 Let's go through some of Prince Philip's, I mean, they're called gaffes on the media. Some might call them bigoted or at least grossly insensitive. You can decide how you'd like to describe them, but we're going to hear them a lot over the next 24 hours referred to as colorful. But we're probably not going to get them plastered across the television very often. So because we're an alternative media platform, let's give you the alternative rundown of things Prince Philip has said. Remember, if he has a job in terms of public service, it's to be a bit of a diplomat. So if he's undiplomatic, that's a bit of a problem with the public service. Anyway, I'll take you through them. This was during the 1981 recession. Lots of people are unemployed. Prince Philip says, everybody was saying we must have more leisure. Now they're complaining they're unemployed, which is he was sort of moral leader for our country. In 1984, after accepting a small gift from a local woman in Kenya, he said, you are a woman, aren't you? The stuff where he's speaking to people in the former British Empire is to me the grossest. 1988, we are now he was speaking to a German news agency. And he said, in the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus to contribute something to solving overpopulation. That's worth noting, you can be reincarnated as anything. He's chosen a deadly virus to contribute something to solving overpopulation. Now, when everyone says on the news, I've heard it so many times today, his redeeming factor was he was an environmentalist. You've got to remember when aristocrats are environmentalists, normally what that means is they want to control the birth rates of the poor. Let's go to 1995 to a Scottish driving instructor. Remember, these are supposed to be the people keeping together the union. He says, how do you keep the natives off the booze long enough to pass the test? 1996, we're in response to calls to ban firearms after the dumb blank shooting. If a cricketer, for instance, suddenly decided to go into a school and batter a lot of people to death with a cricket bat, which he could very easily do. I mean, are you going to ban cricket bats? This is a hereditary job. If there was any meritocracy here, someone who made that argument, unless you were in America where you could become a Republican president saying that kind of stuff, I don't think that would work here. And again, this is another racist one, which I think are the most outrageous ones, really, to then have all of this hagiography that brushes over it today. This was from 1999, commenting on an old fashioned fuse box in a factory near Edinburgh. Prince Philip said, it looks as if it was put in by an Indian. That was in 1999. That wasn't even that long ago. 2001, to a 13 year old, Andrew Adams, who told Prince Philip he wanted to go into space. He told the 13 year old, you're too fat to be an astronaut. Obviously, that's incredibly cruel, but it is just very surreal to have someone who is, their job is to basically be this cuddly figurehead, and then you're telling 13 year olds they're too fat to go into space. Very bizarre. 2002, to an Australian aborigine during a visit, he says, still throwing spears. Very gross. 2009, another racist one after looking at the name badge of businessman, a tall patelle, at a palace reception for British Indians. He said, there's a lot of your family in tonight. Oh my God, you can see why they took him off royal duty, can't you? And my final one, this was to Malala Yousafzai. Children go to school because their parents don't want them in the house. Now, the context here is that Malala survived an assassination attempt by the Taliban, and now campaigns for the right of girls to go to school without fear. Now, Aaron, as I've said, some of those in a way were constructed in a fairly, in a funny way. I wouldn't make the jokes, but now they're there. I mean, he was a 99 year old who said some bigoted things. There will be many 99 year olds who said some bigoted things over a period of 99 years, I suppose. But it was also his job to be a diplomat. And I suppose all of the media platforms are struggling as to how to describe this. They're all talking about it very euphemistically. They were gaffes. I've heard people on the radio, the official newsreaders say, colorful language. And it is a bit like, oh, it's a bit awkward, isn't it? Sort of covering for him in that way. Yeah, I think so. I mean, I think people like the word gaff, because A, it erases obviously some horrific things he's saying. But also people say, just call it what it is, racist. You say, well, if it was just racist, that's one thing. But it's not racist. It's misogynistic. It's fat phobic. It's racist. It's, you know, it's every, he's even slacking off Scots multiple times. He doesn't, he doesn't really leave many people out. So I think bigotry is probably the best, the best way to put it. I think, you know, that term gaff, I mean, it's a strange one. But what I find really interesting, Michael is, and no, this is, this is Tiskey Sass. Of course, I always, I always talk about Jeremy Corbyn, is that we have had a media for years, saying that Jeremy Corbyn is a racist that, you know, socialists in this country are racists. Then we have somebody who has an insight club media, you could fill the shelves up with all the files of him saying bigoted comments, Prince Philip, nobody's going to say the word. Right. And I think that really does say a great deal about the state of the conversation around racism in this country. You know, we've just had the Sewell report. You can correct me on that pronunciation, Tony Sewell, but it was the report that came out at the end of March. And, you know, its conclusion was, basically, Britain's the least racist country around, basically, that was the conclusion. And when we see Donald Trump say these things to Piers Morgan in 2018 saying, I'm the least racist person there is, we laugh, right? In a similar way that we laugh at Prince Philip because it's it's absurd. It's a stupid person saying something really absurd. But actually that's kind of Britain's national ideology is that actually we are the least racist country in the world. And the thing with Prince Philip is if you actually acknowledge what he's saying, it goes so far and it's been given such a free pass for so long, you know, you're letting our real kind of worms. So like you say, they absolutely cannot use the R word, mad of his time, forthright, you know, loose lips, but you cannot call him a racist. And I think that's quite revealing, really. And it tells you about the complete absence of sincerity about having a meaningful conversation about race and racism in this country. Like you say, he's a complex guy. I don't he died. I don't want him to be remembered by everybody forever as a racist, cancel Prince Philip, right? But you know, let's just let's just call facts facts. He was a guy who said lots of racist things doesn't seem a particularly difficult thing to do. I mean, that's that's that's how literally most people will associate, you know, Prince Philip with their sort of mental, you know, mood board, they would say, oh, yeah, he said some really, really crappy things, actually, some might find them funny or whatever. But that's what he would be associated with. And even the people that find them funny would accept they were racist. And yet we're not really, we're not really talking about that. And I think that's really important. I think that really tells you a lot about the British media and about our political culture.