Dan Bongino: Populism, False Compassion, and Leave Me The F Alone

by
Steve MacDonald

If you’re interested in adding serious podcast value to your life experience, this episode of Stay Free with Russel Brand is a good investment of your time. Brand’s guests are Charlie Kirk, Dan Bongino, and Nigel Farage. The topics are wide-ranging, but there is some focus on immigration, unnecessary wars, and the popular uprisings against governments’ embrace of them.

Kirk and Bongino are both brilliant and informed, as is Brand, and they sound good together. The discussion is deep but fast-paced, thoughtful, and informative. And Farage arriving near the end makes it better. There are no softball topics, questions, or answers, just serious speculation and introspection on the state of politics and what needs to happen to look forward.

As I watched, at least a dozen snippets stuck with me as worthy for an excerpt to be shared on these pages, but this one from Dan Bongino, near the end of the episode, gets first prize.

Dan congratulates Nigel on his recent electoral win as an onramp to flushing the media’s false narratives about recent left-wing success in Britain. He then ventures on an epic rant about the immorality of false compassion, fallen man, and the fundamental purpose of government.

He quickly distills (with a fair share of F-bombs: that’s your language warning) what Conservatairains want and don’t want from government, facts so true that they dissemble all the nonsense from the left about their promise of an impending dictatorial rule of the right. A projection that suggests we – who only want what Dan describes – would ever support or tolerate it.

We would not; therefore, the Left’s promised tyranny is a lie (and more projection, obviously).

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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