Victory Elms of SkyNews UK Reviewed My Podcast and Didn't Like It, So She Had It Taken Down
In a news post from last December, SkyNews UK’s Victoria Elms reviewed my podcast on the Kalergi Plan in her wonderfully titled, Antisemitism, racism and white supremacist material in podcasts on Spotify, investigation finds.
I literally can’t help but laugh at that title. White people clearly aren’t superior in any way. That’s why a certain Coudenhove-Kalergi suggested in his book Practical Idealism (1925) that it would be better to replace white people entirely with a “mixed-race of the future”. And for 50 years, the man who wrote that also presided over the Pan-European Union which later became the EU.
At least Elms has had her Brexit from the EU. But what did the ‘journalist’ think of the podcast? Let’s find out. First, you may want to listen to my podcast The Kalergi Plan Confirmed.
Victoria Elms on the Kalergi Plan
Let’s see what the thought police thinks of my opinions:
One of the first results returned on Spotify when searching for the phrase "Kalergi Plan" directed us to a series which, at the time, had 76 episodes listed on the platform.
The so-called "Kalergi Plan" is a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory which alleges that Jewish elites are behind a deliberate plan to erase the white European race by promoting mass immigration.
It’s so called because it’s named after its originator, Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi, an Austrian nobleman with a charming Japanese mother. No, it’s not a conspiracy theory, either. It’s from his book titled Praktischer Idealismus (Practical Idealism) published in 1925 in which Kalergi claims Jews are superior people “as the Chinese are in the East”. Kalergi believed urbanized Jews ought to lead Europe as its teachers and examples.
We have chosen not to name any of the podcast series mentioned in this article to avoid publicising their content.
In one episode, the speaker explicitly promotes the Kalergi Plan.
He claims that the European elite has been "replaced" by a "new urban nobility" made up of Jewish elites.
Actually, Kalergi made that claim, and I cited the author.
The nine-minute monologue ends with an explicit call to violence against Jewish people.
Or rather, against the “urban cancer,” as I say in the video/podcast, since I oppose urbanism, a general theme throughout my thinking.
Another episode by the same creator advances the racist and unfounded idea that white people are biologically superior to people of colour.
"There is something about [white men] that makes us privileged, it’s in our blood," he says.
Yeah, the privileged thing in “our blood” is our willingness to brave the harsh, cold lands of Europe, so unlike the paradise of Central Africa.
He promotes this view, unchallenged, for 13 minutes. The monologue is littered with dehumanising language and makes comparisons that are too offensive to be included in this article.
The album artwork for the series depicts the raven flag - a symbol originally found in Norse mythology, but one that has been appropriated by some white supremacists in recent years.
Actually, I composed it, and no one has yet adopted it but me. It represents the Viking raven (one of Odin’s birds) flying before the Sun toward the battlefield.
We showed our findings to Maurice Mcleod of Race on the Agenda, a social research charity focusing on issues impacting ethnic minorities in the UK.
"This is incredibly dangerous," he told Sky News.
"Early this May we had the highest [monthly] number of reported incidents of antisemitism and, in the year to March, we had 115,000 reported incidents of hate crime. Now that's just what's reported, which is always only the tip of the iceberg."
"It feels like it's normalising this sort of thing if you can go on Spotify and listen to Adele, and then you can listen to this stuff right next to it." he said.
The Kalergi Plan is a variation of the white nationalist Great Replacement conspiracy theory.
It’s EU policy, not a “theory”.
Jacob Davey, head of research and policy of far right and hate movements at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, said it was a belief that had been steadily increasing in popularity over the past decade.
"It's gone from what really was quite a fringe talking point among a few European extremists to the bread and butter discussion of extremists globally," he told Sky News.
But these ideas do not exist in an online vacuum, he said.
The article then goes on to compare my person to Brenton Tarrant, whom I actually suspect of being a Mossad-trained agent. In any case, I would never sink to such levels of stupidity to blow up a mosque in a town called Christchurch.