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Watch Steven Edginton's deep dive into Britain's exponential change in the face of uncontrolled mass migration.At the turn of the millennium, Britain took a radical new path on immigration. Tony Blair’s Government opened the doors wide, with little warning to the public. Since then, communities across the UK have seen changes that few could have imagined. The population has soared, straining housing, healthcare, and schools. 'Yookay: How Immigration Changed a Nation' asks: was Britain ready for this?
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00:00Britain, an ancient place.
00:14It now has new sights.
00:16New smells.
00:21New sounds.
00:23Stepped in a party steady, the big back's on shake already.
00:29And even a new name.
00:31They call it the UK.
00:33And what's gone wrong in Britain is we've had this culture in which the rules were unspoken
00:40and you have people who have no sense of rules at all.
00:43This is a story about immigration.
00:46What does it mean to be British for you?
00:48To be British for me, it means that although I'm British and I'm born in this country,
00:53that I'm still rejected as a black person.
00:55Identity.
00:56Do you know what it is?
00:57I come from the UK.
00:58Do you know what I mean?
00:59So for me it's like this is where it started.
01:03And the strange new country emerging from the ruins of the old.
01:07Do you like the new Britain?
01:10Erm, no.
01:13I've got to be honest.
01:15No.
01:18Yeah.
01:19Yeah.
01:20Yeah.
01:21Yeah.
01:22Yeah.
01:23Yeah.
01:24Yeah.
01:25Yeah.
01:26Yeah.
01:27Yeah.
01:28Yeah.
01:29To make sense of Britain's cultural revolution, I turned to historian Dr. David Starkey.
01:35What do you think about the new multicultural Britain and its cultural aspects?
01:40You know, whether it's the music, whether it's the art, whether it's the aesthetic of the
01:45whole thing, how do you think it stands up to the old Britain?
01:51What a nice, simple question for this of the late afternoon.
01:57Erm, it has an aesthetic.
02:00Erm, it's interesting.
02:02Some of this has been very, very heavily put by the establishment, particularly Drill.
02:08Stormzy is almost a mascot at Cambridge.
02:12He has been allowed on the back of this stuff to endow scholarships which are only for black students,
02:21which I think is outrageous, but that's another matter.
02:24It's also very interesting to listen to the words.
02:27The words are of unconscionable violence, of anti-homosexuality, of utter contempt for women,
02:35of plugging of thugs.
02:37The BBC largely invented this.
02:40But if you go right back to the beginning of modernism, to the end, roughly the end of the First World War,
02:49two artists like Marcel Duchamp, you know, the famous chap with the urinal,
02:54um, uh, Laidon the Phantom and whatever, in New York, um, and signed, was it, uh, uh,
03:01or c'est la vie, um, uh, eros, it's life.
03:05The purpose of that, this again is where we've completely forgotten.
03:10Modern art is about destroying.
03:12It's about destroying the old.
03:15Duchamp says quite clearly, um, Rembrandt's to be used as ironing.
03:20The high art is also about destroying.
03:24The architecture of Le Corbusier envisages everything else.
03:34If culture is downstream from music, then drill is the soundtrack of the UK.
03:41Drill music, aggressive, violent, and deeply influential,
03:46is vastly popular among urban youths in Britain.
03:50To understand it, I met with one of the scene's key figures, Fumes the Engineer,
03:56a producer whose YouTube channel has shaped the sound of a generation.
04:00Good to meet you, Ian. Nice to meet you in our background.
04:02Okay, so you want to show us your studio?
04:04Yeah, sure. I'm here.
04:05Awesome.
04:07Wow, so you've had a lot of, uh, views.
04:10Yeah, we had a lot of, uh, early success.
04:13So who's this guy, like, is this one of your artists?
04:16Um, so that guy, exactly.
04:19Exactly.
04:20I don't know who that is.
04:21Exactly.
04:22Because that's like, uh, an actor.
04:26So, basically, there was a wave where I'd done a lot of plot things,
04:32which is what Freestyle Plot thing is called.
04:34This guy was in jail, but he was crazy popular.
04:37So, he's actually in jail, and I managed to get some-
04:40In jail?
04:41Yeah, he's out.
04:42No, he's out now.
04:43Okay.
04:44But at the time, he was in jail.
04:45And I managed to get some recordings, and put them together,
04:48and make it into a freestyle for him.
04:50Why was he in jail?
04:52Um, I think you can Google East Wing, but I haven't, personally.
04:56But yeah, I think you can Google East Wing.
04:58I'm there speaking about other people's, like, lies.
05:02And I like-
05:03So, this is, obviously, the British flag.
05:04So, you're quite-
05:05Are you a proud, sort of, British producer, or?
05:08Do you know what it is?
05:09I come from the UK.
05:10Do you know what I mean?
05:11So, for me, it's-
05:12It's like, this is where it started.
05:14So, for me, it's like, I have to acknowledge that my core fan base is in the UK.
05:19And then, obviously, it feels great now to be able to expand, and be able to have Spanish plug-ins, and French, and Brazilian.
05:27Should we go into the studio?
05:29Yeah, yeah.
05:30It's-
05:31Gorgeous.
05:32All right, boy.
05:33Right there.
05:34Coming out of sight, son.
05:36All right, man.
05:37Yeah, this is kind of where it all happens.
05:40Obviously, the boost on the other side.
05:42I'm kind of that person that will have you doing everything again and again and again until it's right.
05:48I'm a perfectionist.
05:49Like, I've had guys go in there and get upset at me because they're just like,
05:53yo, bro, I swear it's something good, like, 15 days a while.
05:56I'm going to trust me.
05:57I know when it's the right one.
05:58So, I'm that guy that's always striving to get the best they can be.
06:03What girl are you interested in, Giro?
06:06Do you know what?
06:07It's something I know almost nothing about.
06:09So, I am totally curious.
06:11I need to educate myself totally, and I hope that you can explain to me.
06:17It's not something I regularly listen to.
06:19Yeah.
06:20I don't think I've ever listened to a Ford Rill song.
06:22Ever.
06:23So, ever.
06:24So, you'll have to show me my first experience.
06:26You'll have to sort of inaugurate it.
06:28I think that's been music.
06:29I thought that was a lot of pressure.
06:30But it never, ever is not to.
06:33You could do drill.
06:35You don't have to be from a certain background or experience a certain life to do drill.
06:41And I think that's what got misconstrued with drill.
06:45So, you really think I could do drill?
06:47Yeah, 100%.
06:48Should we run some bars and get you in there?
06:50Have you ever run bars before?
06:51No.
06:52I've never done anything.
06:53Any music background whatsoever?
06:54Not at all.
06:55What would you want to say on a drill beat?
06:58What do people typically talk about on drill?
07:01Let's not worry about that.
07:02Let's worry about...
07:03We're going to talk about what I want to talk about.
07:05Alright.
07:06Move to America.
07:07What it's like to live in America or maybe...
07:09Okay.
07:10So, like that.
07:11Cool.
07:12So, you just moved to America.
07:13So, where was you living before?
07:14In London, in Hackney.
07:15Ah, cool.
07:16So, then that'll be your opening line.
07:18It's something along the lines of...
07:20Came from Hackney and now I'm living in BC.
07:23If you have to give yourself a tag right now.
07:26Yeah.
07:27We need a name for you, bro.
07:28What's your name?
07:29Okay.
07:30Well, my surname is Edgington.
07:31So, what about Edge?
07:32Something to do about the Edge or something.
07:34Are you ready?
07:37You have an Edge.
07:38Yeah.
07:39Yeah.
07:40Alright, let's go in the booth.
07:42Oh, I...
07:43How is you the fun head?
07:44Yeah.
07:45And where do you get your money from?
07:46So great.
07:47Alright.
07:48This is where it happens.
07:49Okay.
07:55Came from Hackney, now I'm in DC.
07:57A shot drill for GB News.
07:59You can check my CV.
08:00Ah, now the gap's too big.
08:01Grilled in this...
08:02Yeah.
08:03Too quick.
08:04That was the timing.
08:06Do it again, do it again like that.
08:08And after many failed attempts, I attempted to record a drill track myself.
08:13It turns out, cultural immersion isn't always painless.
08:18You can check my CV.
08:21I came from Hackney, now I'm in DC.
08:23Facts.
08:24A shot drill for GB News.
08:25You can check my CV.
08:26That's true.
08:27Grilled in this trust on TV.
08:28That one there was all me.
08:29All me.
08:30That one bang like Chief Keef.
08:31God bless the country.
08:32Amen.
08:33It's a mad, it's a mad feeling isn't it?
08:35Yeah.
08:36Yeah.
08:37And it makes...
08:38Energy.
08:39You have energy and there's a vibe innit?
08:40Adrenaline.
08:41Yeah.
08:42That's drill music.
08:43So this felt like a good thing, right?
08:45Yeah.
08:46Yeah.
08:47There is a but.
08:48Yeah.
08:49Here we go.
08:50Drill music does have a reputation for being violent.
08:52Cool.
08:53And, you know, we were looking up the origin of the word drill and it comes from quite
08:57a violent background.
08:58Yeah.
08:59I wasn't sure on that until just now, but yeah.
09:01Yeah.
09:02So what do you think of the sort of violent aspect to it?
09:04The people who've gone to prison, you know, kind of rapping about, doing violent
09:09things, shooting, whatever.
09:11That can't be a good thing, right?
09:13Alright, cool.
09:14I'm going to spin this, alright?
09:18You are who you are, right?
09:21And that's the main thing.
09:23What do you think about acting?
09:26I like living there, yeah.
09:28Cool.
09:29But the stigma now, if you Google it, there's stabbings, there's shootings all the time.
09:32But do you know what it is?
09:33You're you.
09:34So just because you live there, it doesn't mean that you have to be that person.
09:38So it's the same with drill music.
09:40Just because it comes from or may have originated from that, it doesn't mean you have to then
09:46be that person.
09:47Do you get what I'm saying?
09:48Because you've gone in there and done a drill song.
09:50Make no mistake about it, this is a drill song.
09:52Do you get what I'm saying?
09:53You put an artist on there that does drill now, and it's a drill song.
09:59Do you get what I'm saying?
10:00There's a gap for a verse, but it's a drill song.
10:02But you've come out of here, you felt good.
10:04You felt energized.
10:05You felt like a lot of the kids come from, if they are coming from that world and they're
10:11involved in whatever they're involved in, whilst they're here, they're here.
10:16They're focused on this.
10:18They're not outside.
10:19They're not in fear of getting arrested or seeing someone and having to run or run after
10:23them or any of the stigmas that are involved around it.
10:26They're here.
10:27They're doing something positive.
10:29They're releasing.
10:30Like you've come out here and felt something different.
10:33Like, this is what they feel when they come to the studio.
10:36If this is promoting violence to millions, tens of millions, billions of, I don't know,
10:41listens, then surely that can't be good.
10:44If young kids are listening to this and thinking this is cool to go and shoot people or stab people
10:49with those people they're racking about, does that not encourage them to do those things?
10:54I can't speak on what encourages other people to do what, but one thing I do know about music
10:59is I feel like drill is unfairly looked at.
11:02And I'll say that because if I listen to most songs, like most, a lot of stuff are diss tracks,
11:10a lot of stuff like even the R&B songs, they're all dissing their exes and my man and diss girl.
11:15And then you take it back to Tupac rapping, hit them up.
11:19It's the same stuff.
11:21Rap music.
11:22It's all the same stuff.
11:24Like, if you listen to the lyrics, it's still girls, money, drugs, power, respect.
11:31That's all it is.
11:32But I think drill in particular has a reputation for violence.
11:35But why?
11:36Rather than rock or any other genre.
11:38Well, because of the lyrics and because of the people.
11:41Like you were saying, there's someone out there on one of your awards
11:44that has been in prison, for example.
11:46He didn't go to prison for making drill music.
11:50Do you get it?
11:51No one's gone to prison for making drill music.
11:53They go to prison for real life actions.
11:56Which they then might be promoting through the music.
11:58That's, I suppose, that's some of people's worries.
12:01It's possible.
12:02Like, I'm not going to sit here and say drill's perfect.
12:04Like, it is a genre that is looked at under a certain light.
12:09But I do feel like it's unfairly looked at.
12:15To see how it's really done, drill artist Taze stepped into the studio to record.
12:21So, have you already got the lyrics written down?
12:23Yeah.
12:24So, that's normally how it happens.
12:25So, you've thought about it before?
12:27Yes.
12:28This one, obviously, is one of my more commercial ones.
12:34Where I know you lot are coming, so...
12:36Yeah.
12:38So, what does that mean, more commercial?
12:41Nicer?
12:42Yeah, nicer.
12:43More child-friendly.
12:44More child-friendly.
12:45More PC.
12:46Can we see the lyrics? Can you read them out?
12:51Can I read them out?
12:52Yeah!
12:53Yeah!
12:54How many lyrics do you want me to read?
12:56Give us a few lines.
12:57Okay, cool.
12:58Yeah, give us the best lines.
12:59Ah, yeah.
13:00It says,
13:01I stepped in a party steady.
13:02The big back's on shaker already.
13:04I just got a call from Kelly.
13:06She just want to shake her jelly.
13:08So...
13:09Okay.
13:10So, this is about a girl.
13:11Yeah.
13:12Is this a real person?
13:13No.
13:14Nothing's real.
13:15Nothing's real about this.
13:16Yeah.
13:17Because what we're talking about is the violence isn't real.
13:18Yeah.
13:19That's basically what you're saying, right?
13:20Well, the violence in my lyrics isn't real.
13:22Yeah.
13:23There is...
13:24I couldn't say that the violence in everyone's lyrics.
13:26I can't talk to everyone, but...
13:28Yeah.
13:29Really and truly, there is some violence behind it.
13:33That drill started with, like, from Chicago, and Chicago is kind of a violent place.
13:40They used to rap about a lot of things, so it's kind of that subject.
13:43So, when I started, it was like, probably...
13:44When did drill start?
13:45When did I start?
13:46When did I start?
13:47Probably 2017, 2018, I started drill.
13:48And I was living a different life to what I'm living today.
13:50So, sometimes I rap about certain things that I've seen back in the day or certain things
14:01that I've been through, but most of the things that I'm rapping about now, nothing that's
14:06going on.
14:07It's all fabricated.
14:08So, you saw violent stuff when you were growing up, is that...?
14:10When I was growing up?
14:11Yeah.
14:12What kind of stuff?
14:19Fights.
14:22Loads of punches.
14:23Kicks.
14:25People getting rushed.
14:26Just not much.
14:27But...
14:28Yeah.
14:29Not much I want to say on...
14:30Right.
14:31You know what I'm going to say?
14:32Just...
14:33Whoosh!
14:34Stepped in the party, steady.
14:36The big back's on shake already.
14:38I just got a call from, ah, Kelly.
14:40She just want to shake her jelly.
14:42Shake already!
14:43In Old Britain, culture meant Shakespeare and Elgar.
14:47In the UK, it's masked wrappers, viral beefs and beets soaked in violence.
14:55But what does the public think of this new Britain?
14:58To find out, I went to multicultural Brixton in South London.
15:02What does it mean to be British for you?
15:04To be British for me, um, it means, er, that although I'm British and I'm born in this
15:10country, that I'm still rejected as a black person.
15:13And, er, even though my family came over as a Windwash family, they built the roads,
15:20they, um, you know, went to the, came here, built up the country, and, um, they're still
15:27stigmatising us as black people and, um, putting us down.
15:31That's what it means to be British.
15:33So you feel that Britain's a racist country?
15:36Absolutely.
15:37It's still entrenched in its racism and they're still paying off people and they're never
15:41paid retropation, you know, they never paid the people for enslaving us black people.
15:47And, um, what does it mean to be British?
15:50To be a sheep?
15:53Some people say when they think of Britain, they think of Winston Churchill and the Duke
15:57of Wellington and...
15:58Winston Churchill was a racist!
16:00And Alfred the Great and people like that.
16:03Lord Nelson, what do you think of the great British heroes?
16:05They're just, like, racist and slave owners and, um, you know, we, you know, times, times
16:12are changing, backlash is coming, you know, because you can't carry on like that, really.
16:17What does it mean to be British for you?
16:19So obviously, like, me, I was, uh, me being British, yeah, it's, it's all good and, and, and, and, yeah, um, because obviously, like, I was born here, um, born in this country, um, in 1997, the twigs of November, 1997.
16:31And to me, yeah, it's, um, South London, um, South London is, is my home, innit?
16:36And obviously, Stockholm, that I grew up going to, that, it's my home as well, innit?
16:41Stockholm, Clapham, Brixton as well, it's my home as well.
16:44But what about Britain?
16:45What Britain?
16:46Yeah, Britain's my home, innit?
16:48You like it?
16:49Yeah, yeah, yeah.
16:50Since 27 years on this earth, yeah, um, um, it's been, it's been amazing, yeah.
16:55And obviously, um, the things, uh, things have changed for good.
17:00I'm going to name some British legends from history, and I want you to respond how you, what do you think of them?
17:05Alfred the Great, Winston Churchill, Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington, what do you think of these people?
17:11Oh, well, what I'll say is, what I'll say about these people is, um, you know, they're just doing their, they're just doing what they've got to do, you know.
17:20What do you think are British values?
17:22British values?
17:23British values, uh, it's a tricky one still, it's a tricky one, innit?
17:28It's a tricky one, innit?
17:29Um, British values, yeah?
17:31Uh, is it something to do with cost of living or something?
17:34So what does it mean to be British, sir?
17:36What does it mean to be British?
17:38Look at me and you won't miss, you will see that I'm here with you, wondering what to do, wondering how to go along.
17:48Want to be strong and still being weak, because of the system. I don't know who cheat.
17:55And do you have a favourite Prime Minister or King or Queen?
17:59Well, to be honest with you, we grew up and see the Queen in power. I really like King Charles right now still. I like the guy, he's a cool guy.
18:09So what do you think it means to be British?
18:11Uh, well I am British. My ancestors were Welsh.
18:15What are British values?
18:17Uh, have manners, be kind, respectful, yes.
18:23Do you have a favourite Prime Minister or King or Queen?
18:27Elizabeth.
18:28Elizabeth the second?
18:30I know she's gone, but I'm waiting for William now.
18:34You're not a fan of Charles?
18:36Uh...
18:38And when I say the names of the next British heroes, what do you think? So, Alfred the Great, Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington, Henry VIII, what do you think of these people?
18:48Well, they were heroes in their time. I mean, that was a long time ago, but they saved things, so they were good men in that respect, yeah.
18:59And what do you make of the Britain today? It's obviously changed a lot, presumably, since when you were growing up.
19:03Of course, yes. Of course. That's a very difficult one for me, because I'm on my last chapter now, so that's how I'm going to put it.
19:14Um, nearly in my 80s, so, um, that's a very difficult question for me, because if you look around, um, there's a lot of languages spoken, and, um, it's difficult.
19:31Do you like the new Britain?
19:33Um, no. I've got to be honest. No.
19:40What does it mean to be British?
19:42Well, I mean, what does it mean, it's a lot to me, because I always study British, so, uh, and the pound is really strong, the dollars is better.
19:51Do you live here?
19:52Yes.
19:53How long have you lived here?
19:55Two years.
19:56And do you think you're British? Do you feel British?
19:58Certainly.
19:59Yeah.
20:00I love it here.
20:01And what are British values?
20:03Well, exceeding, job offer, travelling, all of the, you can name it. So good.
20:10What's your favourite thing about Britain?
20:12My favourite thing about Britain is getting around easily, transportation, no problem, anywhere you want to go, end of the hand in British, it's always good.
20:20And have you got a favourite prime minister or king or queen?
20:23Well, not really. I just love everyone getting to know them now, so I'm not sure which is my favourite, but all been great.
20:29And what do you think of these British heroes, Alfred the Great, Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington, Henry VIII?
20:37Well, they are really good, getting to study them, like I said, they are really good.
20:42But what does it mean to be British for you?
20:44I was born here, what can I say?
20:47You like it?
20:48It's alright.
20:49What are British values?
20:51How do you mean values?
20:53Some people say that British people are polite and they believe in fair play and they're tolerant and things like that.
20:59Most people are polite and tolerant. But you get somebody in a bad mood and they won't be too polite at all, will they?
21:05Not everyone sees the UK as a problem. I sat down with Fahima Mohamed, a neurodiversity coach and a broadcaster.
21:15It's just a new version of old panic.
21:18The same was said about Irish pubs in the 1950s, curry houses in the 70s and Polish shops in the 2000s.
21:25Britain has always evolved. Culture isn't a museum. It's a living, breathing thing.
21:31And most most Brits enjoy cultural diversity. The Union Jack, Shakespeare or tea with milk all come from cultural mixing.
21:40Britain's identity, whether you like to hear it or not, is multiculturalism.
21:45Most Brits enjoy cultural diversity from chicken tikka masala to certain even festivals that happen within the minority groups.
21:54People vote with their feet and taste buds a lot of the times. And culture is sharing in a strength, not a threat.
22:02Some discomfort is normal and it's not dangerous. Seeing different languages or fates can feel unfamiliar.
22:09But unfamiliar doesn't mean unsafe. In fact, these communities often have strong family values and civic pride.
22:17Britishness is about democracy, fairness and freedom, not what food you eat and what clothes you wear.
22:23To that extent, we can enjoy the differences.
22:26But this is a new phenomenon, isn't it? Because Britain did have a very and England did have a very distinct history and culture and homogeneity until the 1950s,
22:40when you started to have immigration, when you started to have immigration from the former empire, from the Commonwealth.
22:45And obviously, more recently, we've seen huge numbers.
22:48So this isn't going back thousands of years. This is going back, you know, one or two generations.
22:55And this new phenomenon, this new culture, this new wave of immigration,
23:01some people feel that it's eroding the British culture and the English culture that did exist, as I said, until the Second World War.
23:11Well, don't forget that Britain invited those immigrants to fight alongside when it came to the war.
23:17So it wasn't something that was just an invasion, like people call it.
23:20And these are kind of real, you know, offensive and language, which is not really even in line with British values, the British laws, the British system.
23:32It's xenophobic and it's ethnocentric.
23:35And a lot of the times if people are willing to have their own countries for themselves and don't invite people to come in when it comes to trade,
23:42foreign investment, as well as people who are skilled workers that is lacking in this country by its own population indigitously.
23:51So, again, you can't have it both ways.
23:53It has to be in a way where people have come here, they've settled, they were invited and they have also evolved.
23:59There's also a culture amongst minorities where they have more family values of, you know, getting married and having children,
24:05which the English themselves have actually not fulfilled in any sort of way.
24:10And maybe let's, you know, address those issues.
24:12I live in a predominantly white area in southwest London and we've had an influx of people from India and Hong Kong.
24:19They come here with barely much English, but they overtake most people that are living here, unfortunately, within their academics.
24:25So, again, who do you blame?
24:27In Cambridge, philosopher James Orr helped make sense of the deeper cultural shift.
24:33The UK as a designation for the United Kingdom, for those four nations, as the collective term for those four nations,
24:44does not really get going until the mid-90s.
24:49That's when you see an astonishing spike in references to the term UK and the slow decline of the use of the collective term Britain.
24:59You know, the impact of mass migration is real.
25:02The emergence of this new way of thinking about our country, UK, is something that is driven by rapid demographic change.
25:12And so what you're seeing is the emergence of kind of a new or rival collective identity, probably not terribly different from what you would see in the Roman Empire in the fourth and fifth centuries AD,
25:26where you have, in effect, ethnically, linguistically and culturally distinct tribes beginning to assert themselves, particularly in Gaul and in Germany and in North Africa.
25:41And this sort of opened up a sharp contrast between classical Rome, what they would call Romanitas, you know, the older way of being a Roman, purer forms of spoken Latin, classical Latin.
25:55And then the emergence of a just very different set, increasingly divergent sets of cultural norms.
26:02How does the UK compare to the old Britain?
26:05How does it compare? I think probably what distinguishes the UK compared to, you know, understood as this kind of distilled symbol of a new country dominated by emerging migrant cultures and demographic silos,
26:22what characterizes it is what characterizes it is a kind of year zero attitude to history.
26:29There's no, quite understandably, there's no conscious awareness of the hinterlands of the nation.
26:37And that's not just, you know, that they are not familiar with 1066 and all that.
26:45They won't, you know, World War II and the kind of Spitfire nationalism and the Blitz spirit.
26:52These will be, these just are completely alien concepts and alien chapters to them for reasons you quite, you know, you can entirely understand.
27:02They will bring with them, you know, when your rivals step through Heathrow,
27:08they bring with them their own loyalties and their own mental histories of the cultures and nations that form them, the religions that form them.
27:18So I think that's one distinctive feature.
27:20There's a kind of, there will always be a dialogue of the Deaf, I think, between the sort of new UK populations and, as it were, the older historic enclaves.
27:33And increasingly, I think they will be enclaves if we look at, if we look at the data, certainly by the end of this century,
27:40you will see, I think, kind of, you know, silos of maybe people living, sort of UKers and Britishers living alongside each other somehow,
27:51but certainly not, you know, not integrating a great deal.
27:54I mean, it does look like, as I said, it's going to be a tale of two nations.
27:58The UK isn't just a meme, it's a mirror.
28:04It reflects a nation that's fractured, confused and unsure of what it wants to be.
28:11The old Britain was built on a shared identity, loyalty and pride.
28:16The new one is built on vibes, globalism and alien cultures.
28:22Some call it progress, others call it collapse.
28:26But one thing's certain, this isn't Britain anymore.
28:31This is the UK.
28:34This country!
28:36I take whatever talk he is, he was so worthy.
28:39The UK is considered the way to Britain.
28:41This country vielä has been ships and lideradesune by the British High D RPM.
28:45It is not a unique win we can't wait for.
28:46The Republic For The Cause Butth MINUTE 3
28:47This country also happensistically closer to the UK.
28:48This country has 즉 Zeal of the Worldborg 네.
28:50The UK is currently the UK on the UK.
28:53Y beyond, and non- apologise for anyone shares do whatsoever.
28:56The US!
28:59The UK says this 유 Our country has been built on very well retrouver.
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