TIMESTAMP GANG ...... Alhan asks us about life after Copa 90 - 1:02 Speaking it into existence - 5:28 Alhan can’t multitask whilst ordering food - 11:56 How are YOU, Alhan? - 15:15 Vuj vs Katie Hopkins - 18:01 Do you get phased by your success? - 22:57 The General Election Madness - 25:07 #Alhan2024 London Mayor - 32:10 Is Poet the perfect politician? & Sadiq Khan is clapped - 41:05 How did poet meet Alhan? - 47:55 Alhan’s Inspirations - 51:40 Liberal Media - 01:03:20 Alhan & Working at VICE - 01:08:30 School Grades & Parents Expectations - 01:28:22 Privilege - 01:31:50 Trolling got Vuj cancelled at Diesel - 01:37:28 Poet’s 2019 review, does he over share? - 01:41:32 Alhan called Russell Brand to be on Gasworks - 01:44:41
Poet is a unique character... one day he looks like a french aristocratic painter... the next day he looks like your local grandma who goes to Mecca bingo and then he completely switches it up with the deliveroo outfif P.S. I think Alhan forgot that he is the interviewee lol
Alhan is the best blueprint for young people wanting to make it, the short amount of time I've seen his stuff hes been a massive inspiration. Incredible work ethic.
shakenfake It doesn’t though, the only time the public can effect politics is by voting 🤷🏻♂️Hence why public figures should spread awareness of voting to the masses so they can have their say. Poet just loves the sound of his own voice 😂the brudda claims he don’t care about nothing but has strong opinions on everything and is ignorant to others opinions, just watch the episode where poets tryna tell Robbie that racism is a bigger issue now than when Robbie was younger even though he never lived through it 🤦🏻♂️I like poet but I just disagree with him on a lot of topics
This platform is so infectious , at work I end email with HAVE A NICE and I work for the government !!!!!! You guys smash it every time and I Love the movement. HAVE A NICE!
Best pod out of a selection of sick pods. Gotta say as someone bit older (25) than Alhan it takes time to see what he is. He is that young Messi type but for entertainment. Young generational prodigy.
Ngl, even though Alhan merks the brummie accent, he’s inspiring man. I’m 18 and I wanna get into the media world, I only got hooked into gasworks in late 2019 and it’s made me fall in love with Grassroot productions and UK grime scene in general. Alhans story is inspiring man. Mad respect!!!
speaking into existence...its the law of attraction..you have to work hard and stay positive and persistent and you will receive what you desire ... it wont happen without dedication...but i do think that with positive thoughts and mindset you can achieve what you want within reason
what a fucking inspiring video, hadn't really watched loads of Alhans stuff just a few vice videos in the past but fuck me those last couple of stories about vice are genuine inspiration
The general election to be held on 12 December has been necessitated by irreconcilable differences within the House of Commons over the terms of a Brexit deal. These differences are an expression of the divisions within the ruling class over whether an alliance with the EU or with US imperialism would better protect its strategic interests. With no possibility of securing a majority for any Brexit outcome by the second deadline of 31 October, a general election became inevitable; at the fourth attempt, Prime Minister Boris Johnson secured the necessary majority on 29 October after the EU had agreed a further extension of the deadline to 31 January 2020. Despite its relative decline, Britain remains a major imperialist power. However, in conditions of deepening world crisis and rising inter-imperialist rivalries, it is incapable of sustaining this global position unless it develops a closer alliance with one or other of the two key protagonists: either with the European imperialist bloc or with US imperialism. Divisions within the ruling class over these two options underpin the Brexit crisis. At stake is the future of the City of London as one of the world’s leading financial centres, the hub of a network of offshore secrecy jurisdictions, and vast overseas assets which at around £11 trillion are more than five times the size of Britain’s GDP of £2.07 trillion. Despite liabilities of a similar size, the net positive income from these overseas investments together with other services has been crucial to sustaining the British economy and offsetting a large loss on the balance of trade in goods. It is a gigantic usury capital: but this will be under threat whatever Brexit choice prevails. The general election offers no guarantee that the parliamentary divisions over Brexit will be resolved one way or the other. Although the Tory Party is nominally opposed to a no-deal Brexit, there is now a substantial majority of MPs who would favour an exit at any cost. At stake are the 5.25 million votes cast for the Brexit Party at the May 2019 European elections, which saw the Tory vote slump to 1.5 million, a loss of 15 of its 19 seats and a humiliating fifth position after the Green Party. Labour is also split, however, and its inability to put forward a clear Remain position in opposition to the Tories saw it come third after the Lib Dems in the same election. With an estimated 149 Labour MPs in leave-majority constituencies compared to 83 in pro-remain constituencies, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has had to preside over a series of compromises to hold the Parliamentary Labour Party together. In order to keep everyone on board, a Labour government would honour the result of the 2016 referendum by negotiating a fresh deal, and put it to a referendum, but with Remain included as an option. Because Labour is first and foremost an electoral party, it must secure the votes of the mass of the working class and of its better-off layers if it is to win a general election. Its compromise Brexit position aims to achieve this. Many privileged workers, especially those in the public sector, are pro-remain because they see continued EU membership as sustaining a form of social democratic state which can underpin their jobs and living conditions. They also see a threat to those conditions arising from the sort of deregulation that would inevitably accompany a closer economic relationship with the US. To them, Labour will say it is for a close relationship with the EU, and for the free movement of labour. However, other better-off workers have different concerns: they are older, and their material conditions are based more on wealth in the form of house ownership rather than income. They perceive the threat to their position to come from unwarranted largesse towards the poor in the form of excessive benefits and their perception of uncontrolled immigration. They are the core of the Brexit vote - but Labour cannot afford to alienate them. So it will tell these workers it will honour the 2016 referendum, and implement a skills-based set of immigration controls. The vast majority of the left are calling for a vote for Labour. They point to the proposals for a Green New Deal, nationalisation of energy, water companies and railways, the promise to scrap Universal Credit, raise the minimum wage and abolish the anti-trade union laws. What they ignore is that, despite Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, Labour remains an imperialist party. Essential reassurances to the ruling class will remain Labour policy, in particular, its commitment to the imperialist NATO alliance and its military spending target of 2% of GDP, and the pledge to upgrade Trident. Labour will continue to signal clearly that under a Labour government, British imperialism’s world-wide interests will not be under threat. Labour’s Green New Deal does not address the soaring level of debt repayments by underdeveloped countries - up by 60% in three years - which are being used by the World Bank to demand that they commodify their land and sell it to monopoly agribusinesses for destructive monoculture. It does not question the role of the giant British-based mining companies such as BHP Billiton and Anglo-American which loot the metals necessary for the new ‘green’ technologies, and therefore to implement the Green New Deal. Labour’s talk about a just approach to addressing climate change references only the interests of the British working class. Such justice does not extend to the under-developed countries which are bearing the brunt of global warming and eco-destruction, there is no suggestion that their debts should be abolished, or their resources should be taken away from giant multinationals and handed back to them. Labour’s Green New Deal is green-washed social imperialism. The mantra of the left is that Labour has changed under Corbyn; in the words of Carlos Martinez writing in Telesur, ‘What it comes down to is that, for the first time, Labour has a leadership which, in addition to being pro-working class and pro-poor, is solidly anti-imperialist, anti-war and anti-racist.’ Yet what is really different? The promise of a massive campaign against austerity that was the cornerstone of Corbyn’s 2015 leadership campaign never materialised. Within a couple of months, he was instructing Labour-run councils to set legal pro-cuts budgets in a letter signed jointly with John McDonnell. The following year, a party rule change made it a disciplinary offence to refuse to set a legal budget. Labour-run councils continued to implement swingeing cuts in local services. The weakness of his leadership was exposed further with the campaign against supposed anti-Semitism within the Labour Party. A combination of The Guardian, the Israeli embassy and Labour Zionists forced Corbyn to make key concessions over his previous support for Palestine, particularly with the adoption of the IHRA Zionist definition of anti-Semitism and the expulsion of figures who had adopted a clear pro-Palestinian position. Already the general election campaign has seen Scottish Labour force one candidate, Kate Ramsden, stand down because of a blog post in which she compared Israel to an abused child who becomes an abusive adult. She had published the post during the 2014 Zionist onslaught on Gaza which resulted in the deaths of 2,200 Palestinians. Scottish Labour’s statement had no comment on this: Palestinians remain a non-people for Labour Zionists. Meanwhile, Chris Williamson, who was suspended from the Labour Party in February 2019 on bogus charges of anti-Semitism, has been dropped as a candidate in Derby to be replaced by a Unite regional official. Now Corbyn is ‘looking into’ an equally bogus charge of anti-Semitism against left-wing MP Dan Carden. The evidence is clear: it only takes slight pressure on Corbyn to force him into retreat. There is no reason to suppose it will be any different if he were to become Prime Minister where such pressure will be far more intense. He has no forces. There is no movement of the working class, no trade union struggle of any significance: 2018 saw the second smallest number of workers engaged in strike action in history, the smallest number having been recorded in 2017. There is no challenge on the streets to austerity. What this means is that when Labour faces resistance from the ruling class to policies it tries to enact there is no countervailing force to push it forward. Added to this will be the resistance from within the Parliamentary Labour Party itself: the great majority of Labour MPs will still be those who endorsed austerity prior to Corbyn’s election and who have pilloried him over the alleged anti-Semitism within the Labour Party. They will be a force preventing any challenge in the first place. Labour supporters whether inside or outside the Party are intent on spreading the illusion that Parliament can be used to shower benefits on the working class without the need for any struggle whatsoever. Furthermore, they want us to ignore the looting and plunder of underdeveloped countries which would be the basis of such largesse. Socialists cannot be party to such backward and chauvinist ideas. The Revolutionary Communist Group will therefore not be calling for a vote for any of the parties in the coming general election. In fighting for the interests of the working class there is no shortcut through this election - it requires the building of a movement unwaveringly opposed to British imperialism. Such a movement can only be built outside of the structures that keep capitalist parties in power - in communities and on the streets. www.revolutionarycommunist.org/britain/labourtrade-unions/5732-general-election-no-vote-for-labour-imperialists
Poet is a bad interviewer. Your aim is supposed to understand the perspective of the interviewee. He always finds a way to conclude it being about his perspective
Amadeus Nyika vuj comes across more professional in the classical sense but that’s why the dynamic works because poet isn’t afraid to give his own opinion. It is an interview as such but also an open dialogue on the podcast. Do you think the guests feel like he’s being condescending? Definitely not.
@@greekgod11able Well even if they did feel that way, they wouldn't necessarily say it. It's their show. It's an open dialogue yes but Poet, regardless of the topic has to have the last say. You can have your own opinion but always bare in mind that the interview isn't about you. I feel like Vuj strikes that balance well
Amadeus Nyika I feel like you don’t understand the dynamic of these podcasts. It’s not an interview as such. Yes he does relate things guests say to him more than most but if you are having a conversation with a friend which is what this podcast is essentially which is why the interview their friends
TIMESTAMP GANG ......
Alhan asks us about life after Copa 90 - 1:02
Speaking it into existence - 5:28
Alhan can’t multitask whilst ordering food - 11:56
How are YOU, Alhan? - 15:15
Vuj vs Katie Hopkins - 18:01
Do you get phased by your success? - 22:57
The General Election Madness - 25:07
#Alhan2024 London Mayor - 32:10
Is Poet the perfect politician? & Sadiq Khan is clapped - 41:05
How did poet meet Alhan? - 47:55
Alhan’s Inspirations - 51:40
Liberal Media - 01:03:20
Alhan & Working at VICE - 01:08:30
School Grades & Parents Expectations - 01:28:22
Privilege - 01:31:50
Trolling got Vuj cancelled at Diesel - 01:37:28
Poet’s 2019 review, does he over share? - 01:41:32
Alhan called Russell Brand to be on Gasworks - 01:44:41
Poet & Vuj Bless
you actually put timestamps 😂
NO RUELS
Poet & Vuj u didn't even spell rules right 😂😂🙌🏾
Kenzo Nkundwa exactly.
Poet is a unique character... one day he looks like a french aristocratic painter... the next day he looks like your local grandma who goes to Mecca bingo and then he completely switches it up with the deliveroo outfif
P.S. I think Alhan forgot that he is the interviewee lol
Alhan forgets he’s not on gasworks and treats Vuj as the guest
Alhan done so much at a young age it’s mad.
Vuj was actually dropping some proper gems on this episode. Don’t let your identity dictate your life ✨👏🏾
Lmao I’m 5 mins in and Alhan is the interviewer🤣
Alhan is the best blueprint for young people wanting to make it, the short amount of time I've seen his stuff hes been a massive inspiration. Incredible work ethic.
SirTea turn your volume up bitch
Alhan needs to do an Oxford Q and A or suttin.
Also Vuj should be called Poet
Andrew Sotiriou round of clappage’ for you sir!
that Alhan take is the best idea ive seen this year bro all jokes aside we need to see him at Oxford.
@@painfree1349 nigga
Poet is always tryna compare things that have no relevance to each other and no one can be asked to challenge him other than Alhan
😆😭
Man got exposed
Nah lowkey I think that political thing was pretty fucking true ngl
He does well to not start shouting at him at times
shakenfake It doesn’t though, the only time the public can effect politics is by voting 🤷🏻♂️Hence why public figures should spread awareness of voting to the masses so they can have their say. Poet just loves the sound of his own voice 😂the brudda claims he don’t care about nothing but has strong opinions on everything and is ignorant to others opinions, just watch the episode where poets tryna tell Robbie that racism is a bigger issue now than when Robbie was younger even though he never lived through it 🤦🏻♂️I like poet but I just disagree with him on a lot of topics
This platform is so infectious , at work I end email with HAVE A NICE and I work for the government !!!!!! You guys smash it every time and I
Love the movement. HAVE A NICE!
Aiden johnson loool
Grandma poet before the wolf comes in
😂😂😂
Alhan: “I’m gonna run for Mayor”.
Poet: “Ryan Giggs is left wing”.
Man United is a Labor club because they have no right-wing
Henry Aslett 😹
schurgy16 lol jokes aside Sir Alex has given a shit ton to the Labour Party I think
@@schurgy16 bullshit. Remember the Boris Johnson signs they held up to Liverpool
Not your traditional podcast. More like a group of friends chilling. Brilliant
Kernos Kemble there’s no such thing as a “traditional podcast”, “podcast” just refers to the format and the way in which it’s shared
unlost never thought of it this way until now, appreciate you
that's because they _are_ a group of friends chilling lmao
The gas is officially working on all platforms
Mandem Media Productions the Gas being supplied to the same kitchen, but different cooker!
Basically just a Gasworks episode in a different setting
Money movement
A gasworks with Vuj
22:25
"internet used to be an escape from reality, but now reality and society has almost come to the internet" - Vuj
idk why but this hit me deep
Can't believe he didn't mention Swarmz
Poet looks like a French homeless blood
Mandem Media Productions
Your A nerd
@@Dantels7 You're *
Imran Khan
Indian in the chat
Imran Khan can I get a curry bro
Imran Khan
You nerd
This & Gasworks are my favourite to watch
So much respect to Alhan. I’m years older then the guy and look up to a lot that he is saying. Respect to all 3 of these man.
Gasworks and This in the same day. 🔥🔥
Alhan is so funny but he’s actually so intelligent as well. This guy is gonna become even more successful in the coming years.
Ik poet gets hate yh but I acc felt bad for him when he said 2019 was his worst year, I met him irl once and he was acc bare nice man.
Adam Foxsmith trust, met him and vuj in oxford street once, he was bare approachable and just a genuinely nice guy.
arcodarco yhh I find it mad how ppl get seen differently online than irl
Why is Vuj sitting at the end of the sofa like a shy girl first time at the crib
Best pod out of a selection of sick pods. Gotta say as someone bit older (25) than Alhan it takes time to see what he is. He is that young Messi type but for entertainment. Young generational prodigy.
Remember when this guy emailed Poet and Vuj? Look at him now. Look at this video. All 3 of them on the sofa.
Tompah is that how he first got on gasworks?
Man said remember like we knew who he was when he sent those emails
Adam Foxsmith Nah I think he was some type of journalist and had connections to people which got him the job
Alhan was matured since day. On the grind from time. Deserved any success that comes his way
59:37 Alhan was 14 going on 21, he’s a wise cat beyond his years.
Alhans Vice segment is mad insightful. He's a joker but Alhan has serious drive. Wish you all the best.
Ngl, even though Alhan merks the brummie accent, he’s inspiring man. I’m 18 and I wanna get into the media world, I only got hooked into gasworks in late 2019 and it’s made me fall in love with Grassroot productions and UK grime scene in general. Alhans story is inspiring man. Mad respect!!!
Keep going man!
Take a second to appreciate Vuj's fade trim...come on!
speaking into existence...its the law of attraction..you have to work hard and stay positive and persistent and you will receive what you desire ... it wont happen without dedication...but i do think that with positive thoughts and mindset you can achieve what you want within reason
What Vuj said at 45:45 is one of the realest things I've heard on this podcast
I already knew Alhan was smart but this just certified how smart he really is
In Pakistan, listening to them men talking bout shit that don’t make sense to me but it’s a fun world to listen to.
Do your ting guys
Get Specs on this
The only time Alhan has been civilised uno jheeze
Poet and Vuj are decent guys. I watched them first on Copa 90. Only found this channel today.
Alhan is the new breed. Too funny.
man said "salmonella" when the food came loooool
Someones tell these lads to talk closer to the mic
Nah that's just bad production.. Wrong type of mics if you're asking me.. But hey there's no rules
Mostly vuj tho
RocksOnRocks 00
The amount of subs they have is your mums body count
Seeing this honest, dedicated side to Alhan is inspirational.
Real g. Keep workin.
Best podcast episode man been waiting for you guys to get Alhan on so funny😂😂👏🏽
Vuj is on a whole other level he got lost in then found the sauce and now has it on his dinner everynight
what a fucking inspiring video, hadn't really watched loads of Alhans stuff just a few vice videos in the past but fuck me those last couple of stories about vice are genuine inspiration
Boom 100k you guys are smashing it
Goldie would be an amazing guest ❤️❤️❤️
1 minute into the interview
alhan: ight so today we have poet & vuj
Make a podcast with Norwegian Klopp
Ali El-Araby Nope. Norwegian Klopp is a super sub. He can’t be a first team starter. He’s the spice. And man can’t eat a plate full of spice cuz.
Norwegian Klopp deserves his own show
100% he would be better than this alhan guy
African child next in poets yard.
Then poet walks out his own yard
alhan is too smart for his age man. proper inspiration
Alhan talking about ethnic parents and their kids' education at 1:25:57 ... FELT that
Alhan calling out Poet for point scoring in debates LMAO! I didn't know who Alhan was but i loved this guy and his vibe
These guys inspired me to film my podcast 🎙
I look up to Alhan so much wow
New found respek for Alhan after hearing his VICE story 💯
Part 2 definitelyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
Feels like alhans interviewing them
Alhan is my hero
AT 1:37 WE HEAR A BELLY RUMBLE. absolutley amazing!
Rasta on the table looks like Bobby Firmino 😂😂
Why isnt it on spotifyyy
can’t imagine how proud mumzy was for alhan
Alhan we appreciate it don’t worry big man
Next podcast, you guys have to interview that sound guy always fixing your mics.
@Chelsea Xo Callum Root.
Callum is the Jamie, Of The Joe Rogan Podcast
Vuj: My parents divorced...
Poet: Kinda lit tho
😅😅
Get ayyonline on here aswell
I turned this on and thought That I accidentally clicked on the rio ferdinand podcast but it was just vuj,🤣
“Bruv, and they offered me a pay rise” 😂😂😂
Bro I watched this whole podcast cooking my food and now I have nothing to watch whilst eating my food kmt
I've hated cooking since my friend told me that you spend over an hour cooking and you finish eating in 6minutes ://////
@@MJama-vp2zq but if u put time and effort in, it's amazing and tastes so nice
og baller think of it as you’ll be hungry for longer than the time it takes to cook and eat
@@sahilhoque838 Depends what u cook bro
My favourite channel!! Big up the Poet and Vuj Wanderers
On a real, i really appreciate Vuj’s journey
Amazing amazing episode! Alhan is amazing!
Armz Korleone next guest
Anything with alhan is a banger
Bring back FIFA&Chill
Poet looking like Earth Worm jim 😂😂
When is pt. 2 dropping? Love hearing from Alhan.
I have no idea who this man is but in here cause im a Wanderer
Love Alhan una 🤣🤝 this guy will be going places trust
Vuj is exactly the same complexion as the drawing of him on the wall 😂Am I the only one seeing that!
Alhan is sick man so smart
I rate Alhan so much such a g
Po and vuj be making a barber shop in the front room
How can Alhan be my hero when he's 4 years younger than me
greatest podcast ever
I feel people take things into consideration and appreciate certain things but for it to influence them they have to go thru it them selves
ill listen to these in the background while i play fifa lol
No rules yeah but definitely ditch your phones when you're talkin to guests
The general election to be held on 12 December has been necessitated by irreconcilable differences within the House of Commons over the terms of a Brexit deal. These differences are an expression of the divisions within the ruling class over whether an alliance with the EU or with US imperialism would better protect its strategic interests. With no possibility of securing a majority for any Brexit outcome by the second deadline of 31 October, a general election became inevitable; at the fourth attempt, Prime Minister Boris Johnson secured the necessary majority on 29 October after the EU had agreed a further extension of the deadline to 31 January 2020.
Despite its relative decline, Britain remains a major imperialist power. However, in conditions of deepening world crisis and rising inter-imperialist rivalries, it is incapable of sustaining this global position unless it develops a closer alliance with one or other of the two key protagonists: either with the European imperialist bloc or with US imperialism. Divisions within the ruling class over these two options underpin the Brexit crisis. At stake is the future of the City of London as one of the world’s leading financial centres, the hub of a network of offshore secrecy jurisdictions, and vast overseas assets which at around £11 trillion are more than five times the size of Britain’s GDP of £2.07 trillion. Despite liabilities of a similar size, the net positive income from these overseas investments together with other services has been crucial to sustaining the British economy and offsetting a large loss on the balance of trade in goods. It is a gigantic usury capital: but this will be under threat whatever Brexit choice prevails.
The general election offers no guarantee that the parliamentary divisions over Brexit will be resolved one way or the other. Although the Tory Party is nominally opposed to a no-deal Brexit, there is now a substantial majority of MPs who would favour an exit at any cost. At stake are the 5.25 million votes cast for the Brexit Party at the May 2019 European elections, which saw the Tory vote slump to 1.5 million, a loss of 15 of its 19 seats and a humiliating fifth position after the Green Party. Labour is also split, however, and its inability to put forward a clear Remain position in opposition to the Tories saw it come third after the Lib Dems in the same election. With an estimated 149 Labour MPs in leave-majority constituencies compared to 83 in pro-remain constituencies, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has had to preside over a series of compromises to hold the Parliamentary Labour Party together. In order to keep everyone on board, a Labour government would honour the result of the 2016 referendum by negotiating a fresh deal, and put it to a referendum, but with Remain included as an option.
Because Labour is first and foremost an electoral party, it must secure the votes of the mass of the working class and of its better-off layers if it is to win a general election. Its compromise Brexit position aims to achieve this. Many privileged workers, especially those in the public sector, are pro-remain because they see continued EU membership as sustaining a form of social democratic state which can underpin their jobs and living conditions. They also see a threat to those conditions arising from the sort of deregulation that would inevitably accompany a closer economic relationship with the US. To them, Labour will say it is for a close relationship with the EU, and for the free movement of labour. However, other better-off workers have different concerns: they are older, and their material conditions are based more on wealth in the form of house ownership rather than income. They perceive the threat to their position to come from unwarranted largesse towards the poor in the form of excessive benefits and their perception of uncontrolled immigration. They are the core of the Brexit vote - but Labour cannot afford to alienate them. So it will tell these workers it will honour the 2016 referendum, and implement a skills-based set of immigration controls.
The vast majority of the left are calling for a vote for Labour. They point to the proposals for a Green New Deal, nationalisation of energy, water companies and railways, the promise to scrap Universal Credit, raise the minimum wage and abolish the anti-trade union laws. What they ignore is that, despite Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, Labour remains an imperialist party. Essential reassurances to the ruling class will remain Labour policy, in particular, its commitment to the imperialist NATO alliance and its military spending target of 2% of GDP, and the pledge to upgrade Trident. Labour will continue to signal clearly that under a Labour government, British imperialism’s world-wide interests will not be under threat.
Labour’s Green New Deal does not address the soaring level of debt repayments by underdeveloped countries - up by 60% in three years - which are being used by the World Bank to demand that they commodify their land and sell it to monopoly agribusinesses for destructive monoculture. It does not question the role of the giant British-based mining companies such as BHP Billiton and Anglo-American which loot the metals necessary for the new ‘green’ technologies, and therefore to implement the Green New Deal. Labour’s talk about a just approach to addressing climate change references only the interests of the British working class. Such justice does not extend to the under-developed countries which are bearing the brunt of global warming and eco-destruction, there is no suggestion that their debts should be abolished, or their resources should be taken away from giant multinationals and handed back to them. Labour’s Green New Deal is green-washed social imperialism.
The mantra of the left is that Labour has changed under Corbyn; in the words of Carlos Martinez writing in Telesur, ‘What it comes down to is that, for the first time, Labour has a leadership which, in addition to being pro-working class and pro-poor, is solidly anti-imperialist, anti-war and anti-racist.’ Yet what is really different? The promise of a massive campaign against austerity that was the cornerstone of Corbyn’s 2015 leadership campaign never materialised. Within a couple of months, he was instructing Labour-run councils to set legal pro-cuts budgets in a letter signed jointly with John McDonnell. The following year, a party rule change made it a disciplinary offence to refuse to set a legal budget. Labour-run councils continued to implement swingeing cuts in local services.
The weakness of his leadership was exposed further with the campaign against supposed anti-Semitism within the Labour Party. A combination of The Guardian, the Israeli embassy and Labour Zionists forced Corbyn to make key concessions over his previous support for Palestine, particularly with the adoption of the IHRA Zionist definition of anti-Semitism and the expulsion of figures who had adopted a clear pro-Palestinian position. Already the general election campaign has seen Scottish Labour force one candidate, Kate Ramsden, stand down because of a blog post in which she compared Israel to an abused child who becomes an abusive adult. She had published the post during the 2014 Zionist onslaught on Gaza which resulted in the deaths of 2,200 Palestinians. Scottish Labour’s statement had no comment on this: Palestinians remain a non-people for Labour Zionists. Meanwhile, Chris Williamson, who was suspended from the Labour Party in February 2019 on bogus charges of anti-Semitism, has been dropped as a candidate in Derby to be replaced by a Unite regional official. Now Corbyn is ‘looking into’ an equally bogus charge of anti-Semitism against left-wing MP Dan Carden.
The evidence is clear: it only takes slight pressure on Corbyn to force him into retreat. There is no reason to suppose it will be any different if he were to become Prime Minister where such pressure will be far more intense. He has no forces. There is no movement of the working class, no trade union struggle of any significance: 2018 saw the second smallest number of workers engaged in strike action in history, the smallest number having been recorded in 2017. There is no challenge on the streets to austerity. What this means is that when Labour faces resistance from the ruling class to policies it tries to enact there is no countervailing force to push it forward. Added to this will be the resistance from within the Parliamentary Labour Party itself: the great majority of Labour MPs will still be those who endorsed austerity prior to Corbyn’s election and who have pilloried him over the alleged anti-Semitism within the Labour Party. They will be a force preventing any challenge in the first place.
Labour supporters whether inside or outside the Party are intent on spreading the illusion that Parliament can be used to shower benefits on the working class without the need for any struggle whatsoever. Furthermore, they want us to ignore the looting and plunder of underdeveloped countries which would be the basis of such largesse. Socialists cannot be party to such backward and chauvinist ideas. The Revolutionary Communist Group will therefore not be calling for a vote for any of the parties in the coming general election. In fighting for the interests of the working class there is no shortcut through this election - it requires the building of a movement unwaveringly opposed to British imperialism. Such a movement can only be built outside of the structures that keep capitalist parties in power - in communities and on the streets.
www.revolutionarycommunist.org/britain/labourtrade-unions/5732-general-election-no-vote-for-labour-imperialists
Boost that audio or bring the mics closer.
Big up Alhan
lit, proper enjoyed it, vvvv interesting
bus driver time stamps 32:55 38:26 44:10
bendy bus 35:10
thanks
I’m here for the sarcasms lol
Poet is a bad interviewer. Your aim is supposed to understand the perspective of the interviewee. He always finds a way to conclude it being about his perspective
Amadeus Nyika that is what makes him so great and him and vuj’s relationship so great
@@greekgod11able But Vuj doesn't do that to the interviewee though. It comes off very condescending
Amadeus Nyika vuj comes across more professional in the classical sense but that’s why the dynamic works because poet isn’t afraid to give his own opinion. It is an interview as such but also an open dialogue on the podcast. Do you think the guests feel like he’s being condescending? Definitely not.
@@greekgod11able Well even if they did feel that way, they wouldn't necessarily say it. It's their show. It's an open dialogue yes but Poet, regardless of the topic has to have the last say.
You can have your own opinion but always bare in mind that the interview isn't about you. I feel like Vuj strikes that balance well
Amadeus Nyika I feel like you don’t understand the dynamic of these podcasts. It’s not an interview as such. Yes he does relate things guests say to him more than most but if you are having a conversation with a friend which is what this podcast is essentially which is why the interview their friends
Alhan😂😂😂his dad is a fcking bus driver
we need part 2
even if you dont like the kid, you have to respect the work rate
3:01 my man wearing an illvzn jacket