This video examines how Britain's social housing system allocates public resources to foreign-born individuals, including African royalty and other non-citizens, raising questions about whether social housing should be reserved for citizens and how the system may inadvertently support individuals who are not productive members of society.
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So, we're going to come back to Britain now because uh like like we were talking about earlier um for some reason we are just battery farming foreigners in Britain. Uh as migration watch here point out London social housing is essentially a way for Britain's government to subsidize the mass migration of foreigners who aren't productive enough to support themselves.
I mean and this is genuinely quite mad.
16,000 social homes in Westminster occupied by foreignb born lead tenants.
I mean, the fact that like there are 26,811 social housing tenants in Westminster, you would think is quite mad. So, for anyone who doesn't know, that's the very heart of the British government. That's the very seat of it. So, why would you have social housing there of all places anyway? GDP, I guess.
>> I I don't know. There's a number of um homeless and drug hosts right based right around Parliament. It's >> just what I mean, of all the places to have them, why there? I mean, >> well, I I guess >> MPs should be exposed to some of that, but I mean, it did make me uh you there is quite a cluster.
>> Yeah.
>> I mean, of rehabilitation centers and homeless um shelters for people with uh various social problems.
>> Yeah.
>> The other place down there is obviously the House of Commons. That's a place for people with various social problems.
>> And 60% of those are literal immigrants.
Um so I was I was thinking about this like okay well this is very very strange because I mean in London itself uh 46% of all social housing goes to people who are literally born outside of the UK cuz London has the largest number of immigrants per capita in any place in the Britain. And it's just crazy how like for the entire city we're just just half of the people we're keeping alive on state benefits are just born overseas. Like what what's the point of this? But then I was thinking, okay, well, who are these people? And actually, they're kind of weird because like this is obviously not going to be representative of all of them, but we have a surprising number of African kings on social housing in Britain. Now, I would have thought one would have been too many, but actually there's something of a pattern going on. Right now, I'm not, like I said, I'm not saying they're all African kings, but we do have some, right? I mean, we've got Sierra Leone's first lady who is in she has a social house in London.
Her name's Fatima Bio, right? She came from Sierra Leone uh when she was a girl, lived in social housing, then ended up marrying um what's his name? uh Julius Bio who is now the the president of Sierra Leone and she currently lives in the presidential palace of Sierra Leone but she also has a council house uh council flat in Southwalk where she keeps her children so she lives in the Sierra Leone.
>> You mean you mean Suk don't you?
>> I don't I'm not from London.
>> It's pronounced Suk. Even I know that.
I'm I'm sure it is but I'm >> I think you need to get out of Swindon more often.
>> I I get out of Swindon a lot.
>> I just don't go to London. Mayfield is looking good. Um, but isn't that interesting? In Suk, she's got a council flat there that she keeps her children in rather than having them live in the presidential palace in Sierra Leone, >> a country run by her partner, >> which is which she doesn't think's fit for her children somehow.
>> Somehow, >> have you considered that London sad indictment?
>> London is far more uh diverse, dare I say, than Sierra Leone property. So, she's trying to enrich them. You know, I didn't look up the demographics of Sierra Leone. They might actually >> I bet I bet they're pretty monochromatic there.
>> That's probably true. But isn't that just remarkable? Like, yeah, you know, you've got to live in a council flat in London while I live in a presidential palace with my husband in as the ruler of a foreign country. Like, that is remarkable. Is it is that is this almost the hypocrisy of Dian Abbott who opposed private schools but sent her own children to them because nothing's black mothers will do anything for their children. Apparently they will.
>> This is just standard delegation as far as I'm concerned.
>> Yeah, but I just >> I've got better things to be doing than dealing with you off to London.
>> Okay, Mom. Can't like the nurse the the the nannies look after me in the presidential palace though? Like they've got like palm trees behind >> qualify for a council flat. Well, well, that's the So, they they qualified.
>> They got the color swap out presumably.
That's that's all you need.
>> No, no, no. She qualified when she was young, right? Because she came over when she was a girl. Um, and they've just kept the council house ever since. It's like, but surely there should be a thing. It's like, okay, now you're a multi-millionaire first lady.
>> Give you leave the ladder for someone else to climb up.
>> Well, exactly. Yeah. Should you not relinquish the council flat when you've become successful? Like >> are London trying to sell this as like a council success story?
>> Uh kind of. Yeah, actually. They kind of are.
>> Oh, rags to riches.
>> Yeah, it literally is. And don't get me wrong, I'm glad she's married the president of Sierra Leone, but uh I think someone else could.
>> Can we have the flat back then?
>> Yeah, exactly. You can afford your own flat in London at this point. Um but she's she's of course not the only person and at least she began in the rags, right? She she didn't begin as a a ruler of an African nation. Um, what's weird though is you've got highly Salassie's grandson is in social housing in London in the aisle of dogs. I'm pronouncing that right? Right. Um, Zera Jacob Salassie is the new hereditary emperor of Ethiopia. This was in 1997, so it's a while back now. But, uh, but he lives in a tatty two-story house surrounded by council estates. He had gone to Eaton, Oxford, and Sandhurst, but had not worked in Britain since completing his education. According to family sources, his income is modest. He appears to depend on supporters of the imperial family. Uh but since but his succession to the Ethiopian throne depends on him being able to preside over his father's burial that US immigration authorities were refusing a visa to go. So I guess he's not actually the emperor of Ethiopia anymore. Um but he was but he would have been in 1997 but instead he was living in Britain in a council house. So we got a long tradition of um housing. This here here is the council house >> revealed preference there.
Yeah, it's just very weird, isn't it?
Like this.
>> Yeah, >> it doesn't look like a bad place to me.
>> No, no, I'm sure it's fine if you're a normal person in prison, but like you're the real emperor of Ethiopia. What are you doing here? But it's not just Ethiopia. There are many nations in Africa. Um, what about uh >> I thought it was a country.
>> Well, okay. Country.
>> See, it's the oldest uh Christian country.
>> I meant Africa.
>> Uh oh. Well, uh, yes. But anyway, Rwanda, the new king of Rwanda is, uh, currently here. Well, this was again in 2017, but, um, this is Emmanuel Bushi, who's the nephew of the late King Kilgi, uh, named as King Yui the 6th, uh, by Kilgeli's chief courtier. The Rwanda family was, uh, exiled in 1961.
When he was a baby, he was schooled in Uganda. Uh he ended up working for Pepsi, moved back to Rwanda in 1994 before relocating to the UK in 2000. And so he now he lived in >> qualifying for a council house.
>> He lived in a council house near Old Trafford. Uh it's like, oh, okay, great.
Why why why do we have African emperors council house?
>> He could afford his own house.
>> Well, I mean, apparently not. I I guess when uh the Republican revolution took place in Rwanda, uh they probably just appropriated his wealth. So, you know, probably not. But, um yeah, so he then he lived in a terrorist house uh in uh well Valley. So, isn't that interesting?
Just like like we for some reason are just keeping all of these African uh kings and queens uh happy here.
>> I like to think >> maybe they're old friends of the establishment. Maybe they did favors, you know. I don't know.
>> But you think they give him somewhere better than a council house?
>> Well, he seems happy enough.
>> He seems one in the island dogs opposite the Cutty Start looked look quite desirable.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Old Trafford's not such a bad place, Carl. Perhaps he'll come up to Macka and do a bit.
>> He like He might like the football.
>> Bakerfield. Um anyway, the next one is this. No, no, honestly though, I'm I'm consider I'm considering like if if there was some 4D chess being played here, if we were still a real country, we'd just be keeping these guys in our pocket so that we'd have men on the inside when we recolonize.
>> Now, that that would be a smart play, right? We've got literally like a Pavli situation where we've got, you know, No, no, we know who we're going to put in when uh we finally retake the empire.
Yeah. But, you know, that's not going to happen.
>> No, this is just this is just weird. No, they instead of instead of keeping these as useful agents of the empire, no, they're just dependent.
>> Why is this bloke's beard ginger?
>> Great question. Great question.
>> Is this something to do with like just like Muhammad was ginger, so I'm going to dye my beard ginger?
>> I don't know if his beard is dyed ginger or not, but what this is is uh I think he's dyed it.
>> It might be, it might not. I don't know.
Abdul Kadir Mumin, who is an Islamic state leader in Somalia. Uh obviously he lived here in a council house obviously and with his wife smile.
>> It's like Wolfie Smith and the people's popular front isn't it? Uh you know the revolution starts here to think.
>> Yeah. Uh but he he he married a Somalian woman in Britain. So she was British Somalian. Uh and he has three children.
Uh and then he decided I'm going to go to Somalia to lead the Islamic State revolution there and abandon my children. So she uh Muna Abdul uh as a boy and two girls and she's just like he doesn't contact us. We've not heard from him like and apparently uh he reemerged in Somalia in 2016 in a video where he was burning his British passport and dedicating his life to Jihad which brilliant. I'm so glad that we're keeping these people in our country. She lives in a two-bedroom council flat in slow now. So amazing. Why are these people here? Why are any of these people here? What are we doing? Like this is bizarre. Isn't next one. Hamas fugitive living in a council house in London.
Like why are we doing this? Muhammad Kasim Salwalla, a Hamas terrorist who ran operations in the West Bank, is enjoying life in a British state funed home in the London burough of Barnett.
Why? Only a 10-minute drive from the nearest synagogue. Perhaps they're hoping for some kind of conversion.
>> Well, what's Yeah, I I don't know what's going on there, but Baret houses 1 of all British Jews. This is a Jewish area of London >> and somehow >> they're hoping for an assimilation success story with this one, boys.
>> Thing is, it's this kind of like, oh yeah, I was uh, you know, I was Hamas out in Palestine and I was attacking the Israelis all the time and I had to flee and I fled to London. Where'd I go?
Jews. The Jewish b. The Jewish burough.
It's like there's an irony there. It's like a a comedy. It's a big practical joke or explain therapy, >> but it it just he he recently purchased his council property under the right to buy scheme.
>> So, it's been renting for a long time >> since 2003.
And then he qualifies for right to buy.
So, he got Β£112,000 discount on his council house so he could >> a bargain.
>> I But isn't that people should own their own homes? Yeah. Hamas terrorists should own their own bloody homes. Like, what are we doing? Why are these people here?
I >> I think we're just looking at a multiculturalism success story, Carl. I don't know what there is to complain about.
>> Unironically, that's what they think.
This is, as far as they're concerned, this is what the right to buy scheme is for, to allow this guy to buy his council property. But it's just mad, isn't it? Like going back to uh um Trevor Phillips, what Brit what Restore Britain wants to do. Um we we want to get rid of people who hate us.
>> You don't think this guy's a net tax contributor?
>> Yeah. Yeah. Weirdly, I just >> Where did the Β£112,000?
>> Well, it was a discount.
>> Discount. Where where did the money come from to buy the flat?
>> I I like to think that he's become a a well-loved member of the local Jewish community >> and that they just like all all gave him some of the money. They all pulled it together. So, they we really like you, Abdul. So, you know, come on in. We welcome. And they pull little practical jokes on one another. like they got him a pager for Christmas and he was laughing it up and and he goes in, he hands him a parachute and they're all like yucking it up. It's great time.
>> But lit literally like why why were we just paying for this guy called Abdul Khadim Mumin to live in our country? Why were we paying for this guy to live in our country? Why are we paying for any of these things? Like this all on social.
>> Can you think of a country you could go to?
>> No.
>> Where they'd sort of take you in, give you a four-star hotel?
>> No. I I can't allow me to live in social housing.
>> Pocket money and move you to the front of their public services queue.
>> Maybe Canada.
>> I can't think of anywhere.
>> No. And it it's ridiculous, right? And so it's it's just preposterous. And yet we keep doing it. It's this really weird pathological need to help people no matter how ridiculous they are and no matter how much they hate us or hate everyone else or whoever, you know, dispossessed kings or whatever. But there is one uh there's a a chap who's a a north service uh a housing service officer in North London uh called sorry what was his name? Um oh uh oh this is the chap. This is the highly salassy guy. Sorry I thought this was a different chap.
>> Wait wait wait. This guy's considered a godlike deity by the Rastafarian.
>> Yeah it's a bit of an issue right? Bit of an issue but at least at least he is actually working as a housing officer.
>> He's contributing.
>> He's got a job, right? He's handing out social housing to other royal members >> like moldy man >> which actually seems to be the case.
Yes, that actually seems to be his job.
>> We've found the root of the problem.
This guy >> it's so >> proved >> proved it. But it's so funny. It's like you know Yeah. Yeah. We were originally part of the Oxomite Empire which became the Ethan Ethiopian Empire. It's one of the longest running empires in history.
And now I am stamping approval rating approvals for social housing. But no, the the Rastapharian thing was actually a bit of an issue, right? So in Jamaica, they had a kind of um uh sort of cargo cult to the Ethiopian king. Now, I mean, you see the Ethiopian king, he's not really like he's not a subsire African like he's not >> I mean I mean this is quite a um quite a dignified figure right here. This this is what like an African dictator should like just like properly regailed, properly dressed. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. But but he's not >> Well, Ethiopia was never taken into anybody's sort of uh colony. Exactly.
One of the very few independent African >> I think it's the only one actually.
>> Maybe the end.
>> Um but the but the point is he's he was worshiped as a godlike deity by the Rastafaras cuz these are um subsaran Africans who just see the word African and think okay yeah that's us. Um but he was actually a devout Christian. So when he visited Jamaica, he refused to get off the plane because he was like, "I'm not having them worship me as a god.
Jesus is God."
>> Oh, fair play.
>> It's blasphemy.
>> Exactly. It was genuinely blasphemous.
So >> Mr. Trump's done a bit of that recently.
>> Well, sure. Sure. But um but anyway, I just thought this was really weird because this just keeps happening that we have this and uh we probably shouldn't. We probably shouldn't.
>> Are you saying no more kings?
>> Sorry, I've got a bit of cough. No, I'm saying no more social housing for people bought outside of the UK. I am absolutely sick of it, man.
>> I'm kind of willing to make an exception for for random African kings cuz I just think it's the drip.
>> It's just funny.
>> We just keep them around like like a like a court would have an exotic foreign >> like a collection.
>> Yeah. A collection of exotic foreigners at court so that you're able to show them off to your friends. I want an a council estate full of random exotic royal ma royal families from Africa.
>> All right, I'll allow it. I'll allow it for >> none of the rest of them.
>> Social housing for African royalty and no one else.
>> There you go.
>> Do we have to Hamas terrorist, though?
>> I mean, he seems like a very valued member of the local Jewish community.
You don't want to rip him apart, do you?
>> That's true. He's enriching them, isn't he? Sure.
>> He certainly is.
>> Yeah. Um, Mandine says, "During the next Unite, Britain, uh, restore should organize a huge fun raiser to benefit a cause related to the negative impacts of mass immigration. This would be good publicity." Um, yeah. Well, I I I do think having some sort of charitable cause would be a good thing actually.
you're at the United Kingdom rally. So, um, you know, it'd be nice to have a charitable cause to do it for, you know, I mean, >> I mean, the the the left are great at forming charitable causes to push their own agenda and having huge patrons who will just throw money at people promoting and pushing their agenda. The right tends to have a problem with people who are rich who go who like tweet saying two thumbs up to this and then don't actually put any money where their mouth is.
>> Well, the the right doesn't have any NOS's at all. And it's like okay, but where where can billionaires sort of as a tax relief send a bunch of money on the right and the answer is nowhere. And so we're like why don't we have any infrastructure? Why don't we have any permanent activist class? It's like cuz we don't have any NOS's and there's no opportunity for the billionaires to give us any money. you know, we need to set some stuff up. Let's go. Let's let's let's go.
>> As we've seen in America, I mean, the it was a it was a circular >> Oh, yeah. You the billionaires give money to the prescribed NOS's and then they get their firms get contracts with the Biden government and it it just keeps going round and and they also donate to the Democrats as well. So, I mean, >> that works, but they also get their agenda implemented as they're get as that money is circulating through. So, um, we need to find some, uh, some way outside of just purely politicking through parliament and electoral politics. We need to find some way of getting our agenda through.
>> But there there would be loads of really worthy right-wing causes that we could set up NGOs's for. I mean, one of the uh things that >> that would require state intervention effectively and then it wouldn't be a right-wing cause anymore because most of mine I don't want state intervention. I want to let people get on with their lives and run their their own affairs.
It doesn't have to be state intervention. It it could be um like someone like Elon Musk donating to like the Pen Dragon Foundation to save a particular castle or something like that. So that you know, no state intervention needs to be done.
>> The Pen Pen Dragon, as far as I know, I've spoken to them. They're not involved with the government at all.
They're just a private charitable or organization doing something really cool and really valuable as far as preserving British culture and taking it to taking it into the future. I mean one particular example in Swindon is the mechanics institute which was purchased and was like the the person who purchased it wanted to rec mechanics institute for anyone who doesn't know it's basically the the place where the NHS came from now whether you love the NHS or not it is a venerable British institution and many people do genuinely love it and so actually honoring the origins of it it's in the mechanics institute in Swindon uh which was a a private charitable trust that was done by the railway workers in order to make sure that they could provide healthcare to anyone of the railway workers who became sick. Very good idea. The building is currently rotting just over there and it's honestly >> heartbre I'm thinking of a fire in there just the other day. Yeah, it's a nice building but you can see it's just dilapidated. It's boarded up at the moment and it's a gorgeous building and if we had like a right-wing charitable trust and a friendly billionaire, oh yeah, I'd like to preserve that piece of your history. I mean I you could turn it into just a beautiful museum building or a library or something like that, right?
and you could do something genuinely beautiful with it. And yet, at the moment, it's currently rotting because the council won't give them permission to make it into a nightclub. And so, this is what a right-wing uh NGO could actually do is get money from billionaires and say, "Okay, look, we're going to restore this building and have it as a library or whatever, you know, something public that whatever." You know, that's that there is like an opening for like a right-wing cultural preservation ecosystem that billionaires could then put their money into. So, it's a tax write off, so you'd have to pay tax on it and that would actually do something good in the local community.
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