This great line in that song goes, I got my motorcycle jacket, but I'm walking all the time.
That was from the very underrated Cut the Crap by The Clash.
Mick Jones was booted out.
Back then, in the late 70s, early 80s, your manager was the maestro, like Malcolm McLaren with the Sex Pistols.
They controlled everything.
So for some stupid reason, the manager of The Clash decided that Mick Jones wasn't good for the brand anymore and just got rid of him.
He was kind of getting into rap.
I think it's when they came to New York, actually, and they saw rap was starting.
And Mick Jones was really into it.
He said, let's have, you know, computer effects and stuff and little dance stuff, which is the way where the music was going.
Billie Idol saw that too and left punk to create dance punk, which is what Billie Idol's career really was.
It was a dance punk kind of thing.
And so then Mick Jones went and did Big Audio Dynamite that had a ton of hits.
Really weird band starring Don Letz, the DJ who introduced reggae to punk rock.
And the weird thing, though, is, so you kicked out Mick Jones for being too electro disco rappy.
And then that whole album is, that whole Cut the Crap album is full of like electro dancey music.
Like even that classic rock, classic rock, even that sort of like ballad song, This Is England, has all kinds of drum machines and effects in it.
Look up Cut the Crap.
Like the album or album cover?
Album.
I know the album cover.
It's a great album cover.
I wanna be a dirty punk.
What are some jams on that album?
Let's check it.
Just play it.
What is that?
This is This is England.
Clash.
Let's find another song on that.
I'm exporting a thing, so it's kind of a little slow.
Well, you're a little slow.
This is a mailbag special, by the way, folks.
I chose This Is England because I want to read Tommy's letter.
Tommy just sent out a letter to all his subscribers and his fans and his what you would you call them followers?
Supporters, yeah.
Supporters.
Got the dictator, dirty punk, we are the clash.
Are you ready?
Cool, dictator.
I love this.
hates it.
This album rules.
Why does everyone hate this album so much?
I think it's awesome.
He's got, did you listen?
There's an underlying sample of just the radio.
Sports Radio.
Put some other games on that.
Dirty punk.
I want to be a dirty punk.
I want to be a dirty punk.
It's a big sound.
So Joe Strummer was really bummed at himself for allowing Mick Jones to be booted out.
And he felt like shit about it.
And he didn't like the new Clash.
So that band, who were sort of hired guns, were really excited.
I mean, everyone loved The Clash, right?
So they're like, I'm in my favorite band.
I made it.
And Joe wrote all the songs.
He would just show up, play his parts, and leave.
And same when they toured.
He wouldn't hang out with them backstage or anything.
They weren't a band.
It was a really sad time.
And then Joe Strummer went loco after that.
And you know what he did?
He moved to a cave.
What?
It was outside of Barcelona in Spain.
He just lived in a cave.
Strummer bin Laden?
That is such an odd move.
Strummer been fucked up.
No, that would be done, not been.
So he never got over it.
He never got over the betrayal that he did to his friend Mick Jones.
Meanwhile, Mick Jones was pissed, but he got over it pretty fast.
What's a big audio dynamite fan?
I think Rush.
Here's a funny joke, by the way, you can say.
When people say like, okay, I'll just be a sec.
I have to go get it.
You go, oh, I'm a girl's record collection.
No, Rush.
That's great.
Yeah, that's yours.
You can use that.
Thanks.
So that's Don Letz next to Mick, not the one with the hat on, the other black guy.
And he's sort of the reason that reggae and punk were the same thing.
There were so many rules when we were punks, but for some reason you weren't allowed to listen to pop music or rock or...
No mainstream anything, but reggae was fine.
And they'd often mix.
Like, play, find...
I don't care about a picture.
Hey, here's a really interesting band that you should hear.
Ryan, pull up a picture of them.
There you go.
Long pause.
People are waiting.
People are scared.
People are annoying.
They're scared?
Yeah.
Because they don't know what's coming.
This is boring.
Jump ahead.
I wish I could sing like that.
Not everything's singing, you know.
The only important thing these days is rhythm and melody.
Rhythm and melody.
Rhythm and melody.
It was a real kooky jumble.
This is a breakdown within the song.
That's why it sounds so weird.
this is not i think a good representation of the band This is a gem, too.
Pretty good.
Piano.
And they sample the who.
It's delightful, delightful.
Mick Jones was all pissed at MIA for sampling paper planes.
Oh, wow.
Meanwhile, he's the sampling machine.
Wow.
He can sample the who, but MIA can't sample paper, can't sample whatever that song was.
I think it was from Combat 1.
Sampled the class?
Remember when Pat and Oswald and I would speak, I would say, dude, you gotta give Big Audio Dynamite another chance.
They're really good.
And he goes, uh, no.
See the rap?
Okay, that's me for that.
Last thing I'm gonna ask for is Bank Robber by The Clash.
It's their dub step kind of jam.
No, the video though.
No, second one down.
This is the definition of cool.
If you don't know, if you just landed here from another country, like if you 20-year-olds, why don't you dress like Joe Strummer?
Just wear a black blazer with a black shirt and a black suit with a black shirt.
You gotta watch out for dandruff.
Just go like that every once in a while.
Especially if you have a beard.
That's the same microphone you're using?
Yeah.
These are expensive.
Keep going.
Daddy was a bank robber.
is that cambrin guy so happy probably stone Oh look, he's got the red scarf that that socialist hat.
It works with him though.
It works with him though.
He just loved to live that way and he loved to steal your money.
There's so many beautiful things with England.
Why did they give it to the Muslims?
Why do the upper class give England to the Muslims?
I have a theory about it.
When I was a kid in the 70s, soccer was just a working class thing.
And it was middle class people didn't go to football matches.
And then the middle class started getting into football in the 80s.
And the working class didn't like them and didn't welcome them and made them feel bad.
And I think that's when some real resentment began for the working class.
And then they grow up and they become Tony Blair and Tony Blair speechwriter and they go, let's open up the gates to Muslim refugees so we can, as Nigel Farage put it, rub their noses in it.
All right.
This is all a long drawn-out way to introduce the mailbag special episode predicated on finding you a letter that Tommy has released.
This is kind of old news now, but it's important that I get to it.
Where did I put it?
Oh, yeah.
A letter from Tommy Robinson while he's serving time in Belmarsh, Category A prison, for the crime of causing anxiety to a convicted Muslim pedophile.
You see how it all sort of dovetails in to the subject?
We all know Tommy Robinson is in prison.
We don't need to go over each and every point of his political persecution.
However, on a letter note, we can reveal that he has penned, reveal a letter that he has penned to you all.
Now, I sent you the actual writing, so you can see his writing, but I'm going to read a transcribed version.
Let me see if I can just sound like Tommy for a sec.
Oh, wait, what are you doing?
Don't move.
Well, here we are.
It's 5.30 p.m.
I wanted to wait until I had some updates before I put pen to paper.
I'm receiving emails and letters, and for that, I'm grateful.
I enjoy the updates, and I also take satisfaction from the variety of people who write to me.
I've been writing to them, and I always wonder if I should write about Proud Boys.
Like they're in jail.
They're not in jail, but they're faced...
And they're facing serious prison time.
I think Max and John are going to beat the case on this one.
Is that uplifting when you're in prison, or is it depressing?
I don't know.
Hearing somebody else is going to be all right.
I want him to hear other guys are fighting, but I also, by the same token, I don't want him to go, we're all fucked.
Everyone's getting arrested.
It's a war on free speech.
It's a war on Western males.
Fuck it hell.
I think.
So I'll put in a fight I had with my wife or something that's stupid or something funny my son said.
I don't know, because it could be uplifting.
It could be just like, I'm not alone in this.
And if they win, it's like encouraging.
You're like, all right, I think maybe some good's happening.
I think the truth is always the best route.
I'm thinking out loud.
Okay.
This unjust prison sentence has had the opposite effect.
It awakens more people to the corruption of the establishment.
I've had letters from doctors, school teachers, professors, nurses, etc., all of whom are shocked at the treatment and unjust conviction that I have received.
The first person I saw upon arrival at HMP Belmarsh was Ross Kemp, who was doing a documentary on Belmarsh Prison.
I've been held in total isolation since the moment I entered Belmarsh.
That's not good for your mental health to not correspond with people.
Some British prisons, minimum security prisons in Britain, you can wear a trap.
You can dress like you.
You play cards.
It's actually kind of nice.
There's no stets of women's scrubs.
I've not seen another inmate.
I'm held in prison within a prison.
I believe the unit that I'm held on was built for Ian Huntley.
Look that up.
Other prisoners that have been held here are Abu Hamza and Michael Abdelago.
Look up those geezers.
I'm not familiar with them.
I think Ian Huntley was the guy who murdered little kids, him and his wife.
Ian Huntley.
I think he's on the Soham murders.
Soham victims.
And two 10-year-old girls.
Oh, my gosh.
And who was the other guy?
I'm faster at this than you.
Abu Hamza.
A-B-U.
I'm racing you.
Well, that guy is known as Abu Hamza Al-Hazard.
Oh, I met him.
We had him in Vice Magazine.
What?
Yeah, he lost his eye trying to make a bomb.
He lost his eye in his hand making bombs.
He's known as the one-hated cleric.
Of course.
Yeah.
We had an interview with him in Vice Magazine back when I was controlling everything and everything was cool about it.
Ad DeBalgo?
Michael Ad DeBalgo?
Michael Ad DeBalgo.
Who's this, Geza?
Oh, that's the guy, the murder of Lee Rigby.
That's the guy with the red hands.
Remember him?
He stabbed that.
No.
He screwed up again.
Michael Ab Adebalgo.
Sorry, folks.
I'm sitting here sniffing snot and yelling at a guy who doesn't know how to use Google.
But yeah, on the afternoon of the 22nd of May, 2013, the British Army soldier, Fusilier Lee Rigby of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, was attacked and killed by Michael Adebalago and Michael Abadawale near the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich, Southeast London.
Remember that?
And it was weird because you saw the murder.
You saw all the footage after.
You still can't find it?
You used to find it.
Michael Adibalgo.
Yes.
Is that one word or ad is a middle name?
No.
It's ad a middle name.
And these women were going, what are you doing?
Why'd you do that?
Why'd you do that?
And he had just decapitated Lee Rigby and he had blood all over his hands.
It was the front page of the post.
You still haven't found it?
Oh, there he is.
There we go, Ryan.
Nice work, buddy.
They murdered him just for being a soldier.
But what was crazy was the woman coming up to him, yelling at him.
Ladies, if you see a man chop another man's head off, run.
We'll handle the rest.
Go back, go back.
You see that picture top left?
That's the woman confronting him.
Right after a murder.
I think we've empowered these women a little too much.
There's a little too much confidence going on in the female community.
Ladies, black man, giant knife covered in blood, run.
It doesn't matter what race he is.
The staff at Belmarsh have been great.
The governor has made sure all my rights are recognized.
To be honest, he's making the best of a difficult situation having me as a prisoner.
I am 100% safe.
This is a totally different sentence to my last at HMP only.
Upon entry to Belmarsh, I didn't ask to be isolated.
The prisoner decided to isolate me.
When Ross Kemp was interviewing me, I explained to him that I was being held like this for my own safety.
But months of total isolation is proven to have a negative effect on someone's mental health.
You know, in an era when everyone from Prince Harry to leading politicians proclaim care about mental health, I do struggle to get my head around the fact that my own government see it in the public interest to lock me up for nearly five months on solitary confinement in the past year.
So he's combining the two sentences there.
All this for asking a now convicted child rapist how he felt about his verdict.
And of course, let's not forget that people also asked Tommy how he feels about his verdict.
So they were committing the same crime that he was going to prison for.
Let that sink in, as Paul Joseph Watson would say.
Let that sink in.
That wasn't good.
No, Paul Joseph Watson has kind of a northern English accent.
You need to go to like an English accent workshop for a week.
At least got his inflections, though.
It's like, oh, maybe that's too woke for you.
No, that was terrible.
No, I think it's good.
Okay, then you're right, and I'm wrong.
Great argument.
Let me quote you word for word what the judge at the head of the Queen's Bench Division said during her summer up.
Let me just point out first that she was promoted to this position just two weeks before my trial.
And now he's quoting her.
The contempts we have found proved were not ones of deliberate defiance.
There was no intention to interfere with the administration of justice.
And in the event, neither the Aktar trial or the trial that followed were prejudiced.
You follow that?
So this is the judge in the first case, well, it's been the same case this whole time, saying that Tommy didn't interfere with justice.
This is her verdict.
He didn't interfere with justice.
Yet, he gets two prison sentences for interfering with justice.
As Ezra Levant says, I love going to Britain because it's like getting into a dystopian time machine where I can see what we're going to be like in five years.
What she's saying right there is that she convicted a journalist of making a mistake that had zero impact on the trial.
Even my enemies can see that serving five months on solitary confinement for what she describes as not deliberate is simply not fair.
I contest that I even broke any law.
It's simple for those watching the video that the punishment does not fit the crime.
Sorry, my so-called mistake, I've not actually been convicted of a crime.
It's a civil offense.
It's not a crime.
The judges who sentenced me went against the law.
They judged against what the law says on their own website because they already published all this information.
That's how we knew who these guys were.
So he didn't out, there was no new information that Tommy provided about this case.
And the newspapers that are already been reporting on these guys, he didn't say anything that hadn't already been said.
And the judge says it doesn't matter anyway.
Two sentences for that non-crime.
Before I get to talk about my appeal, let me tell you about the suite I'm being held on.
They call it a suite.
Ha ha.
It's a separate part of the prison with no other prisoners.
It's located underneath healthcare.
I look out my window onto my exercise yard.
It's an exercise yard used only by me.
Seven meters by five meters with four surrounding walls that go up four floors high.
It's a bit like a courtyard within the prison and the windows that look in on it are officers' windows.
Only two cell windows look down from healthcare.
The idea of this unit is that you never leave it and that no one sees you.
I have my cell and then a cell next door which just has an exercise bike in.
Then another room next to that with a shower and a bath.
That sounds not so bad.
I mean compared to what he had last time, he was in a box, a tiny box that's the size of your bathroom, and then his exercise area was the same and he could only go there 25 minutes a day and it was a cage.
I swear to God, I'm not exaggerating.
On Tommy's previous sentence, if there was a dog kept like that, there'd be riots in the streets.
No one would tolerate a dog being treated like that.
And that says a lot, by the way, about our society.
In fact, if you wanted the South African farmers to get some attention, I would recommend just lying and saying they're doing it to dogs.
And you'd have all kinds of GoFundMes and government intervention to try to save these poor dogs.
My cell door opens at 9 a.m. when I can use the bike in the shower, make a phone call, and spend 30 minutes in the exercise yard.
I spend an hour every morning first killing myself on the exercise bike.
When I first saw it, I asked the governor, what the fuck is that?
Now I love it.
After an hour on the bike, I have a shower, 30-minute walk in the exercise yard, and then make a phone call.
Then I'm banged up again until 9 a.m. the next day.
Shit.
So he's got 9 to 10 a.m. about where he can do anything.
Last week, though, I got a pleasant surprise when I was taken at 7.30 a.m. to the gym.
I was given 45 minutes, but accompanied by Ross Kemp's camera crew.
I think the idea was to show the country that they made an effort after the Trust Imprison service had been seriously damaged by the sight of me walking out of HMP Only, where he lost £40.
The mad thing is, I thought I looked sound when I was getting released from Only.
I thought I was mentally fine as well.
The negative impact of solitary confinement only hit me after I was released.
That makes sense.
Because as a survival mechanism, your brain tells your brain that everything is okay and you're doing great and you haven't lost 40 pounds and you don't have PTSD.
But he literally has PTSD from that event.
So which means at this jail, he should be seeing like a mental shrink on a regular basis.
It should be on some sort of suicide watch.
I honestly don't think any of us, anyone watching this show now of the what, 11,000 subscribers we have, anyone who sees this, that it gets illegally downloaded, whatever, you, me, Ryan, not one of us could have handled Tommy's first sentence.
Not one of us.
He's adopted, I think.
He's adopted?
I believe so.
I wonder what his biological dad was.
Fucking Green Beret.
Not that the dad that raised him isn't awesome.
I met both his parents.
They're wonderful people.
Scotch, Irish.
The governor and nurse in Belmosch come and check on me daily here.
They ask how I am.
I say fine, but tell them I'll be out.
It will let them know properly when I walk out of here, having spent an additional two and a half months on solitary confinement and complete isolation.
If I walk out of here skinny, it's not because I've been starved.
I can eat fine in here.
The staff make sure that.
I'm just smashing the cell workouts until I can't do it anymore.
There's not much else to do.
It's hot in here and the days are long.
I hear the Daily Starve deleted their fake news story about an OAP beating me up.
Haha, OAP, he means old age pensioner.
That's how they say old people in Britain.
The governor and Ross Kemp both came into my cell with the newspaper.
I said to them that I wouldn't mind, but I've not seen a single person since the last time Ross saw me upon my arrival.
The fake news is shocking.
My kids were sent the article and were panicking, thinking that dad had been attacked when there was zero truth to the story.
Isn't that insane?
Someone sat there at the Daily Star and said, a seven-year-old man beat up Tommy Robinson.
Send.
Like, what was it even based on?
Just, is that what they do?
They just write that down?
My first appointment with my legal team was canceled due to an incident in the prison, so it took two weeks before I could sit down with my lawyers.
I've been having an inner struggle with the appeal.
I see a few people have wrote to tell me, telling me that Avi had heard from my wife that I was feeling down.
It's because my appeal costs are 84,000 quid.
That's about 100 grand.
Plus, I've just paid £20,000 in legal fees for the upcoming court proceedings against the Muslim lawyer who sent that red-haired crackhead to live stream my wife and children, putting their lives in danger.
Oh my God, I didn't see that.
What a bastard.
Muslim lawyers sent that red-haired crackhead to live stream my wife and children.
And I like how people go, oh, Tommy's Tommy's just doing this for publicity.
I even have law enforcement friends in Britain who are not on the side of Tommy.
I know it's shocking.
And they say, oh, I think all of this hullabaloo is very convenient for Tommy.
You know, it plays right into his hands.
Yeah, what a spoiled brat as he sits there in solitary confinement and pays a hundred thousand pounds in legal fees for what?
To get rich?
It's a get-rich-quick scheme.
Hell of a scheme, isn't it?
This is not someone lying down on a soccer field going, oh my ankle, ow, ow, ow.
This is someone in prison in solitary.
That's not a scam artist.
That's what happens to scam artists when they get caught, like Bernie Madoff.
I don't know if you've heard, but I've also had to pay their costs from the old Bailey at £31,000.
So not only do they make me go to prison for something I haven't done, but then they make me pay for it.
Totally insane.
That's about 130,000 quid.
It's fucking nuts.
Look up how much that is in American dollars.
How many quid?
Oh, you're not listening?
No, I was, but I tuned out the numbers.
I don't.
Well, you were listening, but just not to the numbers?
Well, you just stopped listening when I said the number, but you're listening to everything.
It was 40,000 quid for the old Bailey?
130,000 pounds.
Oh.
Wait a minute.
He had to pay for the government's lawyer bills?
It's $158,000 in United States dollar.
Okay.
I remember when the pound was $2.
Come on, America.
Get with it.
Wait a minute.
Are you digesting this?
So he does, it's contempt of court was the first charge.
He does his sentence.
They double jeopardy him.
You don't have double jeopardy in Britain, so you can be tried for the same crime, apparently.
This one was just causing the victims, victims, causing the perps stress, causing them anxiety.
That was the second charge.
And he had to pay the government's lawyer bills.
£31,000, about $45,000.
That makes me think some pretty wild shit.
That is fucking...
That's V for Vendetta shit.
That's like lay your bodies on the gears of the system type stuff.
You know, V for Vendetta, the mask that they have is Guy Fawkes.
Right.
Guy Fox, we used to have Guy Fox Day in Britain where you would burn an effigy of him because he dared to want to blow up the parliament buildings.
Fuck yeah, dude.
And I'm pro-Guy Fox.
I'm not burning any effigies of Guy Fox, but you know what?
No one knows about Guy Fox.
Of course, you pull up.
Yeah, there's Guy Fawkes.
Thanks, Ryan.
Flavor Town, blowing up Parliament.
F-A-W-K-E-S, Guy Fawkes.
The real reason he was blowing up the Parliament is not because he's an anarchist, you dummies with your V for Vendetta masks.
He was blowing up Parliament because they were straying from Catholicism and he felt they were becoming hedonists with no ethics.
Even more badass.
And you can't...
His contention was that a state without a church behind it is a state that can instantly go corrupt and will have no morality.
So that's why he wanted to blow it up.
Nice.
And here we have a state without morality who is imprisoning a man twice for embarrassing pedophiles.
Maybe we need less separation of church and state.
Maybe we need more church in the state.
They're trying to make it financially impossible for me to challenge them.
I hope you agree with me in believing that this has to be challenged.
My family don't agree, which is why I've been having an inner struggle over the issue.
I had my legal meeting last week and instructed them to go full steam ahead on an appeal against the conviction and also a bail application.
I had to pay them 42,000 quid.
They required 50% up front to start.
Within the rest, we get the appeal bail application.
I think he needs to sue.
Right?
He needs to make his money back.
He needs to sue the British government for this.
I think he has a great case.
Come on.
My next phone call home was to tell my wife.
By the way, I've stayed at his house and I've met his wife.
It's very unfortunate that he can't show pictures of her because she is a fucking smokeshoe.
Black Irish?
Well, it's like that Essex kind of look that's a little bit Jersey Shore-ish.
Like very heavy tan and dyed blonde hair.
And just like insanely hot.
In fact, I was at his house the night before he went to prison.
Look up like there's a show, an Essex show.
It sound like I'm calling her white trash.
I don't mean she's trashy like these Essex girls.
But it's just like the, they're sort of like queen's chicks.
Italian queen.
Yeah, Italian queen's vibe.
Yeah.
But I was with them the night before he was going to prison the first time.
Yeah, that's kind of her vibe.
That's kind of the level she's at.
She's that hot.
And I was like, let's get fucking weissy.
Do you want to get weissy the night before you go out, right?
Go out in a blaze of glory.
And then I'm talking to them and they're sort of in the kitchen going.
And I realize, oh, yeah, you guys want to fuck.
He may die in prison.
This may be the last night with your husband.
So it's either sex with the woman I love the night before I die or beers with Gav.
What'll it be?
So then I was like, I'm just going to take these cans over to the guest room over here.
I'll be watching BBC.
I said that I felt so much better now.
All I know what to do is fight what they throw at me.
I felt that by not appealing, I was giving into something that is quite clearly a stitch-up.
Get fired, get in trouble, be brave, and never stop fighting.
You can't.
You'll never forgive yourself.
If you stop fighting.
Look at boxing.
When do they stop?
When the referee says, it's over, you're done.
They get, like, name me another sport where you get up after being knocked out.
I was watching a Mets game in Cano the other day.
He circles first.
As he's heading to second, he pulls a hamstring.
Game over.
Well, not game over, but he just leaves.
He doesn't even go back to first.
He just leaves the game.
That's a slightly uncomfortable thigh.
In boxing, you get unconscious.
And then they're always arguing with the ref.
Like, no, no, I'm good.
I'm good.
No, I got it.
I got it.
That's what you have to be.
Boxing Is the best thing for your mental health and your success in life?
The lead judge on the Queen's Bench has dirty hands on this case.
She lied about me, encouraging vigilante attacks, and it's simply not in the video.
Will the Supreme Court judge be willing to dirty their hands on my court, on my case, or will my name be cleared?
It would be impossible to fight the establishment without your help and love.
My wife's view is it will be another trial, more stress, and kissing the kids goodbye again.
But for me, another trial is another chance to expose their lies.
I have to fight it.
I just hope you'll see it.
It is important as I do.
It's a crazy amount on legal costs.
Without your help and support, I'm sure it'll already be a broken man.
Dude, instead of showing his handwriting, you should have his sight up with...
People should be clicking donate as they watch this.
We're doing this is essentially a telethon episode.
Gotcha.
You're not really on your game right now.
I assumed you mentioned the handwriting and I was following along the pages.
I know, but you got to think out of the box.
Spooky.
You got to see things sideways.
Wait, I'm doing an English accent.
Spooky.
You got to see things sideways.
Make decisions yourself, my boy.
Can you help Tommy?
There we go.
So what is that website you're on?
This is TR News.
This is TR.news.
Okay.
And this is Support Us.
You could do Support Us.
This is the article.
We need to get a link for that.
A letter from Tommy Robinson.
I know, but this is way too ambiguous.
I want there to be a URL on the screen for Tommy's fundraising.
This is how you do it, my man.
You go donate Tommy Robinson.
There we go.
If you just go to support us, the support us tab on tr.news.
PayPal, stop processing donations for Tommy Robinson.
What a bunch of sons of bitches.
Can you believe that?
You could do a monthly or a one-time payment.
So this is a there's a Rebel one, but I don't know how old it is.
Well, this one on tr.news, support us, walks you through it pretty good.
You could do it in U.S. dollars.
You could do it in Euros, Canadian dollars, Australian dollars, the British pound.
Now, yeah, I'm wary of fake ones.
So this is trnews.com.
TR.news.
Yeah, now I talk to TR.news regularly.
And so I know that they are the real deal.
Yeah, this is very simple.
If you go to trnews.com, there's a support Tommy.
TR.news.
Sorry.
If you go to TR.news, the very top of the page has a support Tommy.
So why don't you make a your can you make a just make it say support Tommy at and then tr.news got it all right let's get back to work by the way I think that helps this case like for example my uh my um defendgavin.com yes we raised $262,000
that's wonderful and that will be used for to fight the case but I think just as relevant as the money is the fact that over 7,000 people donated now surely the judge or someone involved in the case is going to see that this is not just one freak if it was just me and my money then it's like some guy's mad at the SPLC no thousands and thousands if you put 7,000
people together that fills the street for blocks 7,000 is a fuckton of people all of these people judge think that the SPLC is out of control so when Tommy Robinson is getting donations from America from New York from Chicago from the the south from Seattle that's got to register somewhere so send five bucks I honestly believe that the who is sending is just as much as the what is sending
I want Seattle to be on the record supporting Tommy Robinson so they can see this isn't just some freak with a bad attitude.
This is someone with worldwide support.
Okay, that's a picture.
I just went out of focus there.
Yeah, I saw that.
In post, you just did it again.
No, don't.
I like that.
You like the focus?
I like glitches.
How's that happening, though?
Is there an earthquake or something?
I don't know.
Huh.
Without your help and support, I'm sure I'd already be a broken man, but instead I'm pumped and ready for round three.
The establishment relies on the fact that they don't think we'll be able to afford to keep in the fight.
So I will ask you to share this everywhere.
I'm asking once again, help me fight the establishment.
It's death, prison or glory.
Death or glory becomes just another story.
Another clash jam.
I'm losing my voice.
Once the appeal papers are in, I'll have an immediate bail application.
Usually takes about seven days or so.
So I could or should be home earlier than we expected, meaning I might get a few weeks with the kids in their summer holidays.
It was so good to see my wife.
Kids.
His kids are wonderful.
Same age as my kids.
Really funny.
I remember when I first met him, he had a booster seat.
And he's the same age as my son, 10.
And the guys go, you need the booster seat?
And they say to his son, we'll call him Joey.
You need the booster seat, Joey?
And Joey goes, no, I don't want that, Dad.
And then they go, oh, good, because Tommy needs it to be able to see.
And then they put it in the driver's seat.
That's funny.
Can you believe I'm being held in a cat prison on a total isolation unit for a contempt of fucking court?
There's a few typos there.
there um Luton's first game of the season on Friday night.
And although I'm locked up, I'm still excited.
That's the soccer team.
Just wish I was there with the kids.
When I saw a soccer football game with him, he's so revered at these games.
By the way, not one Muslim was in the audience.
Luton were playing.
Luton is probably 55-60% Muslim.
You go to a Luton football match, zero Muslims in the stands cheering on Luton.
What does that tell you?
We have a lack of assimilation going on.
Short for category prison.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Hey, good.
I think I'm getting a cold.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
See, we all have problems.
You know?
We have soup.
Tommy and I, similar situation.
He's in a category A prison in a box serving a second sentence for the same ridiculous crime.
I have the sniffles.
It's all relative.
You should write a letter.
My son has handled it a bit better than last time.
I was able to talk to him before I went.
That morning of court was so difficult.
I was emotional kissing them all goodbye.
I knew they would jail me.
To be honest, I thought I'd be sitting in solitary for over a year.
It's lucky I'm in good company, because otherwise all this time alone would drive me mad.
It's lucky I'm good company.
Oh, he means himself.
That's his best friend.
We're almost done here, folks.
I'm writing my next book, Bringing Any of the State Up to Date.
His first book is awesome, by the way.
And it's funny how the middle class see the working class as such idiotic Luddites when they're really intelligent human beings.
You know, speaking of which, I was at my local dive bar in the Burbs, and there's a janitor sitting there.
And janitors are stupid losers, right?
They're the working class.
Everything they say is irrelevant.
They're not well read.
So they're not erudite like you and I, and they can't correspond.
They don't know about the German existentialists like Kant and Kierkegaard.
And the guy next to me, he says, someone's asking about Bitcoin.
I go, I don't know about Bitcoin.
It's over my head.
I'm too old to get involved.
And the janitor next to me goes, nah, nah.
He used to be a Marine.
And he goes, someone messes with the dollar.
That's something in my life.
That's tangible.
I'll fucking die for that.
I'll go overseas.
I will die to protect the American dollar.
I'm not going to die for an algorithm.
Now that, to a stupid, cunty, rich, upper-middle-class, overeducated snob, that would sound dumb, but it's actually incredibly profound.
And he's right.
When we start getting into algorithms and start getting into all this nebulous currency, it's not tangible enough to justify a war.
And at the end of the day, if you're going to send your young men off to die, it has to be for something you can touch.
Nice.
I've done half of it before come away.
First thing I need to finalize when I'm released.
I want everyone to know every detail of everything that happened, the ups and downs.
I want to thank each and every one of you who support me.
I don't really get a chance to get two down because your support continually lifts me up.
I just want to get working on dedicating my months to filming The Rape of Britain.
I don't know about this.
I guess he's doing a movie called The Rape of Britain.
Now, you should be googling that right as I say it.
It's a book by Colin Amory.
There could be something that...
Tommy Robinson, The Rape of Britain.
Play that.
Tommy Robinson, The Rape of Britain.
It's a video on News Network.
And it's something he filmed himself.
Dude.
It's not this.
Why am I so much...
Good evening.
Why are you here?
I'm just leaving Rotherham, and I've made a video to...
Do you know what I ever do every time?
I just think...
Say hello.
Hello.
Oh, she's cool.
I met her at the street.
We will have a video.
I should just do it on a live stream, yes.
Wipe your mouth.
No, no.
You've got foods.
I am Mr. Eat As Much As I Can at the Minute, so I've just come out of a Toby Carvery.
I'm the same waiter was before I went to prison.
So, the plan.
Today, you may have seen on my Instagram the police.
I was in Rotherham for five minutes.
I got out of the car and I'd done a video detailing, these are my plans for next year.
This is what I'm going to do next year.
Within five minutes, I had the police at the car ask me what I'm doing.
Why am I here?
What's the problem?
My presence will upset the local community, apparently.
And the local community.
The local community.
The local community that is a 3% of Rotherham's population.
This is what I want to do next year.
I want to bring people to the realization to the size and scale of the problem we face in this country.
3% of Rotherham is Muslim.
3%.
There's 2,800 Muslim men in Rotherham of the age of the grooming perpetrators.
Just pause.
You understand this is the same charge as before.
So the police swarm him in Rotherham and tell me he has to leave because he's making people uncomfortable.
He means pedophiles.
So again, Tommy's crime is embarrassing pedophiles.
94 of them are being investigated.
That's nearly 20%.
Nearly 20% of the Muslim population of Rotherham have been raping young kids.
20%.
How dare he?
That's Rotherham.
1,507 victims, I believe, now.
In that one small town.
1,507 victims from a population of 2,800 Muslim men.
What do you think it's like in towns like Luton, Birmingham and Bradford?
Say, for example, Luton.
I think there's 40,000, 50,000 Muslims.
Not 3,000.
What do you think it's like there?
So what we realise is, once you get to those stages, and in those towns and cities where Muslims then dominate the police, they dominate the council, they dominate everything, it doesn't get out.
So we've seen it get out in Rotherham.
We've seen the big hoo-ha in Rotherham.
We've seen it get out in Telford.
What do you think the Muslim population of Telford is 1% 1,000 children victims.
There's no Muslims in Telford.
Look what they've done to Telford.
Look what's happened with the grooming in Telford.
So I'm up in Rotherham.
I was here five minutes.
Police got involved.
I'm gonna, you'll be seeing a full update of our plans for next year.
The working title of the documentary will be called The Rape of Britain.
And I want to make sure everyone in this country hears, do you know what they're doing?
They're putting conditions on all these court cases.
So none of you hear what happens, the real detail of the vicious and sadistic things that's happening to these children.
None of you here.
Because with the reporting restrictions, you don't hear the ins and outs of the trial.
Now, if you want to go and get the transcripts, you can find out what happened, it costs you £1,000 a day.
These trials take 50 days.
That's £50,000.
After five years, all the records of these court cases are gone.
That means that you will never hear the horrific stories that they're doing to these children.
For example, one young girl in Robberham, they stuck a clawhammer up her when she got pregnant.
She got pregnant, they stuck a clawhammer up at her to murder and abort the baby.
But in the court cases, these are happening in the court cases, but you won't hear of it because reporting restrictions prevent that.
Reporting restrictions prevent that.
So what I want to do to counter that is I'm going to travel this country hitting those hotspots.
That's what I'm going to do.
And I'm going to bring you videos on each one.
And as I said, Woverham Police come today.
And more on the, I'll get on more with the details for the 1st of December.
But I sat as a Brexiteer and I watched and I waited for the Tory Brexiteers to say and do something.
They done nothing.
I waited for Nigel Far Arch to step in and do something.
March, protest, bring the people out, unite the country for Brexit.
And he did nothing.
So I've sat and watched and watched.
The only reason why I've called a demonstration on the 1st of December is because no one else was.
No one else was.
I feel passionately about it.
I can see how passionately the public feel about it.
So I put myself forward.
Come along.
1st of December.
Kev's turned the engine on.
That's the little message to say, get in the car, Yaks.
Get in the car.
So yeah, 1st of December.
More details will be coming out.
To be honest, I just flew into it because I knew I had a long day today traveling around.
And we'll have a video update coming on Gus tomorrow.
That'll be out.
Plus a video detailing what we're going to be doing.
So the Rape of Britain is quite literally the Rape of Britain.
It's not a metaphor.
Literally.
Okay, we're almost done here.
I'll end this on a nod to my amazing and beautiful wife, three perfect children, my mom, dad, and family.
I love and miss each and every one of you.
Remember when I met his mom, she was talking to Tommy and she goes, if you could just, I care if she's the Scottish one.
Yeah, I think she is.
And the dad's Irish.
And she goes, if you could just do one favor, Tommy, you could just know say shit.
Just when you're describing these things, just say feces.
Especially if you're on the news.
It's a terrible word.
And you don't want to be swearing on the news.
Just say feces.
And he's like, oh, right, mum, feces, feces.
And I was eating mints and tatties at the time, and I just had to drop my fork because I was so disgusted.
And I looked at her and I said, thanks a lot.
Fuck.
P.S. I'll probably remember loads I forgot to put in.
The main point was that we are appealing.
Paperwork should be in next week.
Then we will have a bail application.
Prior, thank you to everyone who supports this fight.
The struggle continues.
By the way, I'll need a bus to help me with the amount of mail I'm receiving.
And that was a big thing when he got out last time.
He's leaving with these huge sort of hockey bags, these massive bags of mail that you're not looking up.
For some bizarre reason, unbeknownst to me, you're sitting there with your arms crossed, nodding, going, yeah, he really had big bags of mail when he left.
I'm just thinking about...
Wait, big bags of mail.
There he is.
Now you got it.
That's him.
The last sentence he did, where he lost 40 pounds, carrying all the mail he got.
Look at that.
246.
You know what I said to him?
You need to put those together in a book.
Obviously, not 100% of every letter, but I'm sure you can get permission from every person, or you just put their first name or something, and just have the highlights from all the letters.
All the range.
I think I would love to read that book.
Obviously, you got to watch out for repetition and too much like, we support you, Tommy.
You know?
But wouldn't that be a great book?
But this guy has to sue.
I mean, The Peel is a great idea, but this has got to be the biggest miscarriage of justice.
And ever, you know, the past two years I've been getting into law fare and fighting the SPLC and seeing what's going on with Proud Boys and seeing what's going on with Tommy.
And we had that chick from the band BBQT looking at 10 years in prison for having weed residue in a cartridge in the bottom of her bag.
How the fuck did we get here?
What is going on?
The only solution we have to this problem is to fight.
That's all we can do.
We can talk about root causes.
We can talk about the cultural impact of academia.
We can talk about the Marxist infiltration of the mainstream media.
We can talk about the war on masculinity, the war on Christmas, the war on Christianity.
That's fun to talk about.
And it's important to acknowledge.
But that's not fighting.
We need to fight because fighting solves everything.