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July 14, 2024 - Full Haus
01:13:56
True Love & Friendship

Almost a year ago, Ash Sharp was acquitted of the bogus charge that triggered his arrest, but convicted of possessing a "terroristic document" (a larpy boomer fedpost PDF) subsequently discovered and forensically proven to have never been opened or shared. With no prior criminal record, he was sentenced to eight-plus years in an English prison, leaving his beloved wife and young daughters in one of the most painful situations imaginable. This week we are honored and humbled to welcome Ash's wife and his most steadfast comrade to discuss the latest in his case, what YOU can do to help, and staying strong in the face of the worst adversity. Closer: If I Were a Carpenter by Robert Plant JUSTICE FOR WHITE STAG Ash's Story Write to Ash Support His Family Sign the Change.org Petition And write to other political prisoners: https://Justice-Initiative.net  Go forth and multiply.  Support Full Haus at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Become a member. And follow The Final Storm on Telegram and subscribe on Odysee. Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2 Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows Gab.com/Fullhaus Odysee for special occasion livestreams. RSS: https://feeds.libsyn.com/275732/rss All shows since Zencast deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week.

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It's all fun in games to be a dissident if you're just a non-online or even an undox activist until the eye of Sauron catches you in its sights and the power of the system comes crashing down on your head and your families too in far too many cases.
If you happen to read or listen to White Power by George Lincoln Rockwell, which we boosted just the other day, you know all too well that the civilizational atrocities that woke us up date back far before most of us were even born.
But you also know that at least in the United States, if you keep your nose clean and don't hold a system job, you can more or less be a pro-white advocate without worrying too much about getting thrown in the gulag.
But not so for Europe, where since at least World War II, the United States has exported its nation-wrecking ideology, military occupation, and degenerate anti-white open borders madness.
For all our jokes about Muh Constitution, our First Amendment still protects us far better than our brothers and sisters in our cradle continent.
Merely possessing the wrong book there or making an arm gesture can earn you a lengthy prison sentence.
And you know that Europe is a canary in the coal mine for us and what they plan to impose in America.
It's sort of a reverse Gulfstream.
Listen very carefully to our special guests this week.
Finally, I can't imagine anything much more painful for a family than to lose a loved one to the gulag.
Money problems can be overcome, illness can be defeated, and even death brings a sort of closure.
But losing a husband and father for up to a decade or more and unjustly strikes me as a sort of tortured purgatory I'd only wish on our blood enemies.
All that said, we are proud and humbled to welcome on the brave and stoic wife of England's Ashley Podsyad Sharp this week, as well as one of his most steadfast comrades to discuss life under occupation, overcoming the hardest adversity, and hopefully keeping a smile on your face throughout the struggle.
So, Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers and aspiring ones.
It is episode 190.
I am your a little bit rushed host, Coach Finstock.
It's late night over in Old England and Poland, and it is six o'clock here on the East Coast.
So I'm back in the gazebo for the first time in a long time.
Chickens run around and a dog, and I'm counting my blessings, frankly, to be here.
Before we meet the birth panel, I want to thank a couple anonymous kings for supporting the show over the past week.
I'll leave their names out, even if one of them may have put them in there.
But if you want to help out the show, please visit us at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
And with all that, let's get on to the birth panel and our two very special guests.
First up, I am not going to do snappy or funny or cutesy introductions.
We just seem a little bit off.
So Sam, I see there on camera.
Great to have you back.
Welcome aboard.
Thanks, Coach.
It's been a long, hot, sweaty week here in town, and I'm having a cold one right now.
Looking forward to this show, but I'm mad.
I'm mad about the circumstances.
Yeah, we'll get into it, but sad and mad in almost equal measure, and I think anger is usually a more useful emotion than sadness when you're facing something like this.
It would be, you know, it's one thing to get pinched if you get caught up in some monkey business, uh right.
But to go away for a long time on what is unquestionably 1984 style thought policing, uh yeah, mad doesn't do it justice.
All right, big guy, welcome back.
Uh, rollo rollo, my friend, thank you for making time for us this week.
Uh, unconventional recording schedule, but we do what we can.
How are you bud?
Good, thank you, let's rock.
Let's do it all right.
First up, she is, of course, the wonderful wife of Ash Podsyad Sharp, the glorious mother of two beautiful young daughters and the woman who is now uh left, sort of to pick up the pieces and soldier forward after her husband was absolutely thrown under the bus by the English judicial system.
Evelina, welcome to FULL House.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Hi, thank you to have me.
It's our pleasure and our honor, ma'am.
Let's do the usual here, please.
And your ethnicity, your religion, and your motherhood status.
Of course, I'm Polish.
I'm proud of being a Polish.
I'm married to Ashley.
And this is the big honor of my life, the biggest one.
And I'm mother of two beautiful kids, my girls, my precious.
And I'm Christian.
Definitely.
I'm Christian.
Wonderful.
And we know a little bit about your backstory because, of course, Ash came on the show.
We recorded while he was facing his trial and sentencing.
And then we released it after the deed, the dirty deed, was done.
But remind us how you guys met back in the day, please.
Oh, a funny story.
And probably our kids will know different one, but I can tell you that.
Sure.
So yeah, in 2015, I moved into England to actually get some work job because in Poland was just terrible to get any jobs.
And I was after split up with my eggs and, you know, some drama going on.
So anyway, I didn't know English at all.
And actually appeared that it's quite hard to find any job in England without English, right?
So yeah, my actually gay friend told me that I should like to launch an app that was a Tinder.
And on the Tinder, I could talk with people, right?
And believe me or not, but I was so innocent in this kind of stuff that I thought that I thought that is only like a chat thing.
Of course, honestly.
And Ash actually knew how to use it.
And he used this many times before.
So at some point, when he saw me, he sent this like a star.
So basically, you can see this straight away.
And he had a date the next day.
And we had a fantastic date.
Like we spent six hours in a like very, very poor kind of pub listening to Let Sepre and Pink Floyd and drinking vodka and just talking.
And he's saying that my English was great.
I think he was just drunk.
Very good.
I'm glad that I asked too, because there's no shame in that.
One of our best pals of the show met his now wife on Tinder.
Yeah, I don't know what kind of reputation Tinder has in your country, but in this country, it's kind of a joke.
It's a bad one, but it works sometimes.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, thank you, Evelina, for being so candid about that.
I appreciate it.
Just a little backstory for the audience.
I assume that most of our audience has heard our sort of, what was it, rules, new rules of Britannia instead of Rule Britannia.
That was a little play on words for the title there.
So we'll get into what we can, how you've been soldiering on, because let's be honest, you're not the first and you won't be the last woman to lose a good man to the system for standing up for our people.
Sad, but true.
All right.
Next up is, I don't know exactly what the relationship is.
All I know is that he has been an absolute soldier and I'd call him a heroic friend for standing up for Ash, for helping Evelina and perhaps contributing to the cause of getting his address out there so people can write to him in prison to give Sengo.
He's been in communications with me throughout this whole thing.
So Steve, welcome and thank you so much, bud.
Good evening, Coach.
Hi, thanks for having us on here.
Absolute honor.
And sorry for the late notice.
You know, we were just going to go with Evelina.
I thought, you know what?
It would probably be good to have little Steve on here too.
So lay it on us, big guy, your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status.
Yeah, sure.
I'm English, of course, born and bred, as all my family have been for many generations.
So I'm Christian, although I'm not ultra Christian.
I'm not practicing, but that was the faith I was born to.
And I try to adhere to it as best as possible, but I'm not a regular churchgoer.
I'm a father, a proud father at that.
I've got a lovely son who's the, who's my everything.
So that's where I stand and that's who I am.
Wonderful.
And I got to say, I love your accent.
I don't, is that a classic English accent or does that have a geographic?
I don't want to reveal where you're from or anything, but it's delightful.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm a southerner, originally from Essex.
And so, yeah, yeah, my accent is a lot of people take the meek out of it because I'm living in the north of England now.
And a lot of people say, a lot of people say, are you Australian?
And I go, yeah, whatever.
Yeah, I know you guys have your own intra-regional disputes and, you know, chauvinisms and whatnot.
And Ash, of course, is a northerner, so far as I understand.
You know, he's from up in the industrial heartland.
He sent me a George Orwell book to read The Road to Wigan Pier.
And he's like, those are my people.
That's where I'm from.
And it was a grisly report from sort of the heart of industrial, industrializing England.
Well, welcome, pal.
Thank you for that.
And I'm sure that like, yeah, half of the English audience would be like, no, he's got a terrible accent.
That's not the right one.
Anyway, I always stick my foot in it.
Let's go back.
Let's go back to Evelina.
And I just want to say I'm sorry.
And how are you and the girls?
Yeah, thank you, but don't be sorry.
This is something what probably had to happen to us, right?
When you are doing the right thing.
We are good.
Thank you for asking.
We're just moving to Poland to live with my parents.
And my grandmother is 94 and she's living with my parents.
So it's awesome.
The youngest one, what is like one year and a half, loves to eat from her plate and only from her plate.
So it's quite funny thing.
And to see the smile on the woman's face what is like 94 and she doesn't want to live anymore is just priceless.
And every time when she's waking up and she's kissing my kids' feet with this big smile on her face, nothing more better could happen to her and to my children, you know?
So yeah, we are fine after.
Go ahead, please.
Yeah, yeah.
After everything what happened the last year, all this drama and the drama world is going on.
God is blessing us every day with so many things that we cannot even count it.
I cannot comprehend still being grateful to God after all that you guys have been through.
And I mean that respectfully.
I think that's an amazing attribute to not say, oh, we really got the raw end here.
He was shirking duty on this lovely family in this case and a very devout family too.
I want to get into Ash's status and then most importantly, what we can do for him.
But if you could share, if he, as most of the audience will know, he has been banned from, as I understand it, communicating with his daughters and of course, even seeing them.
So if you guys could still visit, if you still had regular rights to see your husband and the girls to see their father, would you have stayed in England?
Or was there something else to encourage you to move back to Poland?
Well, no, I think we would move to Poland.
Many, many things actually happened the last year.
First thing is the police is actually, let's say, they're saying that they're visiting me.
For me, this is harassing.
They just coming to my house and asking me very, very strange questions, trying to get some information what doesn't exist about Ash, right?
So for example, they can ask me if some right-wing extremists are giving me money to send documents around the world.
Yeah.
Right.
They're saying that is for my, of course, protection.
They're just harassing me.
That is the first thing.
The second thing, for example, today I had a call from social service, right?
Because they had anonymous call from someone who said that I have right-wing extremist views and I'm a racist.
If you didn't before, you might now.
Not that I'll put that characterization on you.
Half the country here would get visits from the police if their true beliefs were known and the cops came around to check up on you.
Yeah, completely understand.
So they have been quote unquote checking up on you and obviously snooping around, poking around, which does equate to harassment.
So even if you could still see Ash, you had to get the hell out of there.
Oh, yeah.
To be honest, it's for me easier to fight and see him than drive a five and a half hour to see him.
With the two girls, it's impossible even to do it.
And relocating him to a more distant prison is almost certainly by design, right?
They put him in a nastier one farther away to twist the screws.
Yeah, that is a normal practic for a tact offender.
So they're doing this for everybody who is like terrorist offender, right?
Gotcha.
And just in case the audience hasn't listened, maybe this is their first time tuning into full house.
Want to remind them that Ash was serving as a corrections officer when somebody dimed him out as a quote-unquote right-wing extremism, the White Stag Athletic Club.
They arrested him because he had shared a link or even an image to Mr. Bond's music, who is of course himself serving a lengthy prison term in Austria, just sharing the music.
So that was the hook that they used to bring him in.
Then they searched all of his computers and his laptops, etc.
And then they found one naughty document called the White Resistance Manual that was on an encrypted drive that there was no evidence it had been opened.
And then they brought him to trial on the sharing extremist lyrics and then also possession of this naughty document, which Ash claims he never read, supposedly was borne out.
I could see some people in the audience going, oh, yeah, sure, you downloaded this and never read it, or you got the book on your shelf, but you never read it.
But I actually believe him.
It's entirely conceivable.
You're just like, oh, that's an interesting title.
Let me put that on my computer.
So they arrested him on BS, essentially, and then they got him after poking through all of his documents, supposedly this radical, violent, you know, Nazi extremist for one document and sent him away to remind us, please, what his sentence is.
Why?
He's eight years in prison plus five years on license.
So it's in total 13 years.
And the five years on license, is that like what we call supervised release or parole where he's out, but he's still got an ankle bracelet or something like that?
That's right.
Okay.
Let me see here.
Let's okay.
His current status, please.
So he was tried, acquitted, as we say it of the music charge, convicted.
So he got nine plus five for the possession of the document that was never opened.
And then he appealed his sentence recently.
And we'll pivot over to Steve after this.
But what happened with the appeal, Evelina, please?
So I got the phone from his solicitor, and unfortunately, the appeal was rejected.
And when I read the document from the judge, basically the judge reject all the evidence, like, or even more accurate would be say the lack of evidence of his guilt.
Right.
And he only quote the judge who sentenced him.
So right now, we are appealing this decision.
What means that we will fight, like his solicitors will be fighting, facing three judges for the right for appeal in like two, three months of time.
And you're appealing the length of the sentence, not the conviction.
No, no, no.
We basically, yeah, we are appealing only like on the sentence, right?
And because Ash, for no reason, actually is accused to be a violence, we are appealing this as well because there is no, yeah, yeah, there's no proof that he's a violent person and he is accused for being violent.
So he is in a prison of very, very strict restrictions right now because of that.
I'm piling on with the questions here.
What was their rationale for cutting him off from visitation or communication with your girls?
You know, he wasn't whispering like Mein Kampf into their ear on the phone.
Was there any grounds whatsoever?
How the hell did they justify that?
You see, the funny thing is that we were fighting to get this information for like three months.
And the prison and the governor denying us this right to get this evidence.
But finally, I found a document internal prison document, what was saying that they just have to do it.
So when I sent this to a governor, the government said, oh, sorry.
Yeah, that was misunderstanding.
So of course he will see it.
And in this document, actually, what they only disclose only partly, they said that was our one phone call with me.
When Ash, when Inca, so our little girl, like three years old girl, was around and Ash said that the Polish people are not retired and when they will build a country close to England, they will be caught.
And that was the reason, yeah, why Ash actually is using the political language and grooming his own child.
Yeah, talking about politics or having any opinions whatsoever about your country or the state of the world apparently is yeah.
And that really drove home too here because, you know, if you hold what they consider extremist views, then they can assume that you're perhaps sharing them in the home.
Some parents do, some parents don't.
And it raises all sorts of specters of, if not prison, then at least breaking up families on the grounds of extremism.
And I'm like as sorry as I am damn serious about the canary and the coal mine issue of what they can get away with England.
They have said explicitly, you know, criminalizing speech, watering down the First Amendment here, stacking the Supreme Court.
If they could do it here, they would do it here.
Absolutely.
There are people already like that here in large numbers.
Absolutely.
Steve, I don't have the text in front of me, but I read at least most of the judge's decision on, I think, both on the conviction and on the rejection of his appeal.
But can you add a little bit of context here to describe just how, you know, the sentence alone is crazy.
And then when you read what these judges write, it is absolutely blood-boiling.
It's like this bloodless bureaucratic language putting away a non-violent offender for up to a decade.
Yeah, absolutely.
When we were sat in court and the judge was reading out and passing sentence, it made us silent just listening because, you know, you wanted to stand up and start shouting at me, but you can't, of course.
But we were dumbfounded because what he was coming out of his mouth was just pure fiction.
And it was nothing but a personal attack on Ash.
All the way through the trial, the judge repeated several times that, you know, being a supporter of national socialism wasn't a crime.
It's not a crime to have different thoughts and views.
But he turned that 180 and put all of that in his sentencing, saying he was a neo-Nazi, a homophobe, a racist, he's a liar.
That did draw some gasps because that was the opening sentence.
He said, you're a liar.
And we just all stared at each other going, what is he saying?
And it was just a personal attack on Ash.
And we were just gobsmacked.
And they can get away with that.
So with that, that he just led up to him saying, you know, 13 years.
And we were just like, what?
How?
It's just not possible.
Then, of course, just very recently, as Eloina said, on the first attempts of putting the appeal in, the judge that rejected it just basically cut and pasted and paraphrased what the sentencing judge had said.
It was so obvious, so obvious that he hadn't read, looked into it.
And this judge also, the most recent one, is a Indian born in Kenya who is now a British citizen and he's been knighted.
He's a sir.
So, you know.
Does he wear the white wig still or does he wear a long black wig?
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Actually, I was actually looking for photographs of him and his name's escaped my memory because I don't really, you know, but I have been searching online for pictures of him and I can't find any.
So, you know, they just bully their way through.
I don't know what it's like in the States, but over here, the judges, especially in Sheffield when Ash was sentenced, the judge that presided over the whole case, they just sit there knowing they're untouchable.
They can say what they're like.
Nobody will challenge them.
The legal profession won't stand up and say, Your Honor, you're talking at your backside because they're in the same club.
It's their profession.
And that's what annoyed me immensely.
His legal team, they could have done a lot better.
They weren't aggressive enough and they just weren't pulling the judge up.
And the judge was just so biased.
The way he was speaking to the jury, contradicting himself.
Yeah, just disgusting.
Do you have genuine hope for the sentence appeal or are we?
You've always got to.
You've always got to.
Otherwise, you know, you just become, you know, just a person that gives up and that's not us.
You know, we never will be.
And you always have, you've got to be realistic.
What has happened, I think, is quite predictable because the way it works over here, I don't know about the States, is you get basically put off from putting an appeal in because if you lose that appeal, your time you've served already up until that appeal, you can start again.
So luckily that box wasn't ticked by the appeal judge.
It's just rejected it.
Otherwise, Ash would be doing it another year, start all over again.
And they put that in there as a basically to try to prevent people from every single person putting an appeal in.
So you've got to take that chance.
Now, that chance was taken.
That box hasn't been ticked.
So luckily, Ash hasn't got to start his sentence all over again.
Then once that's happened and the first one's been thrown out, a lot of people will go, oh, it didn't work, did it?
I'll just give up here.
So they're betting on that.
They are betting on that.
So now it's been taken forward.
It's got to go in front of three judges.
His barrister can be there to argue the case in person and not just by email.
So, yeah, I've got hope because the way his barrister has wrote the appeal, it's not bad.
You know, it's basically saying in it, this is an excessive sentence.
He's put examples in there of other people that have been convicted and are in prison right now for the white resistance manual.
And they're half of or a quarter, a tenth of what Ash has got.
Even just distributing it too, right?
I mean, not that there's anything wrong with that, like passing around a document, but still, they were sharing it and publishing it and they got less time than Ash.
Yeah, these people were encouraging people.
They were preaching it and they were actually trying to act on it, what this document says.
Ash, of course, did none of that.
And like I said, to many people, when like people say, oh, yeah, but surely you might have read it, like you mentioned earlier on.
It was proven by computer forensics.
And the prosecution and the defense both agreed on this.
They come to the same agreement that that folder had only been opened for 12 seconds and the document, not the document hadn't been accessed.
Right.
But the judges threw that out.
The judge was just like, yeah, whatever.
Sorry, you know, it's insane.
You know, it's like the judge need one of the things I was hoping that his defense would do was ask the judge to be recused.
But I don't think they had the balls to do that.
The judge has got too much personal background to be biased.
He's a homosexual.
He's friends with left-wing communist lawyers and barrister who champion the importation of illegal immigrants under the disguise of sexual harassment from their countries.
Sounds like a conflict of interest to me on any normal planet.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
But, you know, yeah, I just wanted to stand up and just say, you know, redacted, redacted, redacted.
You know, me and my Fed posting.
Anyhow.
Let's not add you to the ranks.
All right.
I can't share another give, send, go for another English prisoner.
So keep your nose clean, Steve.
Absolutely, sir.
Absolutely.
We've got hope.
We have got hope.
We've got to have hope.
And it's the fact that he's going to go in front of the three judges and it's like they can't ignore the facts of what is there now, surely.
That's where you stand, really.
Yep.
Well, go ahead, Sam.
You got to have hope first of all.
And secondly, your suffering, Evelina, is not in vain by any means.
There's people hearing of this case, people that I've mentioned this case to.
It is so infuriating.
The injustice is so outrageous that you are activating people, in a sense, indirectly by this tragedy and injustice that you are enduring.
So we're all in this together.
And in this phase of history, some of us have suffered.
Everyone on this show has suffered something being doxed, losing jobs, losing relationships, whatever it is.
But all of that injustice is moving us towards a new day because even in the early days of Christianity, people were being martyred every day and in large numbers, but eventually it turned the tide.
And in this time we live, we know that the timeframe is all shortened.
Everything is happening so fast that what you're enduring will be for the better.
And this will turn around.
Thank you, Sam.
And for the audience, too, if they're curious why I've maybe taken on Ash's case bigger, you know, why not Sam Melia or other people?
Sam has his own support network.
You know, obviously Sam got wrongfully imprisoned and he's got a big stable.
He's basically a global superstar now for Thought Police.
Zero Hedge articles.
Everybody knows about Sam.
Ash did nothing worse and has gotten less attention.
So there's that reason.
There's the fact that at some point when I saw all the refugees pouring into Europe in 2015, that was my ultimate radicalization because that was when I realized that they're not just trying to do that in the United States because of our supposed ideals and we are a nation of immigrants, but that it really was an organized program to water down white populations all around the earth.
And then there's also the fact that I just really connected with Ash.
He reminded me of me.
We had been in comms for a long time.
He was a regular guy.
He was a father.
He was trying to do the right thing, organize men into a group to do good deeds.
And I honestly didn't think that he would get that long of a sentence.
I thought, you know, just stringing him into the web of the legal system to impose some pain and extract a pound of flesh would be enough.
But then when I saw nine years, my jaw dropped.
And I cannot think of him being led away from court after being convicted, probably in handcuffs.
Obviously, I didn't see it.
And just telling his girls that he was going off to fight dragons.
That reminds me why we do this show and why we have to, when you're going through hell, keep on going.
And people are this, I want to think about that word even.
This isn't radicalizing anyone.
This is normalizing people.
Radicalizing would mean believing some ridiculous, extreme thing.
What we believe is the normal thing.
What we believe is the instinctive thing.
What we believe is the natural thing.
And people are waking up out of their extreme abnormality to be normalized to our point of view.
England should remain English.
Poland should remain Polish.
And the mass importation, even the minor importation of legions from the third world non-white countries is an offense to all of the natural born citizens.
And if, you know, I remember the Polish plumber meme from England years ago, you know, heaven forbid.
I said that to Elon Musk the other day on Twitter.
I was basically like, it's not the legal status of the immigrants.
If the United States were getting boatloads of Nordics and Germanics and Slavs and Anglos, we'd be better off for it.
All right.
It's about the content and the race and the character of the people who are coming.
And the evidence for England, less so for Poland, thank God for now, is written in the stars and you see it every day on the streets.
And of course, in the European Champions Cup.
Maybe we'll talk about that a little bit later.
I want to go back to Evelina.
Did you, this is a personal question, but many women, many wives, many girlfriends have suffered for the courage or activism or involvement of their men.
Did you ever get really pissed off at Ash and say, you dumb bastard, why the hell did you have to do this?
Why couldn't you just kept your head down and worked your job and come home?
Be honest.
If you did, I would totally understand.
And you know what?
This is actually a question what I hear quite often.
I never have been because me and Ash are one.
When we get married, we became one.
He's taking these boys out of their mind and he's helping them.
And they have a fun and they have something.
Ash discovers something what he never had before.
So brotherhood.
He is like only one child of his mother and father and he never had any siblings.
That was for him something amazing to have.
And he knew that when he will share this with another guys, it will be something big and it was big.
And I never was angry with him.
You know what?
Sometimes I was thinking that, dude, you should read it.
But then I was asking myself, did I read everything?
What I downloaded?
Did I read every book, what I bought?
No.
This is life.
Of course.
You cannot be angry.
And to be honest, in his skin, I missed only one person.
And this is my beloved husband.
He missed three beloved cares.
I cannot even imagine this pain.
Yes.
And his, I've been in correspondence with Ash.
It's no secret.
And I can tell the, I think I could safely tell the audience that he is getting ripped absolutely physically.
Yep.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And he's waiting for this moment when he will try with you at things.
Yeah, yeah.
I saw him and actually, actually, it's unfair because he is more handsome than he was.
Right, yeah.
Unfair.
Oh, God, yeah, I was going to say, Evelina, you're quite fetching yourself.
So if anybody, and Steve, you may have to look out too, if anybody is thinking about, you know, making a pass while Ash is away, expect the worst, you know, when he comes out.
That's right.
Stay away, lads.
Don't even think about it.
But yeah, he's getting ripped.
He said nobody's been messing with him.
He's going about his time.
He is absolutely desperate, not desperate for letters, but sometimes we think like, oh, do prisoners really want another letter of me rambling?
Because it's hard to write to a prisoner, especially if you don't know them.
What do I write?
Will I get in trouble or whatever?
So you can literally just pour your thoughts on the world or what's going on in your life or how things are out here.
You can share some sympathies.
Sometimes I just do stream of consciousness.
I hate writing letters.
It's like, oh, I'm going to sit down on a laptop.
And then once I've done it, I feel so good.
I pop that letter.
It's like $1.50 to mail a first-class letter to England.
It's nothing.
You do have to put your return address on there.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
You know what is the most beautiful thing what Ash is doing in the prison?
He actually is taking those guys for smoking the spies over there.
And just they doing the exercises with him.
They're going into the church.
That is amazing what he's doing over there.
This God is present and the Jesus is with him all the time.
is something beautiful that this guy yeah very important for the audience to know too that he's he is a devout sincere christian he He is not like a goose-stepping shaved head.
Well, he does have a shaved head, but you know, he believes that national socialism is a righteous ideology to organize a country and people for their betterment.
And he is a devout Christian.
And there's no contradiction there, too, as he told us so well himself.
I didn't mean to cut you off there, Evelina, but before we get too far and we're right in the heart of it here, let's go into what the audience can and should do to help Ash.
And if you want to kick it off or Steve, you know, let's, there's a bunch of things that they can do.
So let's dig into them one by one.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
Thanks, Coach.
Yeah.
We've got the webpage up, which is Justice for White Stag.
And on that webpage, it explains actually everything.
If the audience is listening and they haven't heard this story before, they can just look at the Justice for White Stag webpage.com and it will explain everything.
It'll have background, what he's going through, what they can do.
They can either write to him, which is the address, and he is on there, of course, to the prison.
They can write to the prison to complain about how he's being held and treated and what they think is wrong with it, which is important because the more people that put pressure on the prison, they just can't ignore it.
There's also an email address on there for the prison reform trust, which, again, an outside body, you can write to those.
We've also got address on there for the home secretary, which actually I've got to double check on that because it's a new home secretary with the Labour government.
And I don't know if that one's correct, but basically on there, there's enough information for everybody to learn about what's going on, the background and what they can do.
And putting pens or paper, emailing, you can email them at emailaprisoner.com.
easy to set up excuse me where they can email ash direct and um you know if putting a pen to paper is a bit difficult um you can email him that's that's no problem and also the telegram page we've got as well um which is doing great um we've been going what five six days now and uh we're touching on 50 000 views Western Chauvinist posted you guys, that was big.
Yeah, kind of.
Oh, that was fantastic.
So there's Western Chauvinist got it.
Thank you, sir.
That just took off because I was watching.
I put a post on in the morning and by the afternoon it had gone to 11,000.
And I was like, wow, that's fantastic.
You know, somebody big boosted you.
Real quick question, Steve.
The letters to the prison and to the home secretary, et cetera.
So not to Ash, but to the system to protest him not getting communication with his girls.
Do you any idea if it helps to do that from the United States or anywhere else in the world?
Or should really our English British listeners do that?
Anywhere and everywhere, because it's all to do with the people out there.
They can ignore it.
And you can be pessimistic and go, oh, they're going to get those to letters and chuck it in file 13 in the corner in the bin.
But that's not the case.
It's more and more people put pen to paper.
It doesn't matter where they are.
And like I said, on the Justice for White Stag, there's a whole sample letter made out there that they can just print off, sign it, and then off it goes.
So yeah, it doesn't matter where you are.
It's just putting that pressure on the system to remind them that they just can't get away with what they're doing.
Absolutely.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
And that's one of the big, that's one of the big things.
They're like, they just when there's a lot of other prisoners in there that are under the same PPRC restrictions as Ash and Ash is educating them on what they can do because a lot of guys in prison have got like, you know, a mental age of like 11.
Excuse me.
And the prison can just bully them.
So although you're sentence and go to prison, that should be your sentence of what was given to you in court.
The prison takes it on their own back to punish you further because they can just get away with it.
And that's what we're fighting at the moment.
And there's a, and I want to mention too that Sam Melia, if I, if I read Laura Taylor correctly, he, his, you know, ban on communication with his kids was revoked.
And I suspect that was a result of letters or emails or pressure or the change.org petition.
So we have, we have a point of evidence that this stuff works.
Yeah.
Yeah, sure.
Um, I got a letter from Sam today, actually.
Heck yeah.
And he's doing good.
He's doing good.
And they're just waiting to find out the terms of his license for when his sentence ends.
His lifting of the PPRC came rather quickly.
Different prisons.
He, this is the thing, different prison, different governor, different eyes on it.
Each prison and the governors treat it like their own kingdom and they just do what they like.
And so that is one of the big problems we've got.
I'm sure it's the same in the States or anywhere.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And you were asking before about how it is here.
You know, it depends on the judge and it depends on the jurisdiction.
I don't know if where you serve your time matters so much.
But, you know, for dissidents, white, pro-white dissidents in America, I wouldn't step foot in New York State.
You know, that's where they chose to string up Ricky Vaughn, Donald Trump, of course.
I mean, in these cities and those jury pools too, you don't have a chance in hell.
of the January sixers, Washington, D.C., federal judges and DC residents, all of whom 90, 95% are left, if not radical left.
Big country, it depends on where they choose to try to crucify you.
Evelina, let's go over to you.
I've been so pleased both to try to help with you and the girls through the give send go.
And I've been even prouder to see the outpouring.
There was one night where I boosted it and almost instantaneously somebody donated a big chunk of money to you.
And I just, I wanted to do a jig for you guys to be happy.
I don't think you're getting rich off of this.
You're raising two young girls.
You're going through the hardest time of your life, but don't be shy here.
I assume that the give send go is a true life godsend for you.
I'm really grateful.
I am and Ash is for any one dollar of the payment.
But this, you know, God will always provide with this kind of stuff.
We have to fight for Ash because he's alone over there and he's feeling alone.
And it shouldn't be like that because he never will be alone.
He will be always my hero and the girl's hero.
And he never did anything bad.
And we should fight for him.
The money are not important here at all.
Not the case.
We can walk and chew gum at the same time.
And just to Ash's character, you know, one of my letters, I said, come on, buddy, be honest.
What do you need?
What do you want?
Do you need commissary money?
Do you need books?
And he said, coach, send a treat to my daughters, which I have, which I have not yet, because it's not an easy thing to send, you know, figure out what would actually be meaningful for two young girls.
But I'm on the hook to do that for sure.
So if you donate to the gift, send, go, you can imagine Ash's and Evelina's beautiful little girls getting perhaps a bigger Christmas present or having a nicer Halloween as that spreads around the world.
Whatever it is, it feels good.
Do it.
And because it's in pounds, I'll just give you a tip.
Most people have like a bunch of credit cards in their wallet.
Just do five minutes of research and see if you have one that doesn't charge a foreign transaction fee.
And then you'll save some bucks, especially, you know, if you give big, two or three percent can make a major difference.
All right, guys.
What else am I missing?
I want to ask Steve about England and Evelina about Poland and sort of the bigger picture stuff, but I don't want to move on from Ash in case I missed anything here.
If we, yeah, that's not bad if we did that in 45, almost 50 minutes.
Thank you, Roller, for your trusty.
Rolo, too quiet.
I'm putting you on the spot.
Have you been fed posting about Ash or what's your feedback to all this?
Well, I was thinking about how there was that Keith Woods post a little while ago about how essentially the English police are not investigating any violent crimes.
And it's something like less than 5% of violent or burglaries are solved, but 3,000 people have been investigated for essentially thought crimes.
Sure.
All right.
That's a good pivot to Steve and where England went wrong and where it stands today.
But just to reiterate, for everyone listening in the audience, you can do at least one of these things.
Go to the Justice for White Stag website or Telegram page to find all these links.
Of course, I'll put them in the show notes.
There's thechange.org petition.
It worked for Sam.
There's letters to the prison and to the home secretary to highlight the injustice.
There is, of course, writing to Ash.
If I said Sam there, I meant Ash.
Write to Ash directly and fill his spirits.
I want him to have a big stack of envelopes and letters and a whole country or whole world full of new friends by the time he walks out of there, like Vince McMahon.
And then, of course, there's Evelina and the girls and the gifts and go, which is up, which I believe is supporting P Sharp.
But we'll put that link in the notes.
Please, if you're listening to this and you are not a gay, anti-white leftist commie, we'll take your support too.
But I don't like to piss up ropes generally.
Do one of those things at least.
Do all of them if you can.
And I've got a couple of things I still got to do here, including writing back to Ash.
Still waiting for my letter from Big Sam, but I'm cutting him some slack there since he's kind of an international cause celeb.
Steve, I put out a poll on the channel, I don't know, a few days ago, and it was absolutely sincere.
It wasn't clickbait.
I wanted everybody to think about which European or which white country in the world is in the worst situation right now, demographically, politically, and culturally, too.
And I answered England.
I haven't been there since 2006 or 2007.
I was in London.
I was still a little bit pilled then.
But obviously, the demographic transition was already underway.
One needs to look no further than the English national sock team to see what's underway.
And you can just hear a sniggering leftist go, snickering leftist going, oh, what does it matter to you if the content of the country gets a little browner?
What does it matter to you if the players on the soccer team are black?
And there's the famous meme now that it's like, I don't care if my daughters are getting raped and my country is turning into a third world slum hole.
We need them for the soccer team, which really kind of nails how so many people think about these things.
I think back to Enoch Powell and Rivers of Blood as perhaps the best chance.
It goes back to Churchill.
But anything you want to say about your dear country that is, if it's not the worst, it's in some of the worst shape, as we know from Ash's situation alone.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah.
No worries.
Yeah, that poll you did the other day.
I was hovering over that, going, Do I just go straight for UK?
Because I live here and I don't know what it's like.
But I voted on that France, UK, Canada.
Now, with France, France, you know, with what's going over there politically in the moment.
And like you just said, with the football team, I think a very good way, like you just said, is just look at the football teams and that might be an indication of what their country's like.
And the French team had nine out of 11 who are not French.
And, you know, we have five or six.
So I thought, yeah, France is way worse.
But with what's been going on in France and that French politician the other day that did that speech saying when he was a boy, one in 10 children were born to foreign nationalists.
Now it's one in four.
That's not enough.
And the worst thing of this country is the native Frenchman.
So you look at that and go, yeah.
He's the leader of their new biggest party, if I recall.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mr. You know, the cheese-eating surrender monkey, whatever he is.
It, you know, so yeah, our country, it's so rapidly changing so quick.
Um, I just look back to my childhood and my grandparents' house that we used to go and play at, which is in East London.
Now it's Essex, but it's classes East London now because the borders have spread.
And there wasn't one single foreign face on the whole street, not one.
Now you can't even go there.
It's a no-go zone.
So if I go back to when I was young, I'm going back, that's like 40 odd years.
But it's accelerating.
So a place that was all right 10 years ago is not okay anymore.
So it's just everywhere.
It is so noticeable.
And when you mention it to people and speak up, some just literally go, la la la, hands, face, not listening, not hearing.
I'll ignore it, stick my head in the sand.
People are waking up, but so many people will just choose to ignore it because it's easier and it's not affecting them.
And they're comfortable.
Thank you very much.
But that's changing.
That is changing.
It is affecting a lot of people.
Our understanding for a long time, or what I heard at least, was, well, sure, England is bad in the biggest cities, but you just have to get out into the countryside and then it's still all English, which is probably rapidly not the case.
No, well, every city is in a minority now.
London is like on the last census, which the Office for National Statistics is going to stop doing for some reason and publishing these numbers.
But the last census was 36% of British living in London.
Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Bristol, Coventry, Leicester, the list is long, all the same, every single one of them.
All these people as well.
And it's Labour is getting bit in the backside from the elections.
Their pets that they've imported to be their go-to voters are forming their own parties and then voting the Labour councillors out.
So it's almost quite humorous, really, because their pets are turning on them.
And then there's quite a few good videos online of Labour candidates stood on stage screaming, get these people out of here as they're getting heckled.
So the worm's turning in a weird way.
It's going to have to go worse before a lot of people wake up.
Could it go too far and irreversible?
I don't know.
A lot of people might close their ears or close their mind to the problem too in the past, at least, because they didn't think that anything could be done about it.
But now, as they see there is something to be done about it, and there are people like us, good people, normal people that are forming associations of one kind or another and doing things, whether it's a podcast or an active club or whatever it is.
There are expressions now that good, healthy, normal people can avail themselves.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And that, well, sorry, yeah.
But that's exactly why they stamped down Ash because Ash is an intelligent guy and he knows what he's on about.
That's what they're scared of.
Now, all the other national group, all the other nationalist groups out there that have been and gone in this country, most of them were either autistic, young, dumb, Fed posted too much.
I'm guilty of that.
Was.
Don't do it anymore, sir.
But they weren't a danger because they were just a flash in the pan and they were like all mouth, no show, no go, and didn't have any real meat behind them, no motive of the truth.
So the system doesn't care about them.
They jail them or they ban them or whatever, but they don't really pose a danger to them.
Then comes along a group like ours where we expressed being non-violent.
We're there for the good of our brotherhood.
We trained.
We vetted.
We turned away people that seem complete nut jobs in the vetting sector and go, yep, off you go, sunshine.
And a cynical or the skeptical listener, real quick, Steve, would say, I don't believe them.
They were secretly training for Rohola or they were secretly training guns.
And it's like, no, we all know that that is the easiest way to get shut down and that we have to be more law-abiding than anybody else.
We can't, you can't give them the camel's nose under the tent on anything as we know, you know.
Exactly.
And because we hadn't done any of that, they made it up.
by saying we think you could.
And that's where the thought crime comes in because that's what the judge said in his sentencing.
The judge said, although you haven't and there isn't any proof of you conducting any violent action, we consider that one of your group would do in the future.
You know, you're like minority report.
Yeah.
It's just like, so they can prosecute you and arrest you, just like what's happening in Canada at the moment with their bill C63, whatever they want to call it, which I just read a few hours ago.
I'm not familiar with that one.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
The Canadian one that's just going to go through at the moment, where it is the beyond thought crime.
Life sentence for a crime that they think you might commit.
House imprisonment if they think you've been naughty.
Think.
Consider.
If somebody reports.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Are you paying attention?
Audience?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Insane.
If anybody hasn't, anybody who lives in Canada, though, that Bill 60, C63, I'm sure they know about it, but insane.
It's like it's that's one of the reasons when on that poll, I ticked France, UK, Canada, because the way Canada's going is just insane.
Absolutely insane.
This country, you're right, what you said before, the police, you know, burglaries and kids riding around on illegal motorbikes and that nobody about, nobody arrests them, nobody can do anything.
The police are scared of it.
If you say the wrong thing, like the harassment I got, you know, they just try to bully me.
Many knocks on the door, social services to my son's school.
And he's looking at them going, yeah, you just brainwash scumbags.
Do they actually believe what they're doing?
Just taking the paycheck and they really feel guilty when they go home.
There's probably some of both.
On that poll, actually, Steve, the United States came out top 29%, probably because most of our audience is here and they know how bad it is here too.
And then UK was number two.
France and Germany tied three, four, and then Canada was number five.
And yeah, the rapidity with which Canada has been darkened is one of the most astounding things.
I haven't been up there in many years, but our Canadian friends tell us about it regularly.
And here in the United States too, audience, don't forget there was that House bill introduced.
It was like an anti-militia act that more or less would have criminalized like any group of men who like happened to own guns and have any sort of association with each other.
It was really spooky when you read at it.
Now we all look at that and say, well, that won't pass the Congress.
It won't this year.
Probably won't next year.
But that's why, you know, they rig elections and that's why they bring in so many people who will.
And somebody made a very good point the other day.
A lot of these people don't even vote, but by their presence here and by them being on the system, that enables them to harvest the ballots, even if Tyrone and Jamal are not actually going to vote.
They can just say that they did and get what they want that way by hoping.
Questioning.
I know, yeah.
Our democracy is Our democracy is under great threat.
Yeah, I'm not as worried about hiding from Biden as the new line.
All the donors, they're not riding anymore.
They're hiding from him.
And I have lost all hope in Trump, of course, although he is probably the lesser of two evils.
But is Spencer still riding with Biden?
Oh, I don't know.
I used to poke on his Twitter account just to gawk every once in a while.
And then I had too many cases of indigestion or nausea.
Thank you for that, Steve.
We are at an hour, so I want to go over to Evelina to close us out.
It's late over there, and I got things to do here.
I'm sure Sam and Rolo do too, but I don't want to rush you, my lady.
Tell us a little bit about Poland.
One of the great ironies, of course, is that the Eastern European countries legitimately suffering under the Soviet yoke ended up far better than the Western European countries demographically, religion sprang back, nationalistic parties, and far fewer of the domestic tyranny cases that we see in Western Europe today.
Is Poland still a wonderful place?
Is it under severe minor threat?
How is it today?
Well, it's quite interesting to come back there after like eight years, nine years, nine years when I was living abroad.
And actually, when I was living there in 2014, I was a leftist.
So I had quite a different experience.
I was the person who made this first ateistic march in Poland.
Shame on you, man.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
You're right.
Well, but I dropped this idea the next year because I realized that everything, this is just not worth it.
Those people are empty.
And all this idea is empty.
So I dropped this.
But anyway, you know, when last year I flew just after the Ash got the sentence, I flew to Poland and I listened to news and the person who was talking about the news had a cross on the neck.
Like it was beautiful to see.
And the news were like the most beautiful music what you could hear and you just forgot about the patriotism, what we used to be proud of.
Like Poland is great country.
We should be proud of these old soldiers who are protecting our borders.
I was like, wow, this is very, very different world.
But right now, because we have a different government, everything is upside down.
So they're fighting for abortion.
They're fighting for rights for gay marriage.
They're fighting for the all beautiful migration things.
And next year, Poland will take 2,000 immigrants.
And to be honest, I'm glad with this.
I hope so that they will take in one time even a million.
And maybe then they will realize what it actually means.
Because these people, my age, they're thinking that the West is a beautiful place because they were oppressed for so long time.
They were oppressed.
There were no freedom.
Right.
And they don't.
It's hard to believe.
How could you not look at the demographic destruction alone and realize that the West is absolutely poisoned, worm-tongued by, I'll say it's, I don't know if you guys, what you get, it's a Jewish ideology that we essentially foisted.
It took root here.
And then after World War II, we basically made all those countries of Western Europe at least a cultural and ideological stomping grounds for our evil elites.
It's a world historical crime.
And Eastern Europe was spared the worst of it only ironically because of the Soviet Union.
And now it's starting to creep creep eastward.
And I, for Evelina and any Poles listening, I can't help but think that Poland is suffering under the same delusions that it did before World War II, where it put its hope in Britain and France.
Poland got a little big for its riches against Germany and banked on Western support.
And it certainly seems like that's happening again vis-a-vis Russia and counting on NATO and the West to keep its chestnuts out of the fire.
Go ahead, Sam.
Well, I remember when I was little and you would hear stories about somebody escaping from behind the iron curtain, escaping from Poland, escaping from the Soviet Union or something like that.
And now we have to try to escape from the West to get to Poland or somewhere like that.
Seriously?
Yep.
Yeah.
To freedoms, you know, to freedom.
Well, that's even Russia.
Well, they did the old Swiss Maru.
The people that were running Russia at the time, they conquered the West.
Yeah, no doubt.
The old two-step.
All right, guys.
Let's link.
Go ahead, please.
Please.
Yeah, Evelina.
One beautiful thing, what you can always feel in Poland is the freedom of speech.
And then that thing that when you're sitting and drinking your coffee in the coffee shop, you're just surrounded by your people is something unique.
It isn't always will be.
And you can make jokes.
We still have a sense of humor.
Something in England, you have to forget about this.
You just cannot joke.
You cannot mention about anybody.
Yeah, no, you can make a joke about white guy.
Yeah, right.
But this is not funny anymore, right?
Big brother is listening everywhere else.
It's become a trope, but it's true nonetheless.
All right.
Evelina, thank you so much for coming on.
You were worried about your English, so the audience knows.
And I said, get out of here.
You're fine.
You're crystal clear, totally understandable the entire show.
So you're too modest on that front.
And whatever you do, don't get back on Tinder to practice English going forward.
You're no better now.
I don't have to.
I don't have to anymore.
So thank you.
Very, very good.
God bless you and the girls.
And we will continue to raise the banner for Ash if, God forbid, he does have to continue serving that terrible sentence.
And audience, I implore you to not forget him either.
It's very easy to get worked up in a righteous lather of support.
And I'm going to donate and I'm going to write.
And then as the years tick by, it's kind of human nature to fade a little bit or get a little bit fatigued.
Let's not do it in this case.
And God knows there's going to be more cases.
So God bless you, your daughters, and your wonderful husband, Evelina.
God bless all of you, brothers.
God bless you.
Thank you, ma'am.
Steve, I am no less impressed by you and everything that you've done for Ash.
You are a true soldier.
I can't imagine a better friend that a guy could have.
So thank you for everything you've done.
Thank you, sir.
It's nice to hear, you know, but that's what brothers do.
You know, Ash, you know, I've known him the last few years, and he is, he will always be a brother.
He'll be a brother to many of us.
You know, we respect him so much.
And we have a close core of men back here that will never abandon him nor his family.
We visit him as much as we can.
And yeah, that's where we are.
It won't change.
We'll always be there, whatever the system throws at us.
They are not going to stop us.
Amen, brother.
And to our audience out there who may not have IRL contacts, let alone true brotherhood with a group of men in geographic proximity or across the country, wherever it may be, your ass could be on the line next.
And you're going to want to have a wife or a girlfriend like Evelina, and you're going to want to have a comrade like Steve on your side should you get in trouble.
And as we know, going forward, you can think that you're doing everything right.
You're paying your taxes.
You're putting on your turn signal, but they will come to get you if they can.
And increasingly, they will.
Not to be a fearmonger, but better to prepare for the worst than just hope for the best.
Sam, my friend, I think we did about as well as we could on a short period of time.
Short notice.
Thank you for riding with us, brother.
Yeah, it was really good.
Alone, we are weak.
Together, we are strong.
I think there's a certain collection of sticks that we're not going to call it a faggot.
We're going to call it a bundle.
I also, I can't wait to buy Evelina a couple shots of Polish potato vodka.
And Steve, I'm going to buy a couple tall, warm beers of, I don't know, Newcaster ale or Newcastle ale, something like that.
Maybe some fish.
Excellent.
Inshallah.
We shall get it done.
And Rolo, my friend, thank you for coming in on your time schedule too.
Couldn't do it without you.
My pleasure.
Oh, boy.
No final uplifting words.
Do I have to do everything around here?
I said my pleasure.
Isn't that positive?
All right.
I should have just skipped over you anyway.
All right, fam.
Full house episode 190 was recorded on July 12th and it's still that here.
It's probably the 13th over in our cradle continent.
You know where to follow us, Telegram and Gab.
Email the show with anything hot.
Givesendgo.com slash fullhouse if you want to support us.
But more importantly, givesendgo.com slash support.
P Sharp is supporting.
Follow the link.
Don't take my word for it there.
It'll be in the show notes for sure.
So with all that, we're going to wrap this up.
No chit chat for the second hour.
I got stuff to do too.
And Evelina, the DJ box, the DJ booth is yours this week.
You certainly earned it.
What are we going to listen to?
We were going to listen to our wedding music.
Wedding song, what we actually had a pleasure to listen in one time in England and was playing by a guy on some middle of nowhere.
And both of us were crying.
So yeah, please listen to this music.
It is beautiful and is about us.
Beautiful.
I had never heard this song before.
It's the Robert Plant version and it's wonderful.
I was shocked I hadn't heard it.
Sam, of course, knew it right off the bat.
So with that, keep Ash, Steve, Evelina, and your prayers, everybody.
But more importantly, I would argue is do all those things, the petitions, the letters, the donating.
Please do it.
It's the right thing.
You'll feel good too.
And it's not just a good deed.
It helps yourself as well.
So we love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
And Steve, do you know what we say when we close out the show?
You lost me there, brother.
Oh, we say see you.
Evelina probably knows.
Okay.
So yeah, you don't deserve it, you lowly dog.
Evelina, you can say see you and we'll be out of here.
See ya.
See you guys.
Thanks.
Would you marry me anyway?
Would you have my baby if a tinker were my trade?
Would you still find me carrying pots I made far behind me?
Save my love through loneliness, save my love through sorrow.
I give you my onlyness.
Give me your tomorrow if I were in my hands and work.
Oh, would you still love me?
Answer me, baby.
Yes, I would.
I put you only if a miller were my trade.
I don't know wheel grinding.
Would you miss your colour box?
Oh, you saw you shining save my love through loneliness, save my love through sorrow.
I give you my only name.
Come give me.
Give me your tomorrow If I were a carpenter and you were a lady, would you marry me anyway?
Would you have my baby?
Would you marry me anyway?
Would you have my baby?
Would you marry me, marry me She had my Baby I love I'm on love I love
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