James Holland
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You know, you need to be able to see the writing on the wall. You can't be complacent. You know, complacency is such a dirty word, isn't it? You know, you've got to keep your wits and you can't take things for granted. You've got to recognize, I think, that the freedoms we enjoy in the West are...
You know, you need to be able to see the writing on the wall. You can't be complacent. You know, complacency is such a dirty word, isn't it? You know, you've got to keep your wits and you can't take things for granted. You've got to recognize, I think, that the freedoms we enjoy in the West are...
You need to be able to see the writing on the wall.
You can't be complacent.
Complacency is such a dirty word, isn't it?
You've got to keep your wits and you can't take things for granted.
You've got to recognize, I think, that the freedoms we enjoy in the West are
They're not necessarily permanent and you need to make the most of them while you've got them and cherish them and consider what happens if the milk turns sour and what the consequences of that are.
They're not necessarily permanent, and you need to make the most of them while you've got them and cherish them and consider what happens if the milk turns sour and what the consequences of that are.
They're not necessarily permanent, and you need to make the most of them while you've got them and cherish them and consider what happens if the milk turns sour and what the consequences of that are.
They're not necessarily permanent, and you need to make the most of them while you've got them and cherish them and consider what happens if the milk turns sour and what the consequences of that are.
I mean, that's the overriding thing, because although I don't think there'll ever be a war on the scale of the Second World War, you've only got to look at pictures of those opening days of the war in Ukraine and see sort of knocked out Russian tanks and dead bodies, bloated bodies all over the place, put that into black and white. And, you know, it could be the road out of Falaise in 1944.
I mean, that's the overriding thing, because although I don't think there'll ever be a war on the scale of the Second World War, you've only got to look at pictures of those opening days of the war in Ukraine and see sort of knocked out Russian tanks and dead bodies, bloated bodies all over the place, put that into black and white. And, you know, it could be the road out of Falaise in 1944.
I mean, that's the overriding thing, because although I don't think there'll ever be a war on the scale of the Second World War, you've only got to look at pictures of those opening days of the war in Ukraine and see sort of knocked out Russian tanks and dead bodies, bloated bodies all over the place, put that into black and white. And, you know, it could be the road out of Falaise in 1944.
I mean, that's the overriding thing because although I don't think there'll ever be a war on the scale of the Second World War, you've only got to look at pictures of those opening days of the war in Ukraine and see sort of knocked out Russian tanks and
dead bodies, bloated bodies all over the place, put that into black and white.
And, you know, it could be the road out of Falaise in 1944.
It could be, you know, any number of German battlefields in World War II.
It could be, you know, any number of German battlefields in World War II. And the similarities and the trenches and the kind of people hiding in foxholes and, you know, that's horribly reminiscent, as are the huge casualties that they're suffering on both sides, whether they be Russian or Ukrainian. And, you know, it's a shock. It's a shock to see that.
It could be, you know, any number of German battlefields in World War II. And the similarities and the trenches and the kind of people hiding in foxholes and, you know, that's horribly reminiscent, as are the huge casualties that they're suffering on both sides, whether they be Russian or Ukrainian. And, you know, it's a shock. It's a shock to see that.