The Tucker Carlson Show
Rupert Lowe Warns of the Globalist Agenda Destroying the West and the Revolution Soon to Come
05 Dec 2025
Chapter 1: What are the main issues with Britain's political system?
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Chapter 2: How does mass immigration affect the UK?
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Chapter 3: Should we be concerned about China's global influence?
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and Great Britain are very obvious, often remarked upon.
Chapter 4: Why is the UK sending financial aid to foreign countries?
But the one I notice the most is whenever you talk to people here, they say exactly what people in the U.S. say, which is nothing changes. It doesn't matter if you vote for Boris Johnson or Rishi Sunak or Keir Starmer. It was different parties.
Chapter 5: Can free speech in the UK be preserved?
Tory, Labour. Same result. What is that?
Well, I think, Tucker, it's basically it's our democracy has gone badly wrong. So what happened is we are the mother of all parliaments, and we effectively were the genesis of true democracy. I mean, forget the Greeks for now, but let's just say we are modern democracy.
Democracy at scale. Athenian democracy was tiny.
Yeah, but this is democracy at scale. But they had the right concept, I think, and there's some great philosophers from that era. But I think our parliament was structured so that you had MPs elected by the people, and they were effectively the people's representatives. So the job of parliament
was ultimately to put the interests of the British nation first, make decisions that was, first of all, and above everything else, in the interests of the nation. But at the same time, there were internal rivalries about regional interests. a competition between each of those MPs to try and do the best for their constituency as well. But most of them were in some way invested in Britain.
They were landowners, they were businessmen, they were peers, they were aristocrats. They actually had a big shareholding, if you like, in UK PLC. And, you know, I look at prime ministers like Lord Salisbury, and I look at, you know, men who made great decisions, and obviously we can talk about Churchill, we can talk about the great leaders, Maggie Thatcher, who I loved.
We can talk about great leaders, but I think what's gone badly wrong, and this is why...
I've set up a movement, not a party, to unite common sense thought and to allow those people who share the view you've just outlined, that it doesn't matter who you vote for, the smorgasbord of opportunities that you've got at the moment, whether it's the Tories, whether it's Labour, whether it's the Lib Dems, whether it's the Greens, whether it's the Scottish National Party, whoever, they're all part of this dying sort of remnant of what was Parliament.
So I think we've got to have some form of
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Chapter 6: What is the impact of multiculturalism on British identity?
But so I think we need the people
who ultimately care about the country to rise up now i don't think the way in which our government is structured is ever going to serve them well so all they will do is go around crying into their beer about the fact that they voted for as you say rishi sunak or they voted for kia starmer and they're all the same there's there's no real difference i don't think you're overstating it i mean look at their priorities they're both
totally disconnected. I'm an outsider, but I'm just watching this from thousands of miles away, but they seem totally disconnected from the actual country. What happens here? What it's like? What it looks like? Who lives here?
They don't seem interested at all. Well, I think what's happened is Parliament, as I say, whereas it was elected by the people and its interests were aligned with the people. Now, Parliament and the MPs, an MP earns about £92,000 a year, something like that. I actually give my salary to charity each month. I give it to a great Yarmouth charity. But I think a lot of the MPs need that money.
So they've become dependent on that. They've obviously got status as an MP. There's a lot of talk goes on in Parliament. There's a lot of video calls and meetings in room P and all sorts of stuff goes on and people feel important. But actually, are they delivering for the people? I would argue they're not. So I think we've got to have some form of massive change.
And I watch what's happening in the US, and I think we need some help from the US. I think what's happening with Donald Trump and with J.D. Vance and with Rubio, I mean, you've got some great people who are really trying to change the way things are going. I think I blame you partly for... infecting us with this DEI nonsense and all the other stuff that is seeping into the veins of Britain.
But I think you've realized that that's not the way forward. That's not how we're going to get the quality of life and the common sense and the logic and the fairness that we used to have. We've got to expunge all that. And the only way we're going to do that is by very strong people standing up and actually affecting change. And I, you know, I reflect on the U.S.
a lot because, as you probably know, that there was a man called John Lambert who played a part in the Civil War. Oliver Cromwell's one of my great historical heroes. Your Civil War. In the British Civil War. Yeah. He and Henry Arton, when Cromwell won the Civil War, He said, he always said, if I lose one battle, I lose my head. The king can lose a hundred battles and he keeps his.
Well, he didn't fortunately lose a battle and he won the Civil War. And then they had to work out how to govern. And this guy, John Lambert and Henry Arton wrote this thing
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Chapter 7: How is the current economic situation affecting British society?
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Your dogs, your cats, and your wallet will thank you. Do you remember this line from the night before Christmas? Quote, the children were nestled all snug in their beds while visions of sugar plums danced in their heads. the perfect winter slumber, but it's only possible if you can actually sleep. That's where Beam's Dream Powder comes in handy.
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You sleep through the night. And when you get up, you feel sharp, focused, and ready to dominate the day. It's already improved over 28 million nights of sleep. They've calculated it. And Christmas is the perfect time to try it. This winter, Beam is giving our listeners the Patriot discount. Visit shopbeam.com slash Tucker. Use the code Tucker and get up to 40% off Beam's Dream Powder.
But here's the catch. It's only available at this price until it sells out. Go to shopbeam.com slash Tucker. Use the code Tucker. We recommend it. One of the maybe the biggest factors scrambling every one of these calculations and eliminating the historical knowledge that you just displayed is mass migration. This is very true in the United States as well. It's not just here.
It's throughout the West. But what is that? That is the one thing that I notice as a foreigner coming here that does not change regardless of who's in power. is this constant churn in population, millions of new people. There's never been any indication that Native Britons want that. No Native Americans, no one in the United States wants that. We've gotten it anyway.
In my country, they used to say, we need to do this for economic reasons. We need the labor. They don't say that anymore. No one explains why this is happening. Why is it happening here? What's your guess?
Well, I think the essence of immigration is that targeted immigration is good. So if you have a leadership of the country that can identify where skills are short, and you can actually attract people who've got those skills who are gonna contribute to the economy and actually- We have no dentists.
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Chapter 8: What actions are needed to address the challenges facing Britain?
Have you committed a lot of atrocities in Mauritius? No. Why would you owe them billions of dollars? It's all about the Diego Garcia base. No, I know the actual story.
But the Chagossians, a lot of them live in Crawley here. So, you know, they didn't want the deal to happen. They basically don't like the Mauritians.
But if you take three steps back, why would you do that? You would only do that if you hate yourself. There's no potential for gain at all for you, your children, your country.
What is that? Well, I think a lot of them do dislike what Britain was. I think they have this sort of hatred of colonial Britain, which...
mean if you have a hatred of any form of colonialism you have to have a hatred of the belgian uh uh uh a sort of colonization of the congo empire or even france's occupation of of of north africa so well they still occupy africa to this day they do no no they do they do i i i yeah absolutely but i i think i think no i britain may have done some things that that weren't great but on the whole we've i think been a force for good
We've left sound legal systems in India. We've done good things, not bad things. We've voluntarily ended the slave trade. It actually cost us a lot of money. The British Navy was used to police the cessation of the slave trade. So I feel very proud of Britain. I love Britain. And I think these people, these human rights lawyers, I actually despise them, Tucker.
I think they're the enemy of Britain. And I don't understand what motivates them.
So that's it. It's clearly not a hatred of colonialism because Africa has been colonized at a scale never before seen by China. And they won't say a single word about that. I mean, colonialism will never end. The weak dominating the strong is just a feature of life. It's sad, but that's what it is. They're not mad about that. They're only mad about...
the west well in the end history will tell you that we always return to rail politic and rail politic is basically uh power power ultimately dictates what happens of course and as you say that's happening china is very cleverly positioning herself you know in countries which are struggling for money obviously in africa i mean her tentacles are going almost everywhere and you know i i think i think china
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