Hello everyone.
Happy Palm Sunday. Though it’s unpopular to say these days, apparently, Christ is King!
On Monday night, I attended the debate at the Emmanuel Centre in Westminster, where University of Kent academic Matt Goodwin & Triggernometry host Konstantin Kisin argued against Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee & Novara Media founder Aaron Bastani as to whether or not immigration is good for Britain.
You can watch the full exchange below, on Triggernometry.
(My interview with Konstantin & Francis will release at 19:00 PM on Wednesday the 27th of March.)
I then spent the remainder of the week making the case against mass immigration; but also discussing whether or not debates like this matter, when MPs a few streets away are unwilling to listen to restrictionists.
Are we winning the argument, but losing the country?
I was asked to review the event the following day for The Critic. I gave warranted praise to Goodwin and Kisin for their contributions, but remain sceptical as to whether events like this amount to more than consoling migration sceptics that they are correct while their country changes, culturally and demographically, without their democratic consent.
The debate felt much like watching senators in 410 AD suggest that it wasn’t the brightest idea to pay all those Visigoths to staff Rome’s armies. The sacking is already underway, and resorting to an eternal recurrence of conversations on the commentary circuit is paralysing our political moment.
Tomlinson Talks about… Immigration and Transgender Terrorism
This week on Tomlinson Talks, I reviewed the aforementioned debate; and also discussed a recent trend of transgender mass shooters that the media has been reluctant to cover.
To watch live from 15:00 PM UK time, or afterwards, subscribe for as little as £5.00 per month at LotusEaters.com.
Here’s a preview of the show:
Next week, I’m rejoined by Stephen J. Shaw to talk about birth-rates, demographics, and the case for having kids.
Just Another Day In The UK…
On the week that Kings Cross Station puts a Hadith on its announcement board, the UK government and Home Office have decided to empty out 100 hotels housing illegal immigrants, costing taxpayers £8.2m per day.
So they're all being deported, right?
Well... No. Instead, they're repurposing student accommodation and military barracks, costing £1.2bn — £46m MORE than the hotels — to house 20,000 migrants near towns and villages instead.
This was announced after 514 migrants crossed the Channel on Wednesday — a new record for 2024 — with one migrant being stabbed during the journey.
Remember: all of this is a choice that our politicians have made.
That’s all for this week. Stay tuned for more from Tomlinson Talks!