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May 2, 2024 - David Icke
30:22
"Our Kids Are The Target" - 18 Year Old Activist Montgomery Toms Explains The UK Education System
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As I sit here, university campuses across the USA are being occupied by students protesting against the ongoing slaughter in Gaza.
Protests against the now seven-month Israeli bombardment of civilians and murder of over 16,000 children have been a weekly occurrence across the world, but now it seems to be going one step further.
further as colleges and universities are being shut down.
Now in response to this armed police have been deployed to all 51 states of Israel
to crush the growing movement of students of all faiths standing up and saying
not in our name.
Now this hasn't gone down well with the First Amendment Donald Trump types
ironically. You see you can have your First Amendment freedom of speech,
freedom of assembly, freedom to protest against anything, anything but Israel.
APAC, the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, not content with buying sitting US politicians' allegiance, are now pledging $100 million to ensure that pro-Israel candidates win the 2024 elections.
Now, can you imagine the reaction if a Russian or Chinese lobby group were buying elections in the USA?
The media and political class are all aligned, but it seems the college kids didn't get the memo and now the state is lashing out.
Armed police officers, many trained in Israel, have been attacking students on campuses for the crime of standing against the USA's involvement in the murder of innocent men, women and children.
Sending in the stormtroopers to beat the young of your nation at the behest of a foreign state is the desperate act of a dying empire.
It's behaviour that if it was replicated in Russia, Syria, Iran or North Korea would be met with calls for sanctions or regime change.
Assad is attacking his own people.
Remember that?
The West is crumbling and it's all by design of course, as I've said many times.
We the West are not meant to win the global powder keg when it inevitably explodes.
Now, whether people like it or not, Israel is losing the war in Gaza.
Sure, if you're adding up the number of homes you've destroyed, families you've displaced, people you've starved, children you've bombed, and mass graves you've filled, then okay, they might well be winning.
But in the wider context, they're losing, and they're losing badly.
You see, winning a war is meant to make you stronger, more dominant, feared.
Even.
But that isn't what's happened over the last seven months.
Israel's become weaker, less powerful, and absolutely not feared.
People are willing to stand up and condemn in a way that they never were before, because anyone familiar with the actions of the IDF will know that killing Palestinians at will is nothing new.
But finally, the straw has broken the camel's back.
Accusations of anti-Semitism as a tool to silence people no longer have anything like the impact they once did.
Hands have been overplayed and the wolf cried one too many times.
This is the internet age and while you may be able to control the talking points on the evening news, you can't yet control the images that appear in our social media feeds and alternative streaming platforms.
Every day since the horrific acts of October the 7th, our feeds have been filled with images of dead children, dismembered children, bombed hospitals and mass graves.
Now there's no way to defend against that because you cannot defend the indefensible.
You cannot murder 16,000 children and not expect the world to stand united against you in condemnation.
However, while I stand in solidarity with anyone speaking up against the murder of human beings of all different creeds and colours, it's not gone unnoticed that what started as a organic movement is in the process, I fear, of being hijacked.
George Soros and his funding appear to be making its way into the protest movement.
The matching tents are spreading.
And so just like with anything else this man's wallet touches, division is sure to follow.
See the funded Colour Revolution's BLM climate change.
Soros likes making money and he makes money out of chaos.
I would therefore plead with anyone that's protesting to not become what you're fighting against.
Do not become violent.
Do not get sucked in and manipulated into being the mainstream media's... Look, I told you they're full of hate.
Talking point.
Be aware that while George Soros might have bought you a tent, he cares not for the plight of Palestinians and he cares not for you.
Remain resilient but peaceful.
I've said before that there are ghouls that want to watch the world burn so they can rule the ashes and we are rapidly moving beyond the fire being manageable.
It will only take one over brutish police officer to kill a protester and the streets of the USA will be ablaze.
And what happens in America spreads across the world and it spreads quickly.
Please stand up, but stand up smart.
I'm joined in the studio by Montgomery Toms, who apart from having a freaking awesome name,
is an 18 year old activist who woke up at the age of 14 to the direction of travel the
world was heading in.
And he spent the last four years fighting back.
Montgomery, great to have you here, mate.
It's lovely to be here.
So what woke you up?
At the age of 14?
Well, as we know, lockdown hit when I was 14, so that's the key moment where, obviously, the masses changed.
And, obviously, two weeks in, I didn't wake up straight away.
But fortunately, and I'm always going to admit to this, because I'd be arrogant if I said otherwise, it's my parents that ultimately led me in the direction of this.
I mean, my background and my parents' is quite an unorthodox Well, it was a challenging upbringing, not in the sense that I didn't enjoy it, but it was very complicated.
So my dad comes from a very philosophical background.
He studied philosophy at master's degree, and my mum's a psychologist.
So when it came to the fear campaign that the government was pushing on the people, couple that with sort of morals and philosophical background that my dad has, couple them together and, well... They wouldn't have it.
and having it. But fortunately it wasn't a case of just rejecting it based on what we felt just be
principles. It was also to do with science and there was, I would be sat with my dad and all
the time we had, looking through alternative news outlets and understanding the science and trying to
arm me with detailed fight backs so when I go back into education I have the ability to actually
command a conversation with a teacher rather than look like an idiot.
Of course.
Which is extremely important, especially in such a raw environment.
Not wearing a mask in education, all those things.
I stood out like a sore thumb.
So I'm very fortunate that I was armed to defend myself.
But in terms of how did I wake up?
It was my parents that woke me up.
I can never say otherwise.
But what was it like going back into school?
Because we saw obviously photos and stuff, all these kids, especially young kids, all masked up.
It was just horrendous to look at.
But obviously, I'm, you know, I'm an old man compared to you.
So I'm not in school.
What was it like?
What was the atmosphere like?
Yeah, so I wasn't prepared for it.
I actually was quite naive, and I thought, when they brought masks in, I actually remember laughing and thinking it was a joke.
I was so naive to it, because the environment I was in was, I was with my parents, so I just assumed a lot of people would sort of follow the same sort of, well this is nonsense, attitude.
But no, I went back and they had spray-painted circles on the floor for students to stand in.
They had sanitised stations.
They had bubbles.
We got put into bubbles and funnelled through the right corridors at each time.
We had bells that would go off at individual times if there was a positive test.
We had CCTV and surveillance tracking everyone, and if one person got a positive case, they'd go through the CCTV footage, the seating plans, go through the bubbles, and then send everybody home who was in contact with the individual.
They'd come into the classroom with a clipboard, they'd go through the clipboard, they'd round up everyone, funnel them through the corridor, put them into the school hall, and dismiss them.
I ended up being the only person in an entire class who never tested, who was never sent home, and I was just sat there.
on my own. Well, why are you here? I went, well, I'm not sure they want to send me home because
they know I'm just going to walk straight back in. I think.
Was there any time to teach or anything?
No. With all that going on? No. But interestingly, you know, I chose to study history further at GCSE
level and my teacher, whilst stood in a mask, was lecturing me on Hitler's rise to power.
And was talking to the class about how Hitler used propaganda in a fear campaign in order to
introduce his mandates and ideologies.
And I stood there and said, I have some questions and how this is quite an interesting parallel between then and now.
I got taken into a meeting with the head of history and was told I was discrediting my teacher and effectively embarrassing her in front of the class.
I don't know about that.
I think you should probably embarrass yourself for such a lack of self-awareness.
Yeah.
It was a crazy time to be in education.
And when I look back on it, it's crazy actually being there because it all happened so fast.
My response to it was always instant and there was no like, should I wear a mask?
No, I'm not going to do that.
It's simple.
I'm not going to wear a mask.
I mean, I never wore a mask once.
I never tested once.
I never submitted to any of their guidelines.
I mean, we had assemblies where the deputy head would stand and say to the entire school hall, it is not a choice.
To wear a mask.
You must wear a mask, otherwise you're going to be responsible for the transmission of a virus which has the ability to kill people.
Of course, I was 14, 15, 16 in secondary school, but there were students there who were 11 years old, and they're being told this.
It's terrifying.
And to absorb that at such tender ages is... Well, I don't know the impact that it's had yet, but... No, I mean, it creates a fear of each other as well, doesn't it?
Which I'm sure is relevant in terms of division.
I mean, you can go deeper and deeper into it.
So for you then, because I look at it and I think, do you know what?
From someone from the outside, there seems to have been a war on kids, not just through Rona, even before that, and certainly since.
And I get it, because they're the adults of tomorrow.
So if you can change their perceptions through, you know, fear, propaganda, what have you, then you can kind of, you know, almost, you know, build the adults of tomorrow, like I say.
So I get it.
It's wrong, but I get it.
What do you think is the biggest thing that kids are facing now that is dangerous?
Well, I think that the scariest thing is the education system.
I mean, it is a weapon now.
It is no longer there to nurture and raise our children.
And more than that, we're now at a point where the parents who are bringing their children into education were brought up in the exact same system.
And, I mean, my teachers went to the school that they were teaching at.
and who taught me. So it's just a constant cycle and they're stuck in this sort of rat race constantly.
So the education system now is a ticking time bomb and pumping out the same
individuals over and over and over again.
How does that translate to an actual threat?
What am I actually saying?
Well, I can tell you that regarding woke trans ideologies, regarding the vaccine, regarding masks, regarding any agenda they see appropriate, they will find a way to drip feed it into the education system and mould young minds.
So, little things.
Nudging young students on the back of every computer screen in my college said, get vaccinated now.
On the background, you turn on a computer screen, there it is.
All the TV screens around my college turned around and said, you must refer to people by their preferred pronouns.
So it's not a case of normalising, it's just normalising it.
It's enforcing it.
And then I even had these called Personal improvement exercises, where you'd sit and they'd lecture you on current affairs.
So individuals who, for example, especially young men who took a likening to someone like Andrew Tate, regardless of what you think of him, he's clearly had an impact on young men and how they operate.
And you were called an extremist and you could be referred to prevent, which is like a terrorist.
Where potential terrorists go.
So they take it to such extremes, and they do it in such a consistent way, that students see no choice but to go along with it.
Because in order to rebel against it, you're going to lose your youth, you're going to lose your happiness, you're going to lose what it is to be young and free.
Which I sacrifice, but I can see why many wouldn't.
That's extraordinary.
So if you're a young man, particularly, say you follow Andrew Tate, or someone like Jordan Peterson, who came before him, you're being referred to what is essentially an anti-terror organisation.
Yes.
I don't think people realise that.
No, they don't.
Because, as I said, because it's so normalised, and because parents were in this cycle where parents went through the same thing, They're not interested in what's being taught in the schools.
I've been saying this for a while, that parents offload the responsibility of parenting to the education system and are not interested in what they're actually being taught.
And it's like, if my child came home and said that to me, I'd do something and say something.
But it's the fact that children won't say that at all.
They're not going to go home to their parents.
They're going to just keep to themselves because it's seen as normal.
And yeah, I mean, I know individuals who are my age that have been referred to Prevent for having extremist views.
I know young boys who have actually been referred to Prevent, which is just humiliating, based on the fact, not regarding Andrew Tate, but based on Covid policy, saying that they completely reject it.
And it's just outrageous, especially as Young men who are battling the issues of growing up in society as a man, as we know all the issues regarding why Andrew Tate came to light, why Jordan Peters in a certain point to young men, schools will latch onto it and they will attack it, like with some sort of virus.
Like we're the virus as well, and it's horrible.
That's what they want you to think.
That's what the whole climate change thing is about as well, that we're the problem.
As a human race, we are, like you say, a virus that almost needs eradicating.
I keep saying to people, you know, We're the carbon that they seek to reduce.
We've got to that point.
I've seen stuff on social media, you post videos that are very concise to the point, which I think is great, and we spoke about that off-air earlier.
That's a good thing because then you're reaching young people who probably wouldn't listen to a 40-minute podcast.
No, absolutely not.
What is the reaction from young people to you standing up now?
Because obviously it was difficult in school, I get that, but now you're out of that.
Yeah, so it's a really interesting question.
When I was in school, I was cornered.
I had boys on me every day.
Obviously, PAC mentality and bullying, or if that's what you want to call it, I never perceived it as bullying, but many would, is very prominent in schools.
And they would attack me.
They said, you're killing my granddad.
You're responsible for this.
You're an anti-vaxxer.
You're a granny killer.
All these things.
I had this.
I was called a Nazi, whatever.
But, you know, the bullying changed when it came to me, because I never perceived it as bullying.
I never cared.
I just think you're mental.
And I'm very fortunate I could go home and my parents were there to sustain me and say, no, you're not mental.
I can guarantee this is the truth.
But moving on, as a response of the youth now, I have had people who I went to primary school with and secondary school with who have messaged me and said, You were right.
And I'm actually quite fascinated by the level of humility that's come forward in my generation.
I expected a huge amount of arrogance and a lot of people saying, committing to the nonsense.
Doubling, tripling, quadrupling down.
But they don't.
And there's a lot of hope there.
They are very willing to come forward and say, well, can you tell me more?
Because I've noticed my granddad randomly died of a heart attack.
Why was that?
Could it be because of this?
And then we have a dialogue.
In terms of my short form content on my social media, what I'm trying to do, it's a slow process, but build almost a hub and a voice for someone who is youthful.
You have Andrew Tate, but he's got his issues.
You have Jordan Peterson, who has his issues, maybe not for the demographic of maybe 25, 30 year old men or older, but for the demographic of younger men who are 13, 14, 15.
And there's no one yet that is established enough on social media to be able to connect with such a young generation and who will engage.
And I'm very willing to engage in conversations.
Very recently, this morning, I released a video where I was on a tube having a dialogue with a 14-year-old boy who claims he was forced to take the vaccine when he was 11 years old.
And he looks at me and it's the vulnerable, naive look he has.
He says, well, I was forced to take it.
And we went, well, who told you?
He says, well, the government.
And what we break down, the government didn't force you to take it.
And then he exposes that his mom and dad made it.
And it's just horrible.
But it's the lack of information they have and how they're boxed in.
The government, or something greater than the government, is an extremely good job of using the education system as a weapon.
And they've mastered it.
And it's very hard to unpick.
Well, it tells young people, from what I can see, that they're helpless, that they basically have nothing of value to offer, particularly young boys, but I think it's the same across the board.
So if they're looking at someone like you, who's out there, who's speaking your mind, trying to make a difference, then you would hope that that would inspire young people to go, you know what, I can do that as well.
Well, it's a case of, and I've always said this, The biggest problem with my generation and younger generations is that it's not that they have a bad opinion, it's that they don't want an opinion.
They're conditioned to just go along with anything and not even agree or disagree with it.
Just nod along.
And I'd actually much prefer all of my generation to disagree with me.
And be as courageous in their fight back against me, because at least there would be a dialogue there.
But instead, you have them just going, well, I'm not bothered either way.
And that's a real problem, because then what are you supposed to do with that?
There's nothing to play with.
There's no sort of dialogue or conversation.
And that's a real big problem.
So hopefully, even I see in the comment section, stuff like that, it ignites some sort of a conversation.
Even if someone disagrees, it's important.
Because that's how we learn.
That's how we develop.
That's how we gauge different ideas.
And that's what's most important to me.
Oh, absolutely.
I think the part of it as well is that people have a fear of saying the wrong thing, so they don't want to say anything.
I find that all the time, that you can say to someone, shut up, shut your mouth, but it's a very forceful way of doing it, and you know that you're being oppressed at that point, because someone's telling you to shut up.
Whereas if you create a situation where you've got so many things you've got to remember, especially as a young person, I mean, how many genders are there?
200 and something?
I mean, it's bloody insane.
It's insane.
So you've got to remember all these things, and if you get them wrong, Yeah.
So it's easier to be quiet.
It's easier to shut up.
And I know people that, even in my age, early 40s, that are just like, you know what, I don't even know what the right thing is, so I'm not going to say anything.
And that's exactly what they're creating, isn't it?
Well, what we have is a victim culture.
And I even went to university for three weeks, but I left before I got kicked out, because I was not going to survive.
I'm going to tell you something else that will shock you.
It shocked me.
It's like saying, every time I think that I've seen it all, I really haven't.
I was given a piece of paper and there's a list of rules and guidelines at university, and this was on my first week, and it actually says, check your privilege.
And then underneath that it says, if you are white, then you can be perceived as having an unspoken hierarchy between someone who is black or mixed race.
So please check and identify a privilege you may have over someone else.
Well, I'm not agreeing to these.
I am white.
I'm a man.
And so what?
Until you put it on that piece of paper, I didn't even notice anyone's skin color.
You've created a division.
You've created some sort of victim mentality.
I studied photography.
I was very, very good at it.
But they asked me to write an essay on critical race theory and gender theory.
Why is that relevant to my course?
It doesn't matter where you go.
It doesn't matter what area you want to go into.
It's there.
It's suffocating you.
And as you said, it's so hard to have an opinion just in case you get it wrong.
And then the consequences are dire.
The consequences, I had people threatening to stab me.
I had people attacking, making fake accounts and attacking my social media.
I had reports and allegations made that I went up to gay individuals and called them paedophiles to try and slander my name.
All because I turned around and said, Well, I don't think that... I think a man is a man and a woman is a woman.
I don't think people should wear pronoun badges.
I won't refer to you by your ridiculous pronoun.
And because I'm white, I don't think I'm privileged.
And suddenly I get death threats.
That's the environment that my generation is in.
Well, that's inclusivity, that is, isn't it?
But what I don't understand about that, check your privilege, okay.
Yeah.
So if you check it, I'll just scroll through here and, you know, Okay, so I grew up with two abusive, alcoholic parents and an uncle that used to abuse me.
Have I passed, then?
Can I be a victim, then?
I think so.
You can find anything these days.
Do you know what I mean?
I know what you mean.
But then if you check it and you go, well, actually, I grew up in a wonderful family, I had everything I needed.
It's subjective.
Very subjective.
Yeah.
And it's like, even if I did grow up in a nice childhood, in a nice village, in a nice house, That's a good thing, isn't it?
Well, it is.
And I actually, through this, triggered quite a bad conversation because they're so shocked by some of the things I had to say.
It's like what I had said was the most outrageous thing.
And when someone who was white as well was talking and was trying to defend mixed race and black individuals said to me, you're privileged.
And I said, no, I'm actually more of a victim now in my country than they are, because I feel more attacked in this university, more vulnerable because of my skin colour than they do.
So I think white middle-class heterosexual men are actually more effective than black mixed-race individuals.
And they just couldn't believe it.
They were taken aback.
They lost for words that someone could say such a, what they consider, outrageous thing.
But I was raising an important point.
Not necessarily 100% true, but especially in that environment it was.
They're taken aback.
They're shocked by it.
But it's important for individuals like myself and people who share my opinions to voice it, because that's the first time they've ever heard someone say that.
And regardless of what they say, it made them think.
It caused some sort of reaction.
But the thing is for me, and I just find it so absurd, because you've gone from a situation, you know, going back to the United States in the 1960s where schools were segregated based on the colour of your skin, you were judged based on the colour of your skin, to eradicating that, we're all equal, we're all... Yeah, and now we've come back to a point where we're going to judge people by the colour of their skin.
You're privileged because of the colour of your skin.
I thought we were judging on content and character.
I thought that was the whole point.
Yeah, well, you're absolutely right.
And I actually mentioned this in one of my short-form videos that I made to try and reach my generation.
And I said, how have we managed to go in this bizarre cycle?
We've gone from one end of the spectrum all the way over to the other one.
And I said, it's very in keeping with the nonsense that comes with the woke brigade and their obsessive nature of victim mentality.
Well, they're always what they accuse you of as well.
They create rules on behalf of minorities that those minorities don't necessarily want.
I'll be honest with you, I've never had a disagreement with a transgender person.
I've had a hell of a lot of disagreements with transgender activists, none of which are transgender.
They get on great with transgender folk and they, in the large part, are disgusted by a lot of that.
I've got friends, I remember when the term people of colour came in and I had a conversation with my friend David and someone that he knew who was going, I fought in the 70s to not be called coloured.
Because I hated being called coloured.
And then I got called black and I went, I'm fine with that.
Now I'm a person of colour again.
How does that work?
Because it's not coming from minorities, it's coming from...
Activists!
Yeah, and I've stood and I've looked into the eyes of individuals who oppose us, who are saying, we don't believe in drag queen storytelling for children.
There may be some questions to raise there, and they're so angry, but I've looked into their eyes, and they have such an uncomfortable, I would almost say borderline evil nature to them.
of defending such horrific agendas and so openly.
It is bizarre and I went to university with these individuals.
I went to university with people advocated for Marxism, Stalin, drag queen storytelling for children.
I went on the upper end of the spectrum of like really hardcore far left or whatever you want to call them and they are
bizarre individuals to be around and they will go to Many lengths in order to try and attack and slander
individuals like us. It's truly worrying, but I think you're right
There's an element of projection there. Yeah, I think to be honest
I think if you're standing up on a stage and you're saying we need to protect children
We need to stop sexualizing children and and someone else hearing you say that makes them angry. That's a red flag.
Yeah Yeah to me
Just finally mate, and this is a crystal ball job, but where do you see, if nothing changes in terms of the direction that the education system is going, where do you see it in 10 years?
Because these 17, 18 year olds are suddenly 27, 28 and they're in positions where they're making decisions.
Well, it was J.D.
Rockefeller that formed the education system as we know it, and he said that we want a nation of workers, not thinkers.
That's done a great job so far.
Yeah, and to try and break out of that is a tricky one.
I think that if the education system was going to change, you need a complete reformation.
It's completely sunken and taken over.
Through basic stuff as well, as to how we teach people, the teachers are so ill-equipped when it comes to knowledge and just basic understanding of history and stuff like that.
But putting that to one side, it's more importantly looking at how it's used to manipulate children.
We'd have to completely strip back the education system.
How do I see it changing?
Well, you've got two sides.
You can be optimistic or you can be pessimistic.
Let's go optimistic.
Optimistic, okay, no problem.
Then I think that as the youth get pushed and pushed and pushed and get older and older and older, then my generation who then have children are not going to want their children to go through what they've been through.
So I think it may get to a point point in 10 years time where, let's say I have a child, I
wouldn't put them into education, but for the sake of argument, let's say I have, I would micromanage
the system and understand every day what my child is being taught. Because I think my
generation have experienced it firsthand and they don't want the same for their children.
So time will tell. But I think that as I know that maybe I'm an anomaly when it comes to
how extroverted and confident I am at fighting back, but I think that also comes as young
men get older and the likes of agitators influence them, that they're going to have
more of a voice and going to be more interested in how that they can make a change for
the sake of their children.
Yeah.
I think as well, maybe it's, you know, things get worse.
You can bury your head in the sand when stuff's a bit rubbish, but when it just gets horrendous, and then more horrendous, and more horrendous, there is that fight or flight within us, isn't there, I think, as human beings?
They can't fight biology.
And the love, as I just mentioned about children, the love and connection there is between father and son, mother and daughter, etc., is enough for the parents to then stand up for their children.
So it's going to be my generation and then the generation I have a five-year-old daughter.
that is going to make them big change I think but we will see that it's
terrifying and as of right now if I had children tomorrow don't plan on it but
if I did they would never go into the current education system because it's a
completely toxic and manipulative environment. Yeah yeah I mean I have a
five-year-old daughter she's in primary school but it's a tiny village school
and we did some serious research before Yeah.
And I'm like you, I micromanage every single day, you know, not kind of like, you know, but yeah, I know you're teaching today, you know, Baba.
But for me, I was I'm lucky in that sense.
Like I turned up and I saw some Ukraine.
ribbons on the fence and I was like, okay, here we go.
We're getting a little bit political, which I don't think belongs in a primary school.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then I looked and there was, and they had Russian ones and they'd done both sides.
And I thought, do you know what?
Okay, okay.
And I went into assembly and had a union jacket and it said, proud to be British.
And I went, I don't even know where I am, but I like it.
Yeah, it's good.
But the minute that changes, me and my wife, she's a teacher, so we've already had this conversation that actually, should it get to secondary school where stuff gets a little bit crazy, then okay, we'll homeschool.
Fine.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's obviously very important that children have the connection with other children as well.
We are social beings.
We work as one.
So there are institutions, like Hope, which is a... Oh, down in Sussex.
Down in Sussex, which is like an alternative schooling system.
There's some things happening, and I wouldn't want to deprive my children of the experience of education as well.
Not purely just for the educational resources, but also for the environment, the children, the social stuff.
So it's actually really kind of difficult, and I'll cross that bridge when that comes to it, but not yet.
Yeah, no, not yet.
No, no, live your life first, mate.
Where can people at home find you?
Yeah, absolutely.
So for me, I've got a fairly good following on Twitter.
And then from that, Instagram, TikTok.
I'm not even going to go there anymore.
I've tried because it's the best way to connect to my generation, but within seconds, bang, my videos are taken down.
So for me, it's predominantly between Instagram and Twitter or X. So if they go on to X, they're just Montgomery Toms?
Montgomery Toms.
My name wasn't taken.
I'm not surprised, mate.
It's a great name.
It's a great name.
Cheers, mate.
Yeah, thank you so much for having me on.
Absolute pleasure, mate.
You've got a hell of a handshake as well.
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