All Episodes
March 28, 2024 - David Icke
14:26
Are We Ready For The Fight? - Former Premier League Footballer Matt Le Tissier Joins Gareth Icke
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
The Julian Assange US extradition can has been kicked down the road yet again.
The WikiLeaks founder has been incarcerated in one form or another since 2012 for the crime of journalism, and he will remain locked up while this can continues to bounce off the curbs and other various potholes. The UK has asked for assurances
from the USA that Assange won't be killed should his extradition to the
United States be granted by the courts. It's the equivalent of handing the keys to
the creche to a known pedophile while seeking assurances
they'll behave themselves. It's an absurdity, a nonsense.
They want to kill Julian Assange.
That's as obvious as Joe Biden's cognitive decline.
And I think they would very much have preferred his despicable treatment in Belmarsh prison to have already done the job.
As it stands, he's still clinging on.
So they're in a position where they want to extradite and kill Julian.
But they also want to reelect the senile sniffer Joe Biden.
And that's a problem, you see, because a lot of Democrats are sympathetic to Julian Assange.
So just maybe this kicking of the can, almost certainly until after the US elections, is coldly calculated.
You see, you don't want to alienate those voters, do you?
Not until after you've been elected for a final term, of course.
Then you can do what you like, because those voters are only a means to get you there.
You aren't actually going to represent them.
Don't be silly.
Listening to the radio as the story of said can kicking was breaking, the language of the mainstream media bobbleheads is equally as calculated.
The USA seeks extradition for leaking official documents.
It's an intentionally vague description that creates an apathy among the population to Assange's plight.
But in reality, he leaked war crimes.
He exposed the cold-blooded murder of innocent unarmed civilians in the Middle East.
He exposed the genocidal realities of the West's imperialistic war machine.
He exposed the Israel lobby and its threat to US and UK democracy.
He basically did what the media, that's now attempting to create an apathy for him, should have been doing.
These people that sit in front of the cameras and pen their highly edited opinion pieces call themselves journalists, but they aren't.
They're spineless, gutless, establishment-fawning, teleprompter bobbleheads whose only concern is how can I further my career and keep my five-star holidays in the Caribbean.
Now they know that exposing criminal governments and their murderous intentions would be a very bad career move.
And so faced with that fork in the road, a choice between truthful, sincere, moralistic reporting and a pina colada on a sun lounger while getting a Thai massage, these fluffers of Satan will almost always choose the latter.
And that's why the mainstream media is dying by the wayside, because people know the truth when they hear it.
It resonates differently.
And so they will take the word of a dying man rotting in a cage in Belmarsh over someone that took the 30 pieces of silver to maintain a career of lie-selling.
What's being done to Assange should concern all of us, particularly those that believe in freedom of the press.
Because it might be Julian today, but trust me, mate, it's you tomorrow.
In the words of Edwin Stodden, when exposing a crime is treated as committing a crime,
you are being ruled by criminals.
Our final guest this evening needs very little introduction.
Matt Letizia is a former Premier League and international footballer and television pundit.
He was the first midfielder to reach 100 goals in the top division and is said by many to be the greatest penalty taker ever, converting 47 out of 48 penalties in his career.
Now, when the COVID card was played in 2020, Matt was one of very few high profile people in England to speak out against them, something that cost him many jobs and even the role of club ambassador for Southampton Football Club, the club he played his entire career.
Matt, welcome to the show.
You saw through the COVID scam pretty quickly.
What was it that really alerted you to the fact that we're being lied to?
Yeah, it's a good point.
There was a few things, I think.
Firstly, I think the first one was the videos coming out of China with the people falling down in the street, not looking particularly authentic to me.
So I wasn't buying that nonsense.
I mean, I was brought up the whole time by people in this country telling me never to believe anything that comes out of China because it's all propaganda.
And then all of a sudden, in 2020, some videos come out of China of a couple of people falling down the street, not very authentically.
And we're being told, oh, we've got to believe it now.
And this is really what's happening.
So I was like, hang on a minute.
There's something not quite right here.
And that started me off on my journey.
I had a couple of doctors who lived in my village who I had been sitting and having a curry with early on.
And they'd been privy to the data of the Diamond Princess cruise ship.
And they basically told me that, you know what, this is only really going to affect anybody who's really old or already ill.
And so I tweeted something along those lines in March 2020.
And that was when my life changed, really, because that tweet had an unbelievable reaction.
But in both ways, because at that point, it was the most liked tweet I'd ever put out.
But on the other hand, in the replies to the tweet, it was the most abuse that I'd ever got in a single tweet.
And I thought, oh, hang on a minute.
What's going on here?
This isn't the normal reaction from people on social media.
You know, I normally tweet about football and stuff and get a bit of abuse.
But this was like some coordinated campaign to try and take me down.
And I was like, whoa, whoa, hang on a minute.
So instead of me going, oh, I better shut up about this, In my mind, I go, something's not right here.
I've got to look further into this.
And that's when I kind of started doing a little bit of digging.
We'll have a look around the World Economic Forum's website, the United Nations website, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation website.
And I just started joining the dots, I guess, is the best way of putting it.
And something didn't sit right with me, Gareth.
And so the type of person I am, I'm not willing to sit here and say nothing if I think something's wrong.
No, no.
I'm glad you did, Matt.
I'm glad you did.
Because I'll tell you what, mate.
What I find interesting about what you said about that tweet is when someone likes that tweet, people don't necessarily see that.
You're not going to get abuse for liking a tweet.
So so many people would have agreed with you and click like, but they wouldn't dare click reply.
Because then they get attacked, don't they?
Yeah.
But you've spoken out on Ukraine, on 15-minute cities, obviously on the mRNA vaccines when they were rolled out.
How has your stance on this stuff affected you personally?
I would say, well, I mean, it hasn't really affected me, my personality, you know, I haven't I don't let people, I don't get hurt by words and people writing nasty things on their keyboards.
It's water for ducks back having spent 16 years playing professional football.
You know, taking abuse from crowds was pretty easy, you know, so I've been used to all that stuff.
So it hasn't affected me as a person.
It kind of affected the people around me a little bit.
Which was obviously a little bit concerning, and that's obviously what the reaction that people hope for, because they then hope that because of the people that are around me are getting, you know, upset by all this, they think that that's going to shut me up.
But little do they know.
So, in terms of personality, it's not affecting me much.
In terms of income, yeah, I'm probably about Oh, I don't know, probably about 50% down on what I was earning four years ago.
Wow.
So, you know, it's taken a fairly big hit.
But, you know, you adjust to life and you do the things necessary to get by and pay your bills, and that's what I like to do.
Absolutely.
Trust comes first.
Are there any people in your old life, you know, like from the football community, that agree, you know, maybe privately, or are you literally feeling like you're on your own with it?
No, there's a lot that have agreed privately, if I'm honest.
And also, I've got a great idea of what people were thinking when I wrote a letter with Dr Asim Malhotra and Dr Claire Craig.
We wrote to the PFA and the FA about the vaccines and about the increase in the amount of sports people that were having heart problems on the field of play.
And so I texted about 100 of my former Contemporaries, to ask if they would co-sign the letter with me.
And out of the 100 that I texted, I think there was only two that said no.
So there was 98.
There was a massive, massive load of players that had all realised that this isn't normal.
And we weren't used to seeing these kind of numbers of athletes collapsing on the field of play.
And so I was quite heartened by that.
Not all of them would say anything publicly.
Absolutely.
And I found it interesting that Ricky Lambert, you know, being a former Southampton No.
people who got jobs, they probably didn't want to take a 50% hit to their wages like I did.
And you know, that's understandable to a point. But I think some things are more important than
money in my life. Oh, absolutely. And I found it interesting that Ricky Lambert,
you know, being a former Southampton number seven was one to speak out so loudly as well.
Yeah, yeah, that came out of the blue to me a little bit as well, you know, I
I met Ricky a few times, but we weren't really good mates or anything.
We did a little penalty shootout against each other a couple of times.
And it's one-all, by the way, so we need a rematch to decide who's the best penalty taker.
And then, yeah, he decided that he'd had enough.
He obviously had business interests as well, which got hit badly by what went on.
And he decided to come out swinging himself and was pretty strong in the stuff that he was saying.
And since then, we've formed a pretty good friendship.
And yeah, I would consider him a very good friend now.
That's great.
I found it interesting, because for me, I have obviously, you know, I'm into football, so I've got football friends, and then I was into music, playing in bands, so I've got music friends.
And on the face of it, you'd think, well, footballers kick a football around, whereas musicians, they're anti-establishment, they push back.
And it was the opposite.
It was footballers that were speaking out against this stuff.
And it was, you know, old school grunge or punk bands that were pushing the vaccine.
Yeah, mad.
Blew my mind.
It's unbelievably crazy that, you know, some of the people that you thought were proper anti-establishment, you know, and sing songs about it, you know, go to the trouble of writing songs, and yet when push came to shove and they really had to show their true colours, we saw where their allegiances laid.
And I think the Covid stuff really sorted the wheat out from the chaff for people who Absolutely.
Just finally, Matt, because I know obviously you're an incredibly busy man, but where do you see the state of the world now?
Do you think Ukraine, the Middle East, China?
It all feels like a powder keg that's just waiting for a match, and that we're at some kind of crossroads almost.
Is that how you view it?
It certainly looks that way.
There seems to be a lot of chaos around the world.
There seems to be a lot of agitating, almost trying to provoke a world war.
That's what it kind of feels like to me.
But I actually feel like You know, we're in a much better place than I think a lot of people thought we'd be in 2024.
You know, there's been a lot of pushback from the public in terms of, you know, the stuff with the 15-minute cities, you know, forced vaccinations, you know, mandated vaccinations.
You know, the NHS were going to be losing their jobs if they didn't have the vaccines and we, you know, we went on marches to stop that from happening and we kind of managed to get that overturned.
So there's been some good pushback.
I think there's a lot of fights left.
And there is a battle every single day, as you know.
I think we've won a few small battles.
But I also think we have to keep pushing, and we have to make sure the truth comes out about stuff.
Because the more you push, it seems to me, the more that they allow a little bit more truth to come out.
You know, a bit of a limited hangout to try and get you to stop pushing.
you know, give you a little bit, a few crumbs to feed on, hope that you'll shut your mouth.
But as long as, you know, people like us keep going and keep pushing, making sure the truth comes out,
eventually we will win this war.
Oh, a hundred percent.
100%, Matt.
That's great, great.
To hear uplifting words, because there's not that many of them about a lot of the time.
You know, stories are not necessarily very nice to see, so it's actually nice to hear someone say, let's have it, basically, we're going to win.
We will win, yeah.
We're not going anywhere.
We're not going anywhere, and this will probably be a lifelong fight now.
You know, these people don't give up easily, and we have to keep pushing to make sure the truth comes out, make sure that the people who have been injured by the vaccines get proper compensation, and make sure that the people that were responsible for that get justice in the courts as well.
100%.
Cheers, Matt.
Thanks so much for coming on, mate.
It's a pleasure to talk to you.
You're welcome.
Cheers, Gareth.
Cheers, mate.
Export Selection