Konstantin Kisin - British People DON'T Go on Stabbing Sprees episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 21, 2026 · 6 MIN

Konstantin Kisin - British People DON'T Go on Stabbing Sprees

from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more honest conversations you won’t see on the BBC: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos British people don’t go on stabbing sprees — terrorists do. And in this clip, Konstantin Kisin explains why refusing to say that simple truth has made the problem harder to confront, harder to solve, and more dangerous for everyone. Rather than hiding behind euphemisms or vague language, Kisin lays out the uncomfortable reality behind recent acts of mass violence in Britain: these are not random crimes, and they are not cultural norms within British society. They are terroristic acts driven by extremist ideology — and pretending otherwise only protects the ideology itself. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGvwDHJFtGk&t=673s Kisin explains how modern public discourse bends over backwards to avoid identifying terrorism when it happens, choosing instead to blur responsibility into abstract concepts like “society,” “poverty,” or “systemic failure.” While those factors can exist, he argues they are not what motivates someone to commit mass violence in the name of ideology. When we refuse to name terrorism, we lose the ability to confront it. Why are authorities and media so reluctant to draw this distinction? Why is saying “this was terrorism” considered controversial, while saying “this is just crime” is treated as responsible? And what happens to public trust when people can clearly see patterns that institutions refuse to acknowledge? Konstantin argues that clarity is not cruelty — it’s a prerequisite for safety. You cannot fight a problem you refuse to define. You cannot prevent future attacks if you won’t name the ideology behind them. And you cannot protect social cohesion by pretending that terrorism is simply a normal feature of everyday British life. This clip shows how language shapes policy, how denial shapes risk, and how the refusal to draw moral and factual lines ultimately leaves ordinary people exposed. This is not about blaming communities. It’s about identifying terrorism as terrorism — so it can be confronted honestly, resisted effectively, and prevented in the future. Watch to the end. The final point explains why refusing to name the problem doesn’t make society kinder — it makes it more dangerous. #KonstantinKisin #Terrorism #BritishValues #Triggernometry #FreeSpeech #CultureWar #Extremism #PublicSafety #HereticsClips Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more honest conversations you won’t see on the BBC: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos British people don’t go on stabbing sprees — terrorists do. And in this clip, Konstantin Kisin explains why refusing to say that simple truth has made the problem harder to confront, harder to solve, and more dangerous for everyone. Rather than hiding behind euphemisms or vague language, Kisin lays out the uncomfortable reality behind recent acts of mass violence in Britain: these are not random crimes, and they are not cultural norms within British society. They are terroristic acts driven by extremist ideology — and pretending otherwise only protects the ideology itself. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGvwDHJFtGk&t=673s Kisin explains how modern public discourse bends over backwards to avoid identifying terrorism when it happens, choosing instead to blur responsibility into abstract concepts like “society,” “poverty,” or “systemic failure.” While those factors can exist, he argues they are not what motivates someone to commit mass violence in the name of ideology. When we refuse to name terrorism, we lose the ability to confront it. Why are authorities and media so reluctant to draw this distinction? Why is saying “this was terrorism” considered controversial, while saying “this is just crime” is treated as responsible? And what happens to public trust when people can clearly see patterns that institutions refuse to acknowledge? Konstantin argues that clarity is not cruelty — it’s a prerequisite for safety. You cannot fight a problem you refuse to define. You cannot prevent future attacks if you won’t name the ideology behind them. And you cannot protect social cohesion by pretending that terrorism is simply a normal feature of everyday British life. This clip shows how language shapes policy, how denial shapes risk, and how the refusal to draw moral and factual lines ultimately leaves ordinary people exposed. This is not about blaming communities. It’s about identifying terrorism as terrorism — so it can be confronted honestly, resisted effectively, and prevented in the future. Watch to the end. The final point explains why refusing to name the problem doesn’t make society kinder — it makes it more dangerous. #KonstantinKisin #Terrorism #BritishValues #Triggernometry #FreeSpeech #CultureWar #Extremism #PublicSafety #HereticsClips Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Konstantin Kisin - British People DON'T Go on Stabbing Sprees

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👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more honest conversations you won’t see on the BBC: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos British people don’t go on stabbing sprees — terrorists do. And in this clip, Konstantin Kisin explains why...

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