Great vid!! Odd times when the only truth we get in the media comes from comedians!
@misbah34935 ай бұрын
If I had only one word to describe this episode...zabardast!!!
@Junaid-xv2bm6 ай бұрын
Watched the full episode, loved it.
@indyanddr6 ай бұрын
Appreciate this Junaid!
@stephenbasra90586 ай бұрын
Smashed it 💪
@indyanddr6 ай бұрын
Thanks Stephen!
@S3Ranj5 ай бұрын
Awesome video.
@indyanddr5 ай бұрын
Super kind of you, thanks Ranj!
@aamin69333 ай бұрын
Loved to see how punjabis can relate to each other
@SoundControlDJs20006 ай бұрын
🚀 love it guys. Reaching new heights. Another ❤🔥episode
@indyanddr6 ай бұрын
Thank you bro!
@KAUJLA-fw3ex6 ай бұрын
Tez is correct, Biscoff is mid but the spread is a work of art. I'm out of the loop though, what did MP Tan Dhesi do? Also loved the talk about brown people uniting. Keep up the good work guys!
@indyanddr6 ай бұрын
Hahaha the biscoff distain continues! So Tan didn’t vote for a ceasefire under the SNP motion put forward. I think he abstained or voted against it. Instead he voted for the labour amendment which . By doing this, it was interpreted as choosing not to vote for a ceasefire in Gaza.
@saudisinaudis4 ай бұрын
in fairness in some pak-punjabi slang babi can be read to mean pig so i think that is why it is out of use within pakistan due to the general population being muslim... bhaji (young auntie / female cousin) khala/popo (auntie) and mamoo/cha cha (uncle)... generally father side relation you would use popo / cha cha and mother side would be khala / mamoo - this is my family though not sure if it is the same for others... we also have many sikh friends close to the family and refer to them as massi and uncle-ji
@ja5cv6 ай бұрын
Wow enjoyed listening to this interview. Was insightful, tez resonated with me. Though still wondering why George Galloway got voted back earlier this year Rochdale? mainly by asians residing there. Something missing there too, they don’t feel represented.
@indyanddr6 ай бұрын
Thanks for listening! Because George made his voting ground very clear about being pro Gaza. That’s how he won if I recall correctly
@xDriger6 ай бұрын
I'mma keep it 100, I live in the UK and I am slightly scared of people who talk about their belief in islam. I have absolutely no preconceived opinions about people I meet who appear to be potentially muslim, or even if I were to walk past a mosque. It's just when I see everything I see on social media from islamic based sources it really presents itself to me as something that is quite cult-y, where people are either with them or against them, and that they want to convert both people and the culture to something that matches their values. And that honestly scares me. Now I have no doubt that this is influenced by ingrained islamaphobia in this country and obviously the terror organisations and events in the past 3 decades confound it further, so I am sorry about that as nobody deserves to be painted by the same brush just based off a common trait. I wouldn't like being compared to Jimmy Saville just because he was a white british dude. Idk, I just wish that we could live in a multicultural environment where everyone was free to be themselves without fear of repercussion (subject to it affecting other people of course)
@RaferJeffersonIII6 ай бұрын
A five minute conversatio: Yes, we want you to live under our law to protect you from hell. This is the difference. Western values are secular. Islam strongly believes ALL should fall under its rule. That is the key difference. It does not believe in live and let live. And it does so for noble reasons - it believes it is saving you. I’ve had many, many discussions on this issue and it all comes back to the same place. Oh, and their sons can marry your daughters but your sons can’t marry theirs. That’s a non-negotiable. Good guys.
@joelk31876 ай бұрын
The fact that you fear a minority religion in a secular country should show you what Islam is about. Do you have this fear about Protestants, Catholics, Buddhists, Pagans, Jews, atheists, Hindus, Sikhs? I am fairly confident your answer would be a no. Even with them at 6-7% minority, you are fearful. Of the 26 major terror attacks in the UK since 2000, over 60% have been done in the name of Islam. In Australia it is 73% since 2000. In France it is 85%. EIGHTY-FIVE PERCENT. Even in Indonesia, the most populated Muslim country, 70% of the terror attacks since 2000 have been carried out in the name of Islam. Fear is exactly what they want you to feel. Islam teaches people to bully and undermine others when a minority, and subject, mistreat, and oppress when a majority. Most of them are just brainwashed from birth. It is useless to target Muslims, because Muslims are the biggest victims of Islam - especially the women. But targeting Islam is vital. Don’t fear the religion or the adherents. That just plays into the only thing Islam has going for it - intimidation. It’s been the same for 1400 years.
@joelk31876 ай бұрын
@@RaferJeffersonIII You do not want the western world to be under Islamic rule to save us from hell. If that were the case, people would be forced to be Muslim under Islamic law. That is not permitted. The fact that Islam believes and teaches that it should rule over all is very problematic. It has the same claims as science - it claims to be universal, but has 99.99999999% less evidence as to why it is correct. After 1400 years of Islam being around, you’d think the world would have accepted it by now, right? It only took 100 years for the entire world to accept modern science. The Islamic states immediately adopted the scientific achievements in warfare. They armed themselves with bombs and artillery and computers, and other scientific achievements. They aren’t arming themselves with prayer, are they? Do you not see how the law on marriage by gender in Islam is aimed at controlling and staying in power?
@Takerfanatic6 ай бұрын
Chat was good once you got the Netflix reviews out of the way