which, has that ever happened to the United Kingdom?
7:37Have they ever actually, I know it's happened the other way, we've seen the videos,
7:40but I thought that was fascinating that the main bad guy that MI5 has to
7:44deal with in this, you know, hugely expensive, Gary Olsen is in it, you know,
7:48the sort of top, not Hollywood production, but, you know, top sort of media, cultural
7:52production, are a group called the Sons of Albion.
7:56And they're like a bunch of British guys who talk like this, and they're like,
7:59I, get out of my country, I'm like really stupid and bigoted, and that's, that's
8:05the bad guy. Isn't that pretty, and they do cut someone's head off, by the
8:08way, spoiler alert, they actually do cut someone's head off.
8:11So, yeah, you're, I'm like, that seems a little bit weird to me.
8:15I haven't seen those videos before.
8:18Never heard of that. I have seen plenty of ISIS beheading videos.
8:22Yeah. Islamic extremists and jihadis beheading white people, and Brits, actually.
8:28No, so that absolutely makes no sense.
8:30But if it's a BBC production, then it is state -funded by the government.
8:34You gotta look at who runs the government.
8:37That's the question. Is the BBC as awful in the British context as CNN is
8:43in America? Like, did you see this thing where we had CNN here about this
8:47terror attack that just happened?
8:48Now, the bomb didn't go off, but it had shrapnel packed into it.
8:52I mean, they were trying to kill people, right?
8:54They just weren't good at making a bomb, thankfully.
8:56It had TATP, which is a homemade peroxide -based explosive.
9:00So they really were trying to kill people.
9:03And the biggest outrage that I've seen is the lack from people on the Democrat
9:09side, the lack of calling out the mean words by the protesters.
9:15I don't even know what they were saying, other than we think there are too
9:17many Islamic radicals. No one ever stops for the irony as well of, there's a
9:21protest about too many Islamic radicals, and Islamic radicals show up to blow them up.
9:26That seems to be kind of a self -fulfilling prophecy, right?
9:30It's ironic, but I mean, the left, the extreme left, are always going to make
9:34excuses for them. So we just have to ignore them and focus on what we
9:39can do to change it.
9:41But, you know, regarding calling them naughty words, Britain has set a new definition for
9:48anti -Muslim hostility. So it further restricts your free speech.
9:52And so basically the UK government has defined it as prejudice, hatred or bigotry directed
9:59at individuals or groups based on their Muslim identity.
10:02So if you go out and you say, hey, the British Grape Gang inquiry is
10:08horrendous and the majority of the perpetrators were Muslims from Pakistan, you could get in
10:15trouble for that. You might even get arrested.
10:17And it is problematic because the wording is so vague of this new law, because
10:23political Islamist figures and jihadis are also Muslim.
10:27So they could argue in a complaint to the police that what you said online
10:32offends them and you can get arrested.
10:34So, yeah, I'd have to wonder, like, if I'm a British citizen and people are
10:38saying, well, this is Britain.
10:39Yeah, but America, Britain, there's a lot of cultural crossover similarity.
10:44Our closest ally, really, or maybe Canada and Britain together.
10:48And you sit here and you say, if this is happening there, it can obviously
10:50happen here. I think it's.
10:52There are some similar restrictions that are certainly in place in Canada for things like
10:57the trans community. Like you can't miss, as a matter of law, you can't use
11:00the wrong pronouns. You get in trouble in Canada.
11:03So there's some similarity there.
11:05Actually, I want to ask you about the, I guess, the Rotherham case, which I
11:11think far more Americans should know about this because it shows the extent to which
11:15the left -wing mentality in Britain, in America, when it comes to non -white immigrant
11:24groups, the extent that they're willing to go to cover up something that's going on.
11:30And so we'll talk about that in a second.
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12:35All right, Jade, again, I know that some of the, I mean, mostly U .S.
12:41audience obviously listening to this show, they'll be familiar with the Rotherham case somewhat, but
12:46I think that people aren't familiar with the fact that there were, I don't like
12:49this term grooming gang. I think that that is a euphemism.
12:54These were systematic rape gangs of, in many cases, prepubescent or just basically 12, 13
13:04-year -old girls in that age range, incredibly young, obviously incredibly immoral and illegal, you
13:13know, illegal in the U .K., illegal in the United States, and a heinous crime,
13:19and the part, there's that part of it, but then the authorities didn't want to
13:23touch this. Children are being systematically, and this was over a course of years, right?
13:28I mean, can you give a little background on just what happened?
13:30Because I think it goes to the extent of how much people are willing to
13:35lie on the left in order to promote this DEI, open borders, diversity is our
13:41strength narrative. Yes, of course.
13:45It's a horrendous case. It's actually a group of cases.
13:48Some of them go back to the 50s and 60s, and the girls were as
13:52young as six or seven years old, in some cases.
13:55Those are not higher reportings, because we focus more on the modern cases.
14:01So we have areas in the United Kingdom where we have an influx of refugees,
14:06asylum seekers, immigrants. They have not integrated, and they've set up grooming gangs.
14:12I don't like that term either, but that's what the government goes with.
14:14I think they're, I mean, just to be clear, to me, they're rape gangs.
14:17That's what, these are rape gangs.
14:18They're raping little children. Keep going.
14:21Yes. No, that's exactly right.
14:24And what we look at with the rape gang inquiry is, we'll change it to
14:30rape gang inquiry now, because we're going to set the new tone.
14:33There were systemic and institutional failures.
14:37So the police and the authorities were aware of what was going on, and they
14:42were aware of who the perpetrators were.
14:44However, they were mainly Muslims, mainly Pakistanis.
14:49And there's a long history of, you know, racism in the UK, the van guys
14:54being like, oh, it's the Pakis, and that's sort of like an N -word there.
14:58So the authorities and the police didn't want to investigate it and brushed it under
15:03the rug because they didn't want to be called racist.
15:06They feared those accusations because being called racist is worse than raping a child.
15:14Unbelievable. And the police reports and the court transcripts that I've seen are quite clear
15:22that there were, within the chain of command of the police, just so everyone's clear,
15:26there were always these concerns of, well, you know, what are we going to, we
15:30can't really let the public get a hold of the fact that these are hundreds
15:34of Pakistani origin men who have come to the UK who are violating, who are
15:41raping hundreds, I think it was actually thousands of, when they add up all these
15:47cases, right? It's in the thousands of young British girls, I mean, truly girls who
15:53are very, very young, 10, 11, 12, 13 years old.
15:56And the kind of thing that an America, honestly, would get, if people heard about
16:00that sort of thing, you'd see a lot of conversation online about, you know, we
16:04need to have the death penalty for people that commit these kinds of crimes against
16:07children. I mean, the level of outrage would be and should be extreme.
16:11And in the UK, people were, cops were covering this up.
16:16Where does this stand with the inquiry now?
16:18Are there any concerns? conservatives uh in parliament who have any backbone to really get
16:23into this and and show the british people and really the whole western world that
16:28this sort of thing does still shock the conscience in a way that government action
16:33will come from it i mean where does that stand um so there was the
16:38attempt to re -inquire into the rape gang grooming scandal um it was voted down
16:45in parliament so what that means is the left and the right all vote in
16:49one big room they're screaming at each other and the labor party who are the
16:54liberal democrats they voted against re -inquiring and doing a deeper search into this scandal
17:02um again because they didn't want to be seen as racist so they have let
17:06down the victims and the victims families time and time again i don't think the
17:12government wants to look into this at all it's astonishing you know there's so much
17:17outrage outrage in this country and right again rightly so about the epstein cover -up
17:23this stuff that the number the cases in rotherham because a police turned a blind
17:29eye to it it was hundreds of men it was incredibly young girls it was
17:34systematic it was violent when you read these trends honestly the transcripts turn your stomach
17:38what these guys were doing to these young girls i can't believe that there's not
17:43people out in the streets i mean just everyday brits out in the streets with
17:48placards demanding justice i mean i'll see people in the streets with placards demanding more
17:54you know muslim immigration to the uk but i won't see anyone demanding justice for
17:58this so there was a unite the kingdom march last year and there will be
18:03another one i believe in a month um led by tommy robinson and a bunch
18:08of people like katie hopkins and it is a anti -immigration pro western march so
18:14we kind of use that as an umbrella march an umbrella protest so there were
18:20a lot of people at that the attendance on it was i just would note
18:22see i don't even know but do you think that that was covered in american
18:25and like the sort of traditional american media here of course not they're they're not
18:29you think cnn was like the british people rising up in in defense of their
18:33borders and their sovereignty no that didn't happen um in fact the bbc as they
18:40always do lied about the numbers i was there i actually got extracted by my
18:46security team when the pro -palestinian um rioters were breaking down the backstage area so
18:52my security guard took me through um the main crowd and he's fantastic will get
18:57us definitely have him on your show in the future um i think he was
19:01on megan kelly actually recently um but we were walking through these crowds and i
19:06could tell you millions i believe there are around two to three million people marching
19:10well i i'm happy to hear that there is at least some awakening in the
19:16uk about what is going on culturally in that country and i think it's it's
19:21happened here too thanks to trump and maga um but it's interesting to see how
19:26on the islamic terrorism issue specifically the left in this country is still they're really
19:32on there i mean whether it's hamas that the left has never the american left
19:35the democrat party has never seen an allahu akbar i'm gonna go blow myself or
19:40other people or both up terrorists that they didn't have some feelings of warmth towards
19:46so it's uh something very very troubling to see our sponsor here is pure talk
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20:21your wireless to pure talk jade before we let you go what's your background because
20:25your first time a lot of people listening to you and seeing you here uh
20:29will i think be coming across your analysis you are a culture warrior and political
20:34commentator but uh how'd you get into this and what should people know about about
20:39the warwick report um well thank you for having me on again this has been
20:44really fun um i'm from the uk and from wales i left school at 16
20:48i'm just a regular person um started modeling ended up getting signed in america been
20:54here for 10 years just became a citizen and i decided to speak out against
21:00the hypocrisies and controversies in the united kingdom because from the us and with my
21:06protections under the constitution i'm one of the very few people who can raise awareness
21:11without going to prison for it um so that's what i do i like to
21:15promote pro -western values and um yeah bring certain stories to light that mainstream media
21:21will refuse to cover go check out the warwick report and jade great to have
21:27you we'll talk to you again soon thank you so much do you know pure
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21:59Hi, it's Kristen Davis from R U A Charlotte podcast.
22:03I just had the most epic girls day cruising around LA with my friend Heather
22:08Graham. And thanks to Hyundai, we even recorded a special episode for you.
22:12Sex in the City got me into Magnolia Bakery cupcakes, which I'm obsessed with.
22:17The last time we did a Hyundai film, we went to the Magnolia and we
22:20sat on the bench. My new episode is out now, presented by the all new
22:25Hyundai Palisade Hybrid. Make every day epic.
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