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We Can’t Believe This is Italy…

Turin, a city once known for its elegance,  industry, and unmistakable Italian character.

The birthplace of Fiat.

Grand piazzas, old cafes  filled with locals, and generations of families building a life beneath the Alps.

But walk through  the city today and something feels very different.

Not just economically, spiritually.

Over the  last decade, mass migration into Italy has transformed entire neighborhoods across Turin.

In some areas, the Italian language barely feels dominant anymore.

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Shuttered storefronts, growing  insecurity, rising tensions, and locals quietly admitting that the city that they grew up in  no longer feels like home.

And it’s not just   in Turin.

Across Europe, more and more people are  beginning to ask the same uncomfortable question.

Europe is in serious trouble.

How much change can  a society take before it loses the culture that   made it special in the first place? Today, we’re  walking through the streets of Turin to see the reality for ourselves.

Not the polished version  tourists are sold, not the carefully managed image shown to you on Travel YouTube.

To understand  what everyday life actually feels like in a city caught between its proud Italian past and an  uncertain European future.

Jesus is in the epstein files apparently.

Welcome everybody to Torino, a  2,000 year-old European city in the northwest of Italy.

We’re glad to be back somewhat here in  this beautiful country and we’re starting our day off at Porta Palazzo, Europe’s largest open  air market.

So, let’s do a deep dive into Turin and see if it’s just another city that’s being  crushed under the foot of horrific EU policies.

So the vast majority of the things  that are actually for sale here in the market is things like niqabs, things  like hijabs, carpet sellers, rug sellers, then you have spices, a lot of fake jewellry  and stuff like that as well on offer.

So it’s no different than if you were to go to a  souk, for example, somewhere in Morocco   or somewhere in Northern Africa, quite  literally.

And I mean that wholeheartedly.

And as usual in every other city that we show  you guys all throughout Europe, the buildings, the old historical buildings are destroyed.

Literally destroyed by graffiti, trash, a lot of trash, a lot of homelessness, a  lot of weirdos standing around screaming uh into nothing basically.

And a lot  of times if they even notice that I’m   recording, if they realize that I’m  recording, they’ll just attack you.

Look at this graffiti stink open air toilet.

It’s a  common theme all across Europe.

Literally all across Europe.

You can just watch one  of these videos and apply the same thing, same playbook all over Europe at the moment.

It’s  insane.

This here as well is northern Italy.

A lot of Italians actually say that the south of Italy  is worse.

The likes of Napoli, Palmo, and so on,   which is correct to a certain extent, but in the  north you can see it, and it’s slowly coming in here as well.

So I don’t know, wait a few months  and it’s going to be the same situation here as   you have in Palmo.

When the sellers are saying  shukran instead of you know you have a real issue.

Welcome to Morocco everybody.

Okay.

So the official numbers for Torino are just about  as they say in the entirety of Italy.

They just like to say that about 9 to 10% of the people  here are of foreignb born origin.

But looking around here, it seems more like eight out of 10  are.

So probably 80% and 20% locals.

That’s what I that’s what I would say here because it’s  kind of weird to be a European here.

Yes, you know, the EU publishes numbers and people  talk about how many actual illegals have actually come in to Europe over the last sort of decade.

And I’m telling you right now, the statistics, the vast majority of the statistics, if you come  and experience these types of cities for yourself, you understand immediately they’re lying about  everything.

all of these numbers that are being published.

Plus, you can’t you can’t actually  track the numbers of people that don’t have documents, that don’t have names, that don’t  have IDs.

These people arrive here without those   required documents.

Obviously, they literally  burn their passports or throw their passports away or flush their passports down the toilet.

You  can’t actually track the numbers.

There’s no way of accurately saying, you know, 5, 15, 20%, etc.

,  etc.

But what is very tangible is just coming to places like this market, walking through, taking  it all in and understanding what the demographics are.

It’s rapidly changing and it’s every day  a new like new city that we’re going to and experiencing these changes firsthand.

And we can  tell you guys tin northern Italy, southern Italy, Western Europe, all of it is it’s going in a very  very very bad direction.

It’s also the situation in Europe at the moment where a lot of people  obviously get naturalized and their families then   become naturalized as well.

They receive a local  European passport and then they will immediately be recorded as such.

So if I don’t know, somebody  from Morocco comes here, they get an Italian passport, after a little while, they are going to  be recorded as an Italian.

If they commit a crime,   if they I don’t know, whatever the whatever  they might do, it’s going to say this Italian man did XYZ, which is of course inaccurate.

And it’s also um kind of changing the numbers quite a bit at the moment.

It’s unfortunate.

Wow,  guys.

Pora Palatina here in the center of Torino.

This is a first century Roman city gate that  was built during the reign of Agugustus, believe it or not.

And it’s quite literally around  the corner uh from the actual market as well.

It’s fascinating to see it.

It’s so well preserved.

Gorgeous.

There’s very little actual wear and tear on the wall itself and it’s standing beautifully  contrasting against the chaos actually of modernday Italy in the back.

Beautiful to see it  though up close and personal.

And you can actually walk through the arches themselves too.

I don’t  know about you guys, but I can remember growing up in Europe in the ’90s.

This used to never happen  in the public parks anyways of Europe.

It’s full on third world here in Trin.

Every green space  that we’re coming across is like an encampment.

Homeless people, homeless illegals.

They trash  the streets with garbage.

And it is widespread, literally widespread all throughout the city.

All  of the green spaces you will either see homeless, drugaddicted locals or alcoholics or freshly  arrived welfare migrants.

Of course, what would a stroll through Europe in 2026 be without this  garbage garbage plastered all over the wall, spray paint, little scribbly tags on ancient buildings,  old buildings, hundreds of year old buildings, and then you have these types of people that just come  up and put whatever identity they think they have all over the wall in multicolored garbage.

It’s  horrific.

And it’s this is literally like plague all throughout.

If you watch any of our videos,  I’ve said it already, you watch one of our videos,   you can copy and paste and it’s just the exact  same in the rest of them.

People try to say, “Oh, it’s only certain cities in certain areas or  it’s only certain towns in certain areas.

” We’ve already covered Milan.

We’ve already covered  Napoli.

We’ve already covered Rome.

This is just another addition.

It’s everywhere.

It’s not  just select few places.

We’re not only picking uh certain areas and highlighting the drama and  click baiting or anything like that.

We’re just   showing you the honest reality of Europe right  here.

And then if it’s private property with these houses as well, your aunt or your uncle  or your grandmother has to pay for the removal or remove it themselves basically on these  historical houses.

or if it’s a public house, our taxpayer money in Europe will of  course care for that I guess at some stage.

A dead man doesn’t rape.

Why don’t we maybe  start not getting so many people into our countries that whose culture it actually is to  rape women.

Just reading this makes me so so angry because obviously you are just including every  single man in that you are including our sons.

You are including the armed forces that  are actually helping defend your your country and the people of the city.

You are  including police officers.

You’re including   a lot a lot of men.

You are including  your own father.

You’re including your own grandfather.

Everybody.

How can you  do that? That’s I don’t know.

The feminist   movement just gets me as a woman myself.

I don’t know.

It just makes me so angry.

It makes me so outraged that I genuinely cannot  find words anymore for it.

It’s just ridiculous.

Now, we’re going to venture into two of  the supposedly worst areas.

Aurora and uh Barieri de Milano.

So, right now we’re  currently walking through the streets of Aurora.

And believe it or not, the place where numerous  crimes take place on a daily basis.

In fact, there was a a man just recently um two  months ago brutally assaulted in the streets because he won a little bit of money  from like a scratch card or something and   uh two North Africans like beat him unconscious  in the actual streets.

So now we’re going to go for a walk and see what the general feeling is  like because there’s only so much value that we can bring across to you guys in showing you the  typical center historical area.

It’s going to be a lot of times heavily shielded for the tourists  that come here.

Now in terms of tourist numbers, I think Torino doesn’t get nearly as much tourism  as a lot of the other places like Pisa, like Rome, like Napoli for example, or even Milano actually.

It’s it’s a little off the beaten path.

Usually people that do come here come here obviously  because of the shroud of terin and uh some Roman architecture that you can still see.

But  other than that, usually uh tin is a little kind of off the beaten path.

One of the reasons why I  would come here is just outside of Trin you have the Barolo region which is one of the greatest  regions in probably all of the world for wine.

So they have a lot of wineries and it’s the perfect  climate especially with the Alps up here in the north of Italy for growing some incredible  wine in I think Naomi and my opinion Italian wine best in the world.

There’s no debate about  it.

Primitivo primitivo.

No CPR.

You find this tag everywhere in Tin by the way which I assume  has been put there by the likes of Antifa.

CPR doesn’t stand for resuscitation, but stands for uh  it’s short for detention and removal centers.

So, what they’re saying is they don’t want illegal  migrants if their asylum claim has been denied.

They don’t want them to be detained and removed  from the country.

So, they’re basically saying no deportations.

Jesus is in the epsin felt  apparently according to the locals of Trin.

Are you guys okay? Insanity.

The most disgusting.

Can you imagine someone saying that about Allah for example? All in the Epstein piles.

If I was  to spray that on a wall, even here in Europe,   I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t get to the end of  it without having a knife stuck in my throat.

Welcome to Barieri de Milano, an area known  to be quite literally overrun with illegal migrants loitering around on the streets.

Drug addicts, you name it.

Third world.

Look at the car, guys.

Windshield completely smashed in.

What a [ __ ] disgusting  area.

I’ll tell you that much.

It’s crazy how it changed from feeling  totally normal and fine to really scary and unsafe.

Horrific.

Yeah.

But like within one  street crossing.

Yeah.

These areas are entirely off limits, by the way, at night time.

If you do  ever want to come to Torino, make sure to not go to Aurora or Bar De Milano.

Yeah, these are no go  zones.

At night, yeah, as soon as the sun sets, you do not want to be here.

Just keep that  in mind, guys.

We’re walking through here   at daytime just to show you how sketchy it is  during the day.

It’s midday currently.

Yeah.

He was he was selling to the local Italian.

Yeah,   they’re selling drugs to the  locals here out in the open.

Every single female other than Naomi  is wearing a hijab in this area,   by the way, just so you’re aware.

I did not stop yourself.

Say let me This is insane.

Look at how filthy everything is.

This entire area is just completely nonItalian.

Maybe you’ll have a few of the vendors here.

I’ll tell you what, it’s  incredibly low percentage cuz Look at this guys.

They don’t even maintain any  of the areas like the public grass.

It’s trash   everywhere, syringes everywhere, stinks of piss.

Can you imagine living here? You’re paying your taxes.

You might work a 9 to5.

Some people might  work multiple jobs just to survive in these areas.

And then the government, the EU imports thousands  of these savages who are just literally dealing drugs open day in the middle of the street and  the main street.

We just walked through the main street here, one of the bus busiest ones in  Barera, the Milano.

I can’t even say the name of this area.

Milan barrier area.

And on that  street, you just had, as we just shown, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 Nigerian dudes, North African dudes  just loitering, hanging around, sleeping on the streets, fighting each other, dealing drugs, very  obviously dealing drugs.

And it’s all accepted.

Police don’t do anything.

Literally nothing.

In  fact, police openly get attacked very commonly alongside other people as well.

So it is very  much a lost cause situation in these particular areas of tin and as you saw in the busy market in  the in Europe’s largest open air market as well that also was 60 70% non-European.

So, the largest  open air European market, majority non-European, can you imagine going to, for example, let’s  just throw it out there, you want to go to the largest open air market in Asia.

You go there and  everybody in Asia just looks like Naomi.

Like, everybody in the market just looks like that.

They’re just going to sell sourdough breads.

Yeah,   that’s all you can get.

So, I just saw over  it.

So, you fly all the way to Asia and then everybody just looks like Naomi and I.

That’s  the reality of what it’s like here.

People are coming from America, coming from Asia, coming  from all over the world to visit a lot of these places and these markets, and then they get  to the market and they might as well just   have flown to Morocco.

you might as well just  take a flight to Lagos in Nigeria if you want to experience that because at least you’ll  get the full experience if you actually fly to those countries.

You will genuinely feel and  taste that culture.

You can’t do that here in a lot of the European countries.

Italy doesn’t feel  like Italy.

France doesn’t feel like France.

Look at this building by the way just over here.

This  is the public spaces here in Torino.

So, this I’m assuming used to be a public bathroom and it is  annihilated, destroyed, smashed up, sprayed over, and the grass is like almost at waist height.

So, no one cares.

No one gives a crap.

It’s all apathy.

People are just blackpilled about  Europe.

here specifically in Tin.

By the way, the police did try to intervene with Antifa and  uh with the foreigners here in the in a case only recently in January, more than 100 police officers  actually got injured because uh Antifa kept throw there was a protest and Antifa started throwing  Molotov cocktails and rocks at police officers and uh a lot a lot of servicemen got very very badly  injured and uh there was actually a case that was pretty large in the media specifically because  the the Winter Olympics were in Milan not that far from here obviously and the entire protest  because of how locked down Milan was actually sort of moved towards Tin and then escalated in  the city of Tin itself.

So Georgia Maloney also uh criticized that obviously in the media but there’s  nothing really you can do and I believe a lot of the police officers here very very likely are  scared to intervene if bad things are happening.

You can see if police officers are walking around  they’re sort of walking around in like groups of   10 or so like they’re not by themselves because  it’s just too dangerous.

Georgia Maloney also since she’s gotten into power things have seemed  to gotten they’ve gotten a lot worse in Italy.

So I think that uh in terms of her being in power  and this thing about having high hopes for her, I think she knows how to talk.

Things are getting  worse day by day.

Um in my opinion, I’ve visited Italy now multiple times over multiple years  and every time I come to a new city in Italy, there’s more issues, there’s more poverty, there’s  more homelessness and there’s a lot more illegals   that are very obviously taking over different  areas.

The thing that Georgia Maloney does, by the way, she just kind of makes the numbers  look nicer.

So, uh, she decreases the amount of illegals that are coming to the country by going  to their country and giving them a work permit so that they can come legally.

Yeah.

She’s a work  visa queen basically.

Yeah.

So you still have lots and lots and lots of people coming from the likes  of Pakistan, from the likes of Nigeria and so on uh under the disguise of needing uh workers  basically.

Yeah.

And then well the same amount of people are being brought in but under a legal  number basically.

Excuse me.

So yeah.

So she basically she does the exact same as the other  European countries and she disguises herself as being a rightle leaning leader but her policies  just do the exact same thing in the end as what all of the lefties are doing.

That’s why we keep  saying to you it’s not left versus right.

It’s by   now it’s good versus evil because left and right  are just the wings of the same bird basically.

Even walking along here,  guys, beautiful, by the way,   scenic river.

I’m not sure what river it  is, but all I know is that all along here, you have just incredibly highly skilled workers  just, you know, chilling everywhere.

And it just makes the whole like atmosphere feel so  safe.

I can imagine just being, you know, a solo female walking through here.

Just  amazing.

Just real authentic Europe.

Yeah.

Yeah.

The unbelievable amount of garbage  everywhere.

It’s like just un It’s unreal.

So it’s every sort of 100 meters you just have  these just in my opinion just absolute bottom feeders just hanging out very obviously not  here looking for work.

Not here looking to do anything else.

And that’s the thing.

Yeah.

This is supposed to be the nice part.

The   nice part.

One of the nicer parts.

We’re  really close to the dome and we’re close to the dome.

We’re close to a lot of other  stuff.

I just want to show you guys this   here.

Look at this graffiti.

Disgusting.

Look  at this.

This is the provincial building here.

Completely trashed, destroyed, abandoned,  forgotten about.

Everything is closed down.

It’s gone.

An office of the commune.

Yeah.

This is like  the city office.

City office of Torino.

Yeah.

So, there you go, guys.

here probably used to be  a shop back when people felt like they could carry on their daily life here in Italy.

So,  and we’re going to keep walking.

By the way, there’s another group, two, three more  groups um of alcoholics, of homeless, of migrants, of North Africans.

The numbers  are never ending because see the thing is is they literally respawn like a video game  characters whereas white Europeans we’re not reproducing because we can’t afford to because  we don’t all of us don’t live on social welfare.

Just blows my mind that Europeans accept this  type of behavior.

It just really stuns me.

A lot of these small shops that we  used to have around here as well, they   um have a lot of merchandise hanging outside  and I think a lot of them are closing down because people are just taking the stuff from  Exactly.

Look at this.

It’s just filth.

No one cares either.

No one cleans up.

No one  does anything.

Beer bottles everywhere.

Beer bottles everywhere.

syringes everywhere.

Public bus station of the city.

This is the public bus station.

Yeah.

This is where all of  the tourists arrive on buses into Torino.

So,   you immediately get off here.

And  if you want to walk along the river, you’re immediately greeted with Mahmud,  Muhammad, and all of the others.

Unreal.

Really.

Glass everywhere.

Yeah.

So, this is another  thing.

Shattered glass.

If you’re a woman and you’re walking around with flip flops or anything  like that, don’t do it here.

Good luck.

Very   dangerous.

The crime speaks for itself as well.

Northern Italy, actually, believe it or not, Milano is categorized as the most dangerous city.

And Torino being only a 2-hour drive from Milano, experiences much of the same.

Not as high in  terms of reports.

But I’ll tell you what, guys, the areas around here, just walking around, I  wouldn’t live here.

If you paid me a million, if you paid me a million a year, I wouldn’t live  here.

And the same goes for a lot of the rest of Europe as well.

Italy, by the way, is now the  country with the highest debt in the entirety of Europe.

The debt in Italy is actually  higher now, even than the debt in Greece.

not relative to the economy but still and  like under which circumstances do you guys as Italians think it is you are in any way capable  of providing aid to other people why like if you already have so many issues why do you think it’s  a good idea to bring more people in that carry their own issues that need financial help that  obviously are going to need help to integrate to find work and so on if you can’t even provide an  environment ment that is safe for your own people, where your own people have enough work, where  there’s enough places in the kindergarten uh for the kids to actually live and and go to school and  all of that.

It’s I don’t know.

Um to be honest, like I’m I’m lost for words here because it’s  just it’s not a situation that is suitable for a European to live in.

We as Europeans, we are proud  people.

And this is just now we are starting to live in the dirt like we’re some cockroaches.

And I don’t think it’s okay.

I’m sorry.