Marie Le Pen with Geert Wilders and other European populist leaders at a meeting in Prague in 2019.
Winston Marshall before his much publicised departure from Mumford and Sons.

By TONY MOBILIFONITIS
Winston Marshall, a former member of the music group Mumford and Sons and host of The Winston Marshall Show, very eloquently put the case for populism at an Oxford debate, attended by old guard leftist Democrat, Nancy Pelosi, former Speaker of the US House of Representatives.

Pelosi interjected in Marshall’s speech when he touched on the hypocrisy of what he called “the new establishment, the globalist left”, who made a great hullabaloo about the January 6th 2020 riot and shooting at the US Congress while ignoring Antifa’s attempt to burn down the Federal Court in Portland, Oregon (and the riots across the US over the George Floyd death).

“You are not … there is no equivalence there, so, but it is not like what happened on January 6th, which was an insurrection incited by the President of the United States,” said Pelosi, reciting the official narrative of the false flag event that clearly involved a team of provocateurs run by the FBI who dramatically smashed windows of the building to gain entry just as Congressional police opened the doors to let the crowds walk in.

Marshall went on to cover the election of Trump in 2016 and how the elite media began to complain about democracy because it had been somehow betrayed by his election. “I’ll tell you what is a threat to democracy, it’s Brussels, DC, Westminster, the mainstream media, big tech, big pharma, corporate collusion and the Davos cronies. The threat to democracy comes from those who write off ordinary people at deplorables,” said Marshall, referencing Hillary Clinton’s notorious quip.

Marshall hit the headlines March 2021 after tweeting praise for Andy Ngo’s book Unmasked: Inside Antifa’s Radical Plan to Destroy Democracy. “Congratulations @MrAndyNgo. Finally had to time read your important book. You’re a brave man,” he wrote.

The tweet sparked a firestorm of fury from people accusing him of “supporting fascism”, after which Marshall backed down and apologised, sparking further outcry from people attacking him for apologising and playing into the typical leftist game of public shaming. He eventually left the band and back then described himself as “centrist, liberal or bit this, bit that” and averse to Left-Right binary political discourse.

However, at the Oxford debate last month Marshall left no doubt about his support for the political movement called populism that is gaining impetus around the world as part of the global awakening to the threat posed by the elitist globalism of the World Economic Forum.

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By cairnsnews

From the land of Australians

10 thought on “The compelling argument for the global populist revolution on stage at Oxford University”
  1. From the chaos of ENGINEERED woke libertarianism to the safety and security of ENGINEERED conservative populism … Now where have we seen that before?

    Another ZoGroup epic production, oRDO AB cHAOS, clamoured for by the entertainment deprived and exhausted public, brought to us by Metro Goldwyn Meyer Lansky and directed by Steven Gamesberg.

    Keep an eye on the closet doors for Adolf’s and Uncle Joe’s cameo appearances in case you don’t know who the White Hats and who the Black hats are. And don’t miss the seductive role of Ms Barbarossa as the film climax.

    Some have seen the movie before, but it bears repeating for the current generations. We’ve got no choice. But that’s how we like it. Otherwise we wouldn’t be clambering over each other to get to the ticket office.

    Click go the shears go click, click click…

  2. Phil said – “… even populist revolutions can be ZOG controlled cesspits. Take Oz, for example, during the populist Whitlam/Hawke era…”

    And for those who lived the dream, King Bonza the Charismatic was the MOST POPULAR PM in the history of Oz, a veritable working man’s ROCK STAR. He even held the Guinness World Record for sculling a schooner of beer. No, really!

    Turns out he was just one more specially SELECTED Judas Goat leading the Useless Eaters to the slaughter house.

    And who would have imagined, King Bonza’s name is on that list of 28 high profile paedophiles now HIDDEN by our foreign-owned fake corporate “government” with a 90-year SUPPRESSION ORDER. Alongside serial paedophile Scotty from Marketing right at the TOP of the list, and former Treasurer and PM Pall Bearer who is also rumored to have been a prolific Necrophiliac.

    And just BTW, ALL certified paid-up card-carrying high-order Freemasons, folks. That should leave little doubt who they’re actually ALL working for, and needless to say, it’s not US.

  3. …but beware, even populist revolutions can be ZOG controlled cesspits. Take Oz, for example, during the populist Whitlam/Hawke era. Little were people aware back then of the chicanery brewing, which to this day, has serious repercussions.

  4. Trump did say he would “drain the swamp” and stop the child trafficking. How many of the people, who oppose Trump, are involved in either of these activities, or protecting the systems? The facts that several assassination attempts have failed, the mocking-bird media attack him at every opportunity and the judicial system is used to try and bankrupt him, can’t be ignored.

    Roger Stone Warns Desperate Democrats May Try To Assassinate Trump
    https://www.banned.video/watch?id=66620b07864e5657bd7a99dc

    Why are they so scared of Trump? He is not the messiah, just a naughty boy sometimes. He certainly has a love of his country and he wants to give it back to the people. Two things in his favour, I believe, is he supports a multi-polar World and he knows how to speak truth to power.

    Tucker Carlson with Jeffrey Sachs: The Untold History of the Cold War, CIA Coups Around the World, and COVID’s Origin

    https://youtu.be/JS-3QssVPeg

  5. Trump Mark II is part of a global move towards populist authoritarianism which threatens all of us. His fondness for the most odious of dictators—remember his embrace of Kim Il Sung?—is a warning sign that his re-election is as serious a threat to basic notions of democracy as his opponents claim.
    Donald Trump and his allies have begun mapping out specific plans for using the federal government to punish critics and opponents should he win a second term, with the former president naming individuals he wants to investigate or prosecute and his associates drafting plans to potentially invoke the Insurrection Act on his first day in office to allow him to deploy the military against civil demonstrations.
    To facilitate Trump’s ability to direct Justice Department actions, his associates have been drafting plans to dispense with 50 years of policy and practice intended to shield criminal prosecutions from political considerations. Critics have called such ideas dangerous and unconstitutional.
    “It would resemble a banana republic if people came into office and started going after their opponents willy-nilly,” said Saikrishna Prakash, a constitutional law professor at the University of Virginia who studies executive power. “It’s hardly something we should aspire to.”
    Imprisoning political opponents is what the Putins and the Castros do. It shouldn’t be allowed to stand here — it isn’t who we are or have ever been. As our Founders understood, the aristocratic principle invariably fails because the aristocrats are unworthy.
    ‘Draft Dodger’ Trump In Scathing New Attack Ad ‘He’s Not Fit’

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