First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"(About the 2018 interview Cathy Newman did with Jordan Peterson): I can't understand how no one in Channel four saw that and went "We can't possibly put this out there. It's embarrassing." but they did and they got the attention they deserved. But what they don't realize, these people, is it's one time attention. You watch that interview and you will never watch an interview with Cathy Newman again."
"I'm a non-believer, but I can't help but think that what we've created as a society when we killed God is a vacuum that inevitably has to be filled. And when it gets filled, it gets filled by a new religion which is what social justice and intersectionality and all of that now is. They have priests. They have inquisitions. The only thing they don't have in that religion is redemption and forgiveness. [...] If we don't have forgiveness, I don't understand how this world is gonna work. I honestly don't."
"Free speech is not some right-wing reframing of whatever; it is the foundation of Western civilization."
"The only way to deal with the problem of racism is to treat people on the content of their character and nothing else, and the fact that woke culture seeks to overturn that is a new form of racism that we must all oppose."
"This country is responsible for 2 percent of global carbon emissions, which means that if Britain was to sink into the sea right now it would make absolutely no difference to the issue of climate change. You know why? Because the future of the climate is going to be decided in Asia and in Latin America. By poor people who couldn't give a shit about saving the climate. [...] Do you know why? Because they're poor. [...] 120 million people in China do not have enough food. I don't mean that they don't get dessert, I mean they suffer from malnutrition. That means that their immune system is breaking down because they don't have enough food. You're not going to get them to stay poor."
"I actually get invited on TV a lot nowadays, and I don't do as much of it as I used to. And part of the reason is that once you've [got] the heroin of a long term conversation, why would you drop down to methadone? This is so much more fulfilling and satisfying. We're sitting here for a good chunk of time, you're giving me the space to speak, you're not talking over me, you're not trying to make me look bad [...], and [in corporate media] you get three minutes to make one point. And look, there's a market out there for that [but] I enjoy this. I enjoy having a conversation [and] connecting with somebody, getting to know how they think and them getting to know how I think, disagreeing where there's disagreement but doing it in a constructive way as opposed to going for the click bait and all of that. That is a really fulfilling part of doing Triggernometry for me. We get to interview fascinating people [...] and we just sit and learn. [...] How many people get the opportunity to sit down with a great mind for an hour and just engage, and speak, and listen, and think about the world? To me, that is incredibly gratifying. And I don't think that if i was hosting something on TV [that] I'd get a chance to do that."
"Rather than us exporting liberal democracy to these countries instead we're importing Chinese-style authoritarianism."
"When you have some kid, who works for Twitter in the Philippines, censoring a Nobel Prize-winning scientist, speaking about his area of expertise, I think we've lost the plot."
"[About the importance of saying what you think]: We come from generations of people who were killed for their beliefs. Well, I'm not going to dishonor them."
"Francis Foster: Everybody knows that Joe Biden isn't in charge. He simply can't be. Konstantin Kisin: He could be, but that's worse."
"During the whole Ngozi Fulani affair, it was covered like it was a terrorist attack when you sort of think there's probably much bigger core issues affecting way more people."
"[About vaccination mandates after the Covid-19 pandemic:] I'm against mandates and I'm against mandates of vaccination, right? People are free to have the vaccination, people are free to wear a mask, people are free to do whatever they want, right? But I think, if you look back, the idea that people shouldn't be forcebly injected with medical things that they don't wish to have came out in 1945 for very good fucking reason. Very good reason. And the fact that that became a controversial thing to say... No! No, no, no. People came together in Nuremberg for a very good reason and decided we're not going to let this happen again. And the fact that people were willing to just completely overlook that. This is the thing, they flip everything on its head."
"Many people woke up on October 7 sympathetic to parts of woke ideology and went to bed that evening questioning how they had signed on to a worldview that had nothing to say about the mass rape and murder of innocent people by terrorists."
"We woke up on October 8 to the clamor of street protests in cities across the West condemning Israel even before any major Israeli response to the attacks. We watched celebratory crowds brandish swastikas and chant âgas the Jewsâ at events purporting to be about the loss of Palestinian lives. We saw Black Lives Matter chapters lionize terrorists."
"The events of the last two weeks have shattered the illusion that wokeness is about protecting victims and standing up for persecuted minorities. This ideology is and has always been about the one thing many of us have told you it is about for years: power. And after the last two weeks, there can be no doubt about how these people will use any power they seize: they will seek to destroy, in any way they can, those who disagree."
"What we have witnessed over the last two weeksâwith enormous pro-Hamas rallies in cities like London, Paris, and Washington, D.C.âhas the potential to change the immigration debate in a decisive way. It is much harder to pretend that allowing people to enter our country illegally is a moral good when you watch some of them celebrate mass murder in the streets of your capital cities."
"Western civilization has produced some of the most stunning scientific, technological, social, and cultural breakthroughs in human history. If you consider yourself âliberalâ or even âprogressive,â it must surely be clear by now that America and her allies are the only places in the world where your values are even considered values. If our civilization is allowed to collapse, it will not be replaced by a progressive utopia. It will be replaced by chaos and barbarism."
"When you want to help people, you tell them the truth. When you want to help yourself, you tell them what they want to hear."
"[About Triggernometry and mainstream media:] We don't have a budget to employ a bunch of people to do extensive research on things or to do fact checking for us. So we can't do certain things that the mainstream media can do, and should do. The problem is the mainstream media isn't doing it either. [...] There's a really important role for the mainstream media. I just wish they'd play that role. [...] New media has its own problems. It over rewards charisma. It over rewards passion. It massively under rewards any attempts to cling to truth. It encourages people to go off in the pursuit of the most exciting take, and truth isn't always exciting. The truth is we need a vibrant ecosystem in which all of these different pieces play their own different roles, which is why I'm in favour of maximum freedom because that's when you get everybody doing their thing. Over time people who want wholesome content if you like, when it comes to fact or information or whatever, can seek it out. Because people aren't stupid."
"I think, it doesn't apply to everybody, caveat, for most women the greatest gift their partner can give them is the opportunity, if they want to be at home with the children, to do that."
"One of the things people don't say enough about free speech is "Yes, it causes harm but the harm is worth it." And we don't make that argument because it's too honest and complicated and unpleasant."
"Pavlik Morozov was murdered by his own family in retribution. But, eerily, I still catch glimpses of him in modern Western society, especially at this point in time, when we are routinely encouraged to put politics before the person, snitch on each other via government hotlines and prove our devotion to idealistic agendas."
"The reality of life under the USSR is not something most people can accurately comprehend now, because it happened before most millennials were born and thus preceded the advent of social media, which means to most of my peers it might as well never have happened at all."
"If there is one thing my Soviet childhood taught me, itâs that subscribing to someone elseâs ideology will always inevitably mean having to suspend your own judgment about right and wrong to appease your tribe. I refuse to do so."
"This is why so few Russians are rarely, if ever, progressive liberals. They are too busy dealing with the harsh realities of life, such as having to pay the rent or feed their children on a shoestring budget, to partake in self-righteousness and identity politics."
"If anything, free speech is the kryptonite of fascism, regardless of whether it stems from the left or the right. Itâs the ultimate disinfectant for bad ideas. Tellingly, this is often why these people are happy to limit free speech: because, beneath all the bluster and virtue-signalling, they have flimsy arguments that collapse under the lightest touch of critical analysis. So, instead of making their ideas more robustâwhich is what most people would doâthey put down debate altogether and hope it goes away."
"Put simply, suppression of free speech is a symptom of tyranny."
"If the right loses the ability to say what it wishes, then thatâs a loss for the left as well, because sooner or later that restriction is going to hit them. Thatâs a mistake that the millennial left tend to make. They think theyâre always going to be in a position of calling the shots and making the rules, because theyâre so right-on and woke. They think a climate of fear isnât going to affect them, because they always have the correct opinions, but this is a huge mistake. Itâs like young people thinking that theyâre always going to be young."
"This whole idea that the only reason people keep nattering on about free speech is that they want to use racist language and promote bigotryâthatâs ignorant."
"She then adds that the primary motivation for contemporary censorship isnât shielding people from âmeanâ words but exercising power. âIt feels good to tell people what to do. These people think theyâre motivated by virtue, but the thrill isnât doing good; itâs authoritarian: pushing people around and punishing them when they step out of line. Itâs a predatory sport, and getting people sacked is one of the things you do on social mediaâŚand now in the mainstream media.â"
"Modern life has become Orwellian andâin many waysâweâre all 1984âs Winston Smith now."
"Soviet citizens, including my great-grandparents, who made statements that were regarded as problematic by the authorities, were told, âComrade, this may be factually correct but it is politically incorrect.â In other words, political correctness originates from the desire to suppress the truth in order to protect and advance the prevailing political narrative of the day. How things havenât changed!"
"As a rule, the more outward âdiversityâ an institution has, the more political uniformity there usually is among the people within it. This is because those calling for âdiversityâ donât really want dissimilarity or opposing views. They just want certain groups to be promoted over others, and straight, white men taken down a peg. Never the other way around."
"Hand in hand with this new linguistic spin on diversity comes âinclusionâ, which is another word that has been bastardised in recent years. Spaces, we are told, must now be made more inclusive in order for them to be healthy. However, on entering such a space, youâll soon discover that some people are more included than others."
"In fact, those responsible for setting up particularly âinclusiveâ spaces frequently ask certain people to leave in order to ensure âsafetyâ. Safety, you see, also has a new meaning based primarily around not having to be confronted with different opinions and beliefs (as opposed to physical threat, which is the sole âsafetyâ issue everyone cared about until five minutes ago)."
"Hereâs an idea: why donât we all stop telling other people how they should refer to themselves and mind our own damn business?"
"If your goal is to force people to accept your unsubstantiated views you have to change the meaning of words. The purpose of newspeak is to create wrongthink."
"Ultimately, they know that for a stable society to exist, there must be a common language that everyone uses to communicate on the same basis of understanding. This is no good to radicals who thrive on conflict, because without societal infighting they cannot offer their agenda in the guise of a solution. This is why they stoke division through words and meaning."
"This chapter is a plea from the heart to journalistsâplease stop fucking with the media. It is not yours to co-opt or use to spread propaganda. You are merely stewards of the industry."
"In his best-selling book Love for Imperfect Things, Zen Buddhist teacher Haemin Sunim proves that things donât need to be faultless in order for them to be good or adored. They can be cherished and retain their inherent value in spite of their failings, much like human beings themselves."
"Over the past century, socialism and/or communism has been attempted in more than two dozen places⌠None of them has succeeded. OK, some might have failed more spectacularly than other, but none of them has triumphed, at least not for more than a few months in the early stages. Why? Because, for all of capitalismâs flaws, radical socialism and communismâwhich are essentially two cheeks of the same arseâdo not work in practice. They sound good and worthy, but they cannot withstand the ultimate stress-test of life."
"The students had every right to set their own rules, but I had the right to say their rules were stupid and make fun of them."
"George Carlin, probably the worldâs greatest-ever comedian, once said that the comedianâs job is to find the line and then cross it."
"The message I was given was clear: there is only one acceptable way of telling jokes and, if you donât conform to it, then you should expect your career to die. It was all very, very Soviet."
"The big difference between those âalternativeâ comedians and todayâs activists is that the former actually pushed against the establishment. They challenged the formula and rewrote the rules, whereas modern-day wokeness is the establishment. It sets the rules and enforces the punishments. Every major comedy agent, TV commissioner and producer is looking for the next woke act, preferably one who ticks as many diversity boxes as possible. This isnât a bottom-up revolution; itâs a totalitarian cult in which people with power tell everyone else what they can and canât joke about."
"But itâs not only comics who are self-censoring: increasing numbers of audience members are filing complaints against venues for allowing acts to âupsetâ them. Years ago, such people wouldâve been laughed out of town and told to grow up, but these days theyâre taken seriously."
"Many comedians Iâve spoken to agree that this kind of entitled, moralistic response is more commonplace than ever before. Perhaps itâs related to what psychologists have identified as a general escalation of narcissistic behaviour. Or maybe itâs an inevitable by-product of social media, through which offence-seeking has turned into a kind of amateur sport."
"It was a complete overreaction and disconnected from reality, but thatâs the norm."
"If youâve ever wondered why comediansâthe very people who are supposed to push boundaries and challenge dogmaâwould embrace the cozy conformity of wokeness, then allow me to explain: itâs fundamentally about power. Itâs not about making people laugh any more, itâs about securing the reins of cultural power, which to a large degree they have already done."
"Just as journalists have turned into activists, so too have comedians. Not all, but a large number. They have morphed into representatives of a political agenda and theyâll censor anyone who doesnât help them further it. They donât want to criticise what you do or what you say or engage in debate; that would be a waste of time. They simply want to punish you, silence you and achieve their political goals by any means necessary."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.