In this brand new podcast, filmmaker Alex McCarron speaks to thinkers, writers and broadcasters about the Coronavirus lockdown, how it will affect our lives and what the world might look like afterwards.
Laurence talks to acclaimed actor and director Robert Davi about the bizarre nature of politics today and their upcoming film, My Son Hunter.#MySonHunter #RobertDavi #LaurenceFox #HunterBiden
Joining Laurence Fox is Christopher F Rufo, writer, filmmaker and advisor to Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis. They talk the next US presidential election and the cancer of grooming in the US education system.
Laurence talks to Sky News Australia star Rowan Dean about lockdown, compulsion of state and the new ideological battlelines that divide us. Rowan is a journalist, former advertsiing executive and presenter of Sky News Australia's Outsiders.
Laurence talks to claimant in one of the first bad law project cases, Amy Gallagher, an NHS nurse & psychotherapist suing The Tavistock clinic for racial discrimination, religious discrimination, harassment, & victimisation - after being hounded out for challenging the wokism healthcare staff are now regularly spoonfed.
Laurence talks to former MEP, businessman and economic commentator Ben Habib about the root causes of the cost of living crisis, the chronic mismanagement of the economy since 2008 and how we can get out of this mess.
Laurence talks to activist, campaigner and Youtuber Kellie-Jay Keen, also known as Posie Parker about the spread of gender ideology, how she got involved in the fight against it and what will happen to our children if a stand isn't made now.
Laurence talks to Queen of the North and facebook superstar June Slater about the sorry state of politics and why what we need is not a government, but an opposition.
An introduction to the Bad law Project with Reclaim Party Leader Laurence Fox, Harry Miller, Family Law Barrister Sarah Phillimore, and Human Rights & Free Speech Barrister Anna Loutfi
Laurence is joined by Gettr CEO Jason Miller, Journalist and commentator Dominique Samuels, Toby Young from the Free Speech Union and Reclaim Party Chairman Harry Miller to discuss the government's new Online Safety Bill, which could potentially destroy free speech in this country.
Join Laurence & Douglas as they traverse the minefield of white privilege, the attack on the working class and how we can begin to combat the woke warriors currently marching through British institutions.
Barrister Francis Hoar joins party leader Laurence Fox to dissect the new Online Safety Bill and what impact it will have on the right to open discussion in the UK.
After Twitter labels George Galloway "Russian State-Affiliated Media" George hits back, and asks what's left for free speech in this country, in an exclusive interview on the Laurence Fox Show.
Laurence talks our future of money, why all money is debt, what the Great Reset really means, digital IDs, social credit systems and digital currency. And, why they are all connected. Dab Tubb is a private investor and specialist in emerging trends.
ABI ROBERTS UNCENSORED: The Queen of Common Sense talks to Laurence about media bias, her personal experience of living in Russia & why she's been cancelled by GBNewsAbi Roberts is a comedian and broadcaster. She studied Russian in the UK and opera at the Moscow Conservatoire. In 2016, she became the first British stand up to perform a show in Russia, in Russian, when she took her one woman show, ANGLICHANKA, to Moscow.You can find her on Youtube here and twitter here.
Laurence talks to broadcaster Calvin Robinson about his treatment at the hands of the church of England, and his efforts to become a minister.
"We're both naughty boys, and you need naughty boys" Laurence speaks to one of the few men in Britain to always speak his mind, James Delingpole, about Canada, liberalism, God, the threat of war and the future or our civilisation.James Delingpole is a British journalist and commentators, host of the hugely successful Delingpod.
Laurence speaks to Dr David Cartland, a man who has risked everything to speak out about what he sees as the harms being done by our response to Covid. This interview cannot be shown on Twitter or Facebook. We'd be taken down by big tech - for simply telling David's story. Dr David Cartland is a General Practitioner from Cornwall, England.
Alex talks to writer and philosopher Ben Irvine about his unique perspective on what he calls the Coronapanic, that Boris correctly pursued a Herd Immunity strategy in March 2020 but was abandoned by the conservative commentariat, leaving him open to attack from the socialist bureaucracies and unions, particularly the teachers. In so doing, have we allowed these interests, who could never get near power via the ballot box, to hold the country to ransom? Is Boris's heart in the right place? Find out in this fascinating conversation. Ben Irvine is the author of numerous books, including Scapegoated Capitalism and Space to Create: A writer's view on the housing crisis. You can buy them here.
In this crossover event of the century, Escape from Lockdown has teamed up with the State of the Markets Podcast to settle once and for all the question of whether there is an overarching conspiracy. Arguing against, Deputy Editor of Country Squire magazine, James Bembridge, arguing for, State of the Markets co-host, author and wealth manager Tim Price. Who wins? You decide.With contributions from Toby Young, Allison Pearson, Dr Mike Yeadon, Bob Moran and Mark Changizi, and the great listeners to our podcasts. Co-hosted by Alex McCarron and Paul Rodriguez.
Alex talks to psychologist Dr Gary Sidley about why the government mandated masks, why some scientists are obsessed by them, despite the paucity in evidence they do anything at all, and the damage that masks do to people forced to wear them. Dr Gary Sidley is a former NHS consultant clinical psychologist, as well as a writer, blogger and trainer. He is the author of Tales from the Madhouse and a member of HART. He is also a leading member of the smile free campaign, working to stop the spread of mask mandates in the UK.
Alex talks to bastion of tweed conservatism, James Bembridge, about whether the political and social culture of Britain can withstand the cultural onslaught of lockdown. James is the Deputy Editor of Country Squire magazine.
Alex talks to writer, comedian and lockdown sceptic Nick Dixon about how his live comedy career was eviscerated by lockdown, the culture war and lockdownism, and whether it's worth listening to what Dominic Cummings has to say about lockdowns. Nick has been a jobbing circuit comedian for ten years, recently started writing for Spiked and has weekly slot on TalkRadio. You can have a fun time on his website here.
Alex talks to writer and youtuber Ben Pile about his work looking at the Climate Change panic, and its similarities (and some differences) with the Covid Panic. Along the way, they discuss the modern technocratic ideology, the influence of supranational bodies and agencies on our lives and just how much will Net Zero cost us. You can read Ben's blog here, watch his youtube output here, and follow him on twitter here.
Alex speaks to barrister Francis Hoar about his battles in court against lockdown. Along the way, they talk about the individual cases has fought against the government, how he arrived at his legal philosophy and how the state of lockdown his damned the country's system of law. Francis Hoar is a barrister of constitutional cases, as well as specialising in public law, commercial law and employment law.If you want to help Francis' current legal fight, to end to quarantine of travellers to the UK, you can donate at https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/end-the-quarantine/
Alex talks to theoretical cognitive scientist Dr Mark Changizi about why governments around the world has pursued a policy as destructive as lockdown with such determination and alacrity. In this wide-ranging interview, they discuss lockdown as a psychological phenomenon and compare is to other mass-hysterias that have taken public consciousness hostage. Dr Mark Changizi is a multi-disciplinary theorist who has worked in a number of different fields in a fascinating and career including cognition, physics, maths, neurobiology, answering questions as diverse as why we see illusions, why we like music and why we get pruny fingers in the rain.
Alex talks to the Telegraph's Oliver Smith about what travel will look like in the age of Covid, whether we will be able to go on holiday ever again or will the threat of new variants keep us locked up in HMP Great Britain.Oliver Smith is the Digital Travel Editor for the Telegraph.
Alex talks to writer Ronan Maher, ostensibly about whether lockdowns have become an integral part of leftist political thought. As Alex polishes off a bottle of wine beers, it degenerates into a wide-ranging conversation about the state of the world today.
Alex talks to writer and activist Stacey Rudin about the state of lockdown in the USA, China's role in bringing it about and her experience helping the Great Barrington Declaration cone into being. Stacey Rudin is a freelance writer, activist, community leader, volunteer, and former litigator. Her work appears in a number of outlets, including for the AIER and RealClearPolitics.You can read some of her work on her brilliant Medium page here
Alex talks to writer, broadcast, critic and professional Grumpy Old Woman Kathryn Flett about what promises to be the worst Christmas since the war, and the of the state of play in our neverending lockdown. Kathryn Flett begin her career writing for magazines like I-D and the Face, before being appointed editor of Arena. After a many years at The Observer, she is now restaurant critic for the Telegraph. She has made numerous TV appearances, including as one of the BBC's Grumpy Old Women and as a judge of Miss Naked Beauty.
Alex talks to comedian Tania Edwards as they paint a terrifying picture of a biofascist state that could emerge in a dystopian near future as a result of the current lockdown induced terror.
Alex talks to Swedish doctor and blogger Sebastian Rushworth about his experiences treating Covid patients in non-locked down Sweden
Alex talks to Dr Clare Craig about data driving the pandemic response, why it no longer makes any sense, the phenomenon of false positives and how the disease which spread across the world in spring is largely over. Dr Craig is a pathologist and tweets at @ClareCraigPath
Alex talks to the cartoonist and firebreathing lockdown sceptic Bob about the disaster of lockdown, and what drives him to make art. Along the way, Bob talks movingly about his family, how he constructs his cartoons and the questions lockdown raises about morality. To buy Bob's original artwork, visit bobmoran.co.uk
Alex talks to the Senior Travel Content Editor for The Telegraph, Annabel Fenwick-Elliott about travel in the age of Lockdown, what countries we can go to, the decimation of the global tourism industry and what travel will look like in the post-Lockdown future. Annabel recently wrote movingly about how she won't be able to see her father for at least two years due to Australia's quarantine policies, you can read the piece here.
Alex talks to Dr Mike Yeadon about the thinking which guides SAGE, the government's scientific advisory body, and how it is fundamentally at odds with reality, resulting in more and more absurd diktats that will have zero effect on overall Covid morbidity, yet will hamstring society of years to come. Dr Mike Yeadon is the former CSO and VP, Allergy and Respiratory Research Head with Pfizer Global R&D and co-Founder of Ziarco Pharma Ltd. He has appeared in various news outlets and has most recently been raising awareness of the issue of false positives in Covid PCR testing, including penning Lies, Damned Lies and Health Statistics for Lockdown Sceptics.
Alex talks to lawyer and researcher Michael P. Senger about social media warfare, particularly, the Chinese Communist Party's propaganda campaign to ensure other states bring in nationwide lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Michael reveals why governments so eagerly embraced lockdowns, in part due to huge pro-lockdown social media campaigns, and how the policy itself was modelled on Xi Jinping's Fangkong health and security philosophy. He explains the Chinese government's Belt and Road Initiative, designed to spread Chinese influence around the globe, and why Sweden, almost uniquely, resisted the lockdown policy. Michael P. Senger's twitter thread in which he posts his evidence for Chinese social can be found here, subsequently collated into China's Global Lockdown Propaganda Campaign, for The Tablet.
Alex talks to the brilliant Aaron Ginn about lockdown scepticism throughout the world, the thinking behind the world's lockdown response, silicon valley and the state of America today. Aaron Ginn is an early adopter of lockdown scepticism. His viral (pun intended) Medium article, Covid-19, Evidence over Hysteria, was one of the first to question the extreme governmental response to Covid-19, before it was censored by Medium and removed from the platform. Having been the only Silicon Valley member of Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign, Ginn, with his cofounders, established Lincoln Network to use technology to promote liberty in the public space. He has previously led growth product management at Everlane, StumbleUpon and is known in the valley for launching and popularizing the "growth hacking movement."
Alex talks to behavioural scientist, author, lecturer and practitioner Patrick Fagan about the psychology of masks, lockdown and managing populations. Patrick was previously Lead Psychologist at Cambridge Analytica, and is now the co-founder of Capuchin Behavioural Science.He has written several thought-provoking pieces for The Critic, including Face Masks Make You Stupid and The Lockdown Lobotomy.
Alex talks to Professor Karl Wennberg from the Institute of Analytical Sociology, Linköping University, Sweden. Professer Wennberg's main focus is entrepreneurship, organisational change, and their macro-level implications, however he recently published a fascinating paper looking at how OECD countries simply copied their neighbours when bringing in measures in response to the novel Coronavirus. Alex and Karl discuss how democratic nations panicked in response to the Pandemic, and what forces made them impose untried and untested restrictions on their populations. You can read about his paper here: https://liu.se/en/news-item/oecd-landernas-politiker-tar-efter-varandra
Alex talks to restauranteur and businessman Hugh Osmond about how the Lockdown has affected business, how decision-making in a crisis can break down and how the government campaign of fear has hamstrung the nation. Hugh Osmond read Medicine at Oxford before moving into the bar and club scene, and is most well known for his 1993 flotation of Pizza Express with Luke Johnson. Since then, he has founded and invested in businesses in different industries, and has written for, and given interviews to, various national newspapers and broadcasters.
Alex talks to lawyer and campaigner Clare Wills about the horrific treatment of the elderly and vulnerable during lockdown. Clare's stories of neglect and lack of care leading to death are staggering, and may go some way towards explaining England's high rate of excess deaths, particularly among the elderly. Clare Wills is lawyer specialising in probate and end of life affairs.
Alex talks to journalist and broadcaster Liam Halligan about the coming economic catastrophe, the opiate of quantitative easing, the decline in the journalistic standards of "the lobby" and what limited options governments might have to save their economies. Liam Halligan is the former economics editor of Channel 4 News, occasional reporter for Channel 4's Dispatches, telegraph columnist and contributor to numerous other publications.
Alex talks to psychotherapist, hypnotist and long time Paul McKenna collaborator, Dr Hugh Willbourn about the outbreak of mass psychosis that has enveloped the world. Dr Willbourn postulates that the Covid-19 Lockdown, anti-Brexit hysteria and climate-change panic are all manifestations of millenarian cult-like thinking, where evidence of failed prophesy merely serves to intensify zealotry, rather than diffuse it. Along the way the talk about to woke politics as religion, why you should watch less television, and how to avoid destructive behaviours, some of which Alex has indulged in during the lockdown. You can read Hugh's blog at https://www.hughwillbourn.com
Alex talks with writer, researcher and Lockdown Legend Hector Drummond about lockdown, statues and how everything, from science to art is becoming political. Hector was previously an academic and is now a full time writer. You can find his writings on his multi-author blog at Hectordrummond.com and buy his book, The Biscuit Factory, Vol 1, Days of Wine and Cheese at https://www.amazon.co.uk/Biscuit-Factory-Vol-Days-Cheese-ebook/dp/B0789WFMTB
Alex talks to economist and writer Andrew Lilico about his opposition to the lockdown, his own modelling and the economics of the crisis. Andrew Lilico was the former chief economist for Vote Leave, and is the current Chairman of Europe Economics. You can read him in the Telegraph, at on his blog, https://andrewlilico.wordpress.com/
Alex talks to former MEP and founder of Leavers of Britain, Lucy Harris, about personality journalism in the age of Covid, the state of politics and government messaging PLUS we rate all the different Coronavirus slogans from governments around the world. If you want to play along at home, here's the list of global coronavirus messages compared - https://order-order.com/2020/05/14/global-coronavirus-slogans-compared/
Speech Day Special! Alex talks to Twitter Knight of the Garter Sir Dan of C, about his school reports assessing the performance of our (supposedly) sound twitter personalities during the Covid crisis. Prizes will be issued for outstanding efforts, and stern rebukes for the disappointing pupils. Along the way Alex and Dan talk about the nature of fear, and Dick Delingpole's "third Wednesday" libertarian drinks initiative.
Alex talks to intensive care doctor and writer, Matt Strauss, about why he opposes the lockdown, his experience treating Covid-19 patients and the occasional challenges he faces making his voice heard in journalism and medicine, with a couple of detours into Iggy Pop and fantasy roleplaying games. Matt Strauss, MD is the former medical director of the critical care unit at Guelph General Hospital, Canada. He is now an assistant professor of medicine at Queen’s University. He has bylines in Vice, National Post and the Spectator
Alex talks to writer, performer and broadcaster Timandra Harkness about our attitudes to risk, and how that informs society's response to Covid-19. There was an audio fail towards the end, so please excuse Alex's voice suddenly sounding like a Skype call, because that's what it was.
Alex talks to Alistair Haimes about data, modelling and the mathematical impossibility of track and trace as a means of eliminating Covid.Alistair Haimes is a financial professional, you can find him on twitter on @alistairhaimes where you can find graphs. Lots of graphs.
Alex speaks to the one man opinion machine, James Delingpole, about "The Perfect Storm of Stupid," his hypothesis about why the world plunged into Lockdown, in spite of the mounting evidence that Lockdown is the cure worse than the disease. James Delingpole is a writer and podcaster, and a man who always speaks his mind. If you want to support James and read some of his exclusive writings, have a look at his Patreon, www.patreon.com/jamesdelingpole. Subscribe to his podcast, the Delingpod. And this one, obviously.