Kemi Badenoch
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, we do have a constitution. It is just uncodified. Right. And it is in our common law. We have these freedoms. We still do. What is happening is that we are increasing the scale of regulation that is limiting freedoms that are already there. The British common law system is amazing.
Well, we do have a constitution. It is just uncodified. Right. And it is in our common law. We have these freedoms. We still do. What is happening is that we are increasing the scale of regulation that is limiting freedoms that are already there. The British common law system is amazing.
Well, we do have a constitution. It is just uncodified. Right. And it is in our common law. We have these freedoms. We still do. What is happening is that we are increasing the scale of regulation that is limiting freedoms that are already there. The British common law system is amazing.
And it's about freedom unless it is explicitly said that you cannot do those things, which is very different from the Napoleonic system. We just need to rediscover these things. And that's why I talk about culture, that you need to understand your culture. You need to understand where these freedoms, these ideas, these institutions came from.
And it's about freedom unless it is explicitly said that you cannot do those things, which is very different from the Napoleonic system. We just need to rediscover these things. And that's why I talk about culture, that you need to understand your culture. You need to understand where these freedoms, these ideas, these institutions came from.
And it's about freedom unless it is explicitly said that you cannot do those things, which is very different from the Napoleonic system. We just need to rediscover these things. And that's why I talk about culture, that you need to understand your culture. You need to understand where these freedoms, these ideas, these institutions came from.
If you just believe that it's all the fruit of exploitation and it's just what bad people did and it's not real, we will lose all these things.
If you just believe that it's all the fruit of exploitation and it's just what bad people did and it's not real, we will lose all these things.
If you just believe that it's all the fruit of exploitation and it's just what bad people did and it's not real, we will lose all these things.
Well, I wouldn't call it a total change. I think that this is definite progress. But you can't assume all the battles have been won. You need a plan. You need to make sure that you're defending the turf that you have just or the ground that you have just gained. But I think Neil's use of the phrase vibe shift is more accurate. And that even just a shift in vibe can change things.
Well, I wouldn't call it a total change. I think that this is definite progress. But you can't assume all the battles have been won. You need a plan. You need to make sure that you're defending the turf that you have just or the ground that you have just gained. But I think Neil's use of the phrase vibe shift is more accurate. And that even just a shift in vibe can change things.
Well, I wouldn't call it a total change. I think that this is definite progress. But you can't assume all the battles have been won. You need a plan. You need to make sure that you're defending the turf that you have just or the ground that you have just gained. But I think Neil's use of the phrase vibe shift is more accurate. And that even just a shift in vibe can change things.
So it's not to be neglected. And You know, yesterday at dinner with JD, it was it was it was really fun. You know, we were there for for a few hours. And we were basically talking about the millennial experience. So I'm 1980. So I'm the end of Gen X and the beginning of millennials. And this is our time.
So it's not to be neglected. And You know, yesterday at dinner with JD, it was it was it was really fun. You know, we were there for for a few hours. And we were basically talking about the millennial experience. So I'm 1980. So I'm the end of Gen X and the beginning of millennials. And this is our time.
So it's not to be neglected. And You know, yesterday at dinner with JD, it was it was it was really fun. You know, we were there for for a few hours. And we were basically talking about the millennial experience. So I'm 1980. So I'm the end of Gen X and the beginning of millennials. And this is our time.
Well, I used to call myself Generation Y because I didn't know I was born in the 80s, but I didn't know which group I was in. And we are in charge now, like all over the world, people in their 40s are doing things. And I think it's taken people of our generation a long time to just accept that we are adults.
Well, I used to call myself Generation Y because I didn't know I was born in the 80s, but I didn't know which group I was in. And we are in charge now, like all over the world, people in their 40s are doing things. And I think it's taken people of our generation a long time to just accept that we are adults.
Well, I used to call myself Generation Y because I didn't know I was born in the 80s, but I didn't know which group I was in. And we are in charge now, like all over the world, people in their 40s are doing things. And I think it's taken people of our generation a long time to just accept that we are adults.
And that's something that I think is causing a lot of the infantilization of our societies and the lack of will and that moral courage to defend what is right. It's not our job. Where are our parents? They should do this. It must be somebody else's job. But it isn't. It's our job. So we had very interesting conversations about that.
And that's something that I think is causing a lot of the infantilization of our societies and the lack of will and that moral courage to defend what is right. It's not our job. Where are our parents? They should do this. It must be somebody else's job. But it isn't. It's our job. So we had very interesting conversations about that.