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April 18, 2023 - The Delingpod - James Delingpole
01:22:34
Danny Rampling
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Welcome to The DeliPod with me, James DeliPod.
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Enjoy.
Now, my secret special podcast.
Danny Rampling.
I'm so excited, I really am.
You must be, at least for some of my viewers and listeners, the most famous guest I've had on my podcast.
But I think that kind of dates us, doesn't it?
We belong to a particular generation, let's say.
Well, that's quite an accolade.
Good afternoon, James.
Nice to be here.
What an accolade, an introduction.
Well, it's really interesting.
I suppose it tells us something about the fleeting nature of fame.
Because, like, there was... well, I'm the rave generation, pretty much.
You're the rave generation.
You invented rave, pretty much.
One of the pioneers, yeah.
Yeah.
And yet, if I mention your name to the kids, they wouldn't have a bloody clue who you are, would they?
Generally, no.
No.
My son does, and his mates.
He's 19.
Yeah, he came to a London date where I played at the Cross venue in London three weeks ago.
And it was great to have my son on the dance floor for the first time.
A very special moment.
Yeah.
Well, how are they?
Because I'm OK.
I'm going to jump all over the place because I'm just so excited to have you on.
One of the one of the definitely one of the best moments of my life, actually, when two of them actually involve you.
One was at the Hope Freedom Festival where you were DJing and it was great seeing the kids dancing to your stuff.
I mean like kids who'd done the homeschooling thing which Hope Freedom Festival promotes.
I suppose they were maybe 18, 17 and they were appreciating the sort of music you were playing as much as I was and that was good to see.
Do your sons Friends, can they relate to?
Because I think dance music was much better in our day than it is now.
Well, it was new and revolutionary at that point.
But I do feel that music is, you know, there's great music in the present.
But yeah, my son and his mates, they love the music because wherever I go, and I have been since 1987, I raise the frequency.
With energy, uplifting energy.
It's all very positive.
There's nothing moody.
There's nothing dark.
It's about taking people on a journey.
And that's what I continue to do.
So I believe it transcends generations.
And I'm seeing a turnaround.
The new generation, they're really interested in the heritage.
More so than ever, in fact.
Yeah.
Yeah, but actually, do you really believe that?
I mean, in terms of that the music is as good as it ever was?
Because I don't know.
I mean, oh, by the way, the dog hasn't been fed.
Can you shut the door when it's been fed?
Oh, good.
Right.
Got that bit over.
I mean, look, I'm sounding like a fuddy-duddy-year-old, turn-this-racket-off kind of person.
Turn it down!
Yeah, turn it down.
Turn it down.
I mean, I would never listen to Radio 1.
Me too.
But if I did, I would be appalled.
About the crap they play now.
It just seems to be missing something.
Am I wrong?
Well, it's homogenised.
That's the corporate machine of the music industry.
Homogenised music, everything is dumbed down and predictable.
So edgy bands and artists, they don't really get a look in.
Whereas before, in the 60s and 70s, you had people like In the 70s, Bowie and Bolin and, you know, all of these real wild pop stars who were edgy and unique.
But now everything is just it's very bland.
And I do believe that Simon Cowell is very responsible for that with all this Britain.
Was it the X Factor?
It really, really It just really homogenized music.
Everything fitted into this particular sound and then manufactured that sound.
A bit like what Stock Aitken and Waterman did in the 80s, but I have to say Stock Aitken and Waterman did produce some amazing pop hits.
They were, in my opinion, they were the Tamla Motown of Britain at that time.
They nurtured a lot of artists.
But I think the whole X Factor machine and the way the corporate record labels have gone, I mean, let's look at Oh, Sam Smith, for example.
What on earth is going on there?
What is going on there?
It's hideous!
Hideous!
Before we try and answer that question, I was... See, I'm working my way... I mean, it's quite simple.
I'm working our way from the kind of the rave-y stuff of my youth to what has become of both of us.
Because we've both been on a very interesting And I think actually the questions you ask about they, Sam Smith, about them, is very pertinent.
Can I make a terrible confession?
Yes.
I never went to Shume.
Is it pronounced Shume or Shume?
S-H-O-O-M, yes, Shume.
Yes.
I never went to Shume.
Oh, that's a shame that you didn't make it there.
You would have absolutely loved it.
Hot basement, strobe lights, smoke, cherry flavoured smoke, apple flavoured smoke, a small room with lots of mirrors and it gave the illusion it was a much bigger room and people were transported to another world.
Everything was so, so Revolutionary and fresh and the energy, the collective consciousness and energy is what made it so special.
And there really was a feeling and this people were feeling that they really belonged in this tribe.
And they did.
And that like the 60s with the hippies and the 70s with punks or the mods and rockers.
You know, youth culture had an identity with acid house stroke rave and people came together like the 60s really, like the hippie movement of the 60s.
And I do say that there are parallels with that collective consciousness as what there was with the leery generation of the 60s.
Yeah, I mean, I did get a taste of what Must have been like, I went to a night called Love at the Wag, you probably remember that one.
Oh yes, yeah I played there a few times, yeah.
I probably saw you play there.
It was a similar vibe, wasn't it?
Similar, but I got thrown down the stairs by an aggressive bouncer in the WAG club at Love because I had a can of Red Stripe in my hand after I'd just finished playing.
I think it was three or four in the morning and it was closing time and he took it upon himself to snatch the beer out of my hand and I held on to it.
He then jostled me down the stairs from the top floor.
So after that, I didn't play there again.
And Chris Sullivan said, oh, please come back and play at the WAG.
I said, no, not until you sack those horrible security people you've got there.
Oh, dear.
I'm sorry that it's got unhappy memories for you, because I've got some memories of being... There was a sort of upstairs-y bit, I think, with comfy sofas and stuff.
Yeah.
And I remember sitting next to this bloke, you know, killed off my face and saying, mate, I love you.
I used to be a football hooligan.
I was really hard.
I was on the terraces.
I would have come at you with a knife.
And now, mate, you're my best mate.
I love you.
I love you.
It was like that.
Waves of empathy.
Yeah, it was good.
But it was.
You know, it stopped a lot of that.
You know, people...
Kids were very tribal back then, and we're seeing it again now in the present, but back then it got very tribal and particularly around football and gangs and what have you.
It's always been there, but it really did break down all of the taboos and the social class and melded everything together.
And it was a magnificent time, a groundbreaking, incredible time for music, fashion, art, Everything and the changes that were going on in the world.
There was this whole wave of optimism around that time in 1987 was the Harmonic Convergence, which took place in California.
So everything was, there was this real energy between people.
And what's the Harmonic Convergence?
I don't know about that.
It was a universe, astrology thing in California and the start of the Age of Aquarius, they say.
So there was this shift in consciousness going on.
And I do believe that, you know, that that did have an effect on us all.
Plus, you know, kind of there was the other, you know, the other party additions which induced empathy and euphoria and openness.
It really, you know, the whole.
The whole thing combined, the new music, the coming together of people from all walks of life like never before.
That was just so exciting and lifelong friendships were made.
But I did enjoy Love at the Wag Club.
You know, as you said, you had some good nights there and it was a good club, but it was just that one incident towards the end of when they were hosting Love at the Wag that, you know, I got roughed up a bit by a bouncer there.
He didn't get my can of Red Stripe initially, but he did, and then it went everywhere, and I got pushed down the stairs!
It's funny, it does date the whole thing, because you don't see Red Stripe so much nowadays, but it was the beer of the time, wasn't it?
Oh yeah, very popular, but then again...
Most people stopped drinking beer at that time, but I've always loved beer.
And I, you know, I all through those days, I didn't take any kind of substances to lift me up.
I have that naturally natural energy.
And that's the transference to the audience and feeding off of the audience and the feelings and what they were experiencing.
So most of them probably popped a pill or a capsule like they did in the 60s with speed and rhythm and blues and everything.
You know, it had the 70s acid.
It had a, you know, it had a supplement, shall we call it.
Well, you are so lucky.
Imagine if you developed an e-habit.
in then in in 87 88 yeah i mean you wouldn't be with us now would you well you'd be a cabbage well um um i'm very balanced in life but um i'm not i i did quite enjoy um eating a few of them you know there's no denying that Absolutely.
But yeah, I... Yeah, but if you had to do it every night, I think that would have been a bit demanding.
Oh, absolutely.
I've always looked after my health, though, and continue to look after my health.
That's very, very, very important to me and my values.
Before we go down the rabbit hole, I just wanted to briefly enjoy our period in kind of normal world.
I don't believe anything I get told about the history of music anymore, but is it roughly the case that you and a few other DJs went over to Ibiza in 86, liked the club music and brought it back?
Is that what happened?
Well, there was there was a couple of clubs in London playing house music.
There was Delirium with Nolan Morris Watson.
There was Black Market, which was hosted at Wag Club by René Galston.
But those those clubs and yeah, they were very, very underground clubs.
But what we did, we brought back some of that Ibiza magic and.
And projected that into London, a London venue.
And we brought back everything that was going on on the dance floor in Ibiza as well, and that's what made it the whole thing really.
What, the live sex shows?
That stuff?
No live sex shows!
That came later!
You mean the smoke, the taste of apples and stuff?
The music that we were inspired by, DJ Alfredo in Amnesia, which was an open-air club.
It was a farmhouse venue in the 60s and the 70s that a lot of the Vietnam vets went to, who migrated to Europe, and the Senyasi people, and just bohemian characters and artists.
Glamorous, glamorous stars and so on.
So it was a real mixture of people on the dance floor in Amnesia.
And yeah, it was it was also, you know, there was this wave of great Californian E as well.
Yeah.
When did you have your first E?
In Ibiza.
What year?
Can you remember?
1987.
So it induced a massive wave of creative influence and inspiration.
We were greatly inspired by everything we experienced.
I couldn't wait to get back to London and start our respective clubs.
I hadn't been a club promoter before that trip to Ibiza.
I was just an aspiring budding DJ.
Climbing the ranks and it gave me the opportunity to create my dream.
So my dreams came true at that point because of my energy, foresight, vision, dedication, commitment and motivation to make it happen.
And that's what I did.
And I was so influenced and inspired by Ibiza.
Shum began in a fitness center in Thrail Street in London, SE1 on the South Bank.
And the first night we did in conjunction with another guy who was playing more rare groove sound and there was two crowds.
So it didn't really it didn't really work on the first night.
Then the second night we hired Carl Cox and his sound system.
And Carl, at that point, he used to put sound systems in all over the southeast.
So, yeah, he he played.
And at the same time, he was he was teaching me how to mix.
So, you know, I thank Carl for his mixing tips.
And yeah, that's how it all began.
Within a matter of weeks, there was a queue around the block.
And at that time, Southwark and that area was very, very much an industrial wasteland.
And at the weekend, there was no one there.
It was a ghost town, apart from the market trader pub in Borough Market with the market traders.
So all along Southwark Street, all those buildings, I mean, now it's a very, very different landscape there with swanky restaurants, hotels, bars.
And it's great.
I love that area.
But back then it was it was very industrial and it was quiet on the weekends.
So we had this fitness center.
An unlicensed gym, not that anybody wanted to drink booze, only a handful of people.
And Leucocade became very, very popular to keep hydrated.
And it gave Leucocade a new lease of life.
Leucocade all of a sudden had cottoned on to the fact that all of these trendy young kids and, you know, were drinking Leucocade.
What's going on here?
But that all came as a result of the heat in Shume.
It was a very hot basement.
And that's how it began, really.
And at that time, my wife, Jenny, she worked in Yoji Yamamoto, the fashion store, as a manager.
So she knew a lot of the fashion people in London and art students.
And we used to go to the art colleges and walk around the West End and the King's Road, because at the King's Road, still back then, in that point in 86, 87, We're still a, you know, a kind of a trendy place to go and buy clothes and hang out.
So those were the key areas we targeted with flyers and would go and talk to people, Kensington Market, you know, have a chat with people and the next, you know, the next week they'd come along to the club.
So we marketed the club virally.
It just happened very organically and word got out there and so many people came to the club.
So many people who, Kevin Rowland from Dex's Midnight Runners, Paul Rutherford, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Martin Fry, Mark White from ABC, Phil Dirtbox, there were models there, all melded in with street kids from Bromley in South London and South London, you know, kind of clubby kids.
So it was a real melting pot of people.
You're making me really nostalgic for that era and also actually a bit envious that because, you know, I could have been you.
I made the wrong choice.
I decided to become a journalist.
But I suppose if I hadn't been a journalist looking out for kind of stories, I wouldn't have discovered the scene when I did anyway.
So it was swings and roundabouts.
But look, tell me, you must have... Just one moment, one moment.
Boy George used to come along there as well.
Fat Tony, Lee Bowery came down a couple of times and just breezed down the stairs and said, I'm not paying.
My brother asked him for five quid.
It was five quid to get in.
And my brother used to sit on the door and he just breezed in with these light bulbs.
He had that outfit at that time.
His ears were light bulbs.
And the security, well, the doorman, Eric, he said, a light bulb chops his ear.
He's not going to pay.
Well, there was workers from the fashion industry and Vivienne Westwood and yeah, it was a real diverse group of people, a mixture of people.
It was, you know, it was really, really great.
Very special.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But sorry, I interrupted you there.
No, no, no, no.
I was just, I was now moving away from that happy bubble.
By the way, E was really expensive.
I mean, in current price, it was, I think it was about 20 quid for an E, wasn't it?
Well, imagine what that would be now.
- No, that would be about 60, 70, I mean inflation.
It was good stuff.
It worked.
Oh yes.
Well it was pure.
It was pure.
It was used for medicinal purposes with therapy and counselling in California.
So that was the source of it.
That's where it was sourced and came here from, into the UK from.
And that's why it was so expensive at the time.
So, you're familiar with Mark Devlin?
I am.
I love Mark.
He's a friend and I have featured on his podcast.
I really like Mark's writing style and his presentation.
He's great, Mark.
We've just been talking about the version of reality that we both remember experiencing, more or less.
Give or take a few fuzzy trips.
But we know now, which we didn't know then, was that there was, behind this, we were just puppets of a larger agenda plotted by some very sinister people.
So, for example, you've seen all the flyers for the second Summer of Love were basically a rip-off of the flyers for the first Summer of Love, which was all about I single eyes in the middle of triangles and pyramids and Illuminati symbolism.
Presumably you weren't aware of any of the significance of any of this stuff going on at the time.
No, not at all.
Shum, the identity of Shum was smiley face.
We adopted the smiley face.
Well, I did.
I saw a stylist, Barnsley, wearing this waistcoat with all smiley badges on from the 70s.
And I loved the smiley I did one or two at the beginning.
I did the first Sunrise event in Wembley.
said that's going to be the symbol for shoe.
And that's what we adopted.
And we stayed with that and a heart symbol also.
So all of that other imagery, and just to state, because I didn't really play on those big raves.
I did one or two at the beginning.
I did the first sunrise event in Wembley.
I did one for Kevin Millins, which was an offshoot of Rage.
But I didn't play on all those great big raves for Tony Colston Hater, because I just saw it as commercialism and just it was a money making enterprise for a lot of people.
And that wasn't where I was coming from.
You know, I was happy that I was playing to 300 people in my club with people who were very responsive to the music, loved the music.
And that was enough for me.
You know, I wasn't after the money.
I could have made a huge amount of money.
And I was invited to go into a partnership with Tony Colson.
He said, come with me.
I will make you a millionaire.
I said, I'm already a millionaire here because my dream has come true.
I'm living the dream.
Yeah, I don't I don't want all that money and everything that comes with it.
I am actually this is worth more than any amount of money.
Money can't buy this.
Oh, Danny, I told you the story at the time, but you were there, you were part of the story.
But when I did that gig with a few comedians, you know, Abby and Alistair and Tanya, and afterwards you played the actor's show.
Yeah, it was great.
I said, like, if I could have gone back in time and said to myself, in 10 years time, You will be attending this after show party for your show with these lovely, beautiful people who are your fans but they're also your friends and they're wonderful.
And you've got Danny Rampling DJing for you, I'd have said.
Ain't gonna happen.
Ain't gonna happen.
And it did happen, didn't it?
I wasn't dreaming it.
It did happen, yes.
It wasn't a dream.
And it was a great night in Bethnal Green.
It was a lot of fun.
Yeah, a lot of fun.
So, here's the weird thing.
I've noticed that a lot of the resistance to the craziness going on in the world now A lot of us are, not all of us, we're the rave generation.
Why do you think that is?
Why do we sort of get what's going on, the evil of what's going on, better as a breed than most people?
Well, you say that, but it's quite surprising that there are many from our generation that don't get it.
But I do believe that was an awakening of consciousness back then.
Back in 87 and the two summers of Love 88, 89, it really was an awakening of consciousness.
That's what we were experiencing.
And many of us have continued that into the present.
And I do believe it's part of our life journey.
It's part of our Dharma, why we're here in this lifetime.
So, back then, we really were changing our own world, but we also believed that we were changing the world at large.
Yeah, the Berlin Wall was coming down.
Apartheid was falling in South Africa.
There was such remarkable, positive change going on.
And that's what we were all experiencing.
And that collective consciousness is powerful.
And I do believe now this.
Terrible period we're in now, although it's very thrilling, dangerous, exciting history at the same time.
Again, it's an awakening of consciousness and some people are further back along the path of consciousness than others.
And I do believe that everything is going to be OK.
This evil that is going on is not going to triumph.
It's not going to triumph.
We're here to raise the vibration, love over fear.
I don't we don't fear anything they are imposing or attempting to oppose or threatening us with.
We have no fear, no fear of any of them or anything.
They are attempting to to restrict us.
And this this agenda, Agenda 21, Agenda 30, that people believe some people is a conspiracy theory because they're too lazy to actually do some research and understand what it's about.
So I think there's a whole wave of cognitive dissonance and the Belgian psychologist Matthias Desmet, his book on the science of totalitarianism,
He has termed what is actually happening around us, mass formation psychosis, where the herd stay with the herd and you have 20% and we're in that 20% over here and over there you've got the volume of people who are just feeling safe in the herd and don't want to know what's going on right before their very eyes.
You know, it's an extraordinary time we are living in.
Sometimes you think, you have to pinch yourself and think, is this actually a reality?
You know, I've had this constantly over the last three years because I've been on the front lines fighting this on a daily basis.
Yeah, you have.
I wanted to ask you, I'm going to ask you in a moment about your awakening.
But first of all, I want to just talk a bit more about the music scene and how things work.
We know from what's it called?
My brain's gone blank because probably too much enjoyment in the late 80s.
Weird scenes inside Laurel Canyon.
We know that the entire West Coast music scene of the late 60s was essentially a CIA psyop.
Just as the Beatles were, created by the Tavistock Clinic and the Rolling Stones as well, they were created to subvert the youth, to achieve the goals of the cultural Marxist agenda, to break up the family, to alienate children from their parents and so on.
So we understand how the music scene The controllers, the record company moguls, the guys who invented gangster rap in order to put more black people in private prisons.
So do you think they miscalculated with rave?
Because MDMA is kind of the wrong drug It made us love one another and it made us, it united us.
Exactly.
I've heard these theories.
I know that Mark Devlin, he thought that, I believe he wrote in his book that I was part of the military PSYOP.
Are you?
No, no, no.
I'd served in the TA in the middle of the 80s, but I was not, I categorically state, I was not part of a military PSYOP by creating Shoom.
You're quite deep cover.
I didn't know you were in the TA.
Why were you in the TA?
I mean, not that it's a bad thing, but... Why?
Because I wanted to join the army as a young man and follow my grandfather's footsteps who I lived with.
So he was a role model to me.
So I considered having a military career.
So I went to Sutton Coalfield for selection and wanted to join the parachute regiment and I trained hard for it and I got turned down because it was shortly after the Falklands War and the army was oversubscribed with recruits.
And what that did, it did me one of the, I think at the time I was absolutely devastated because I went home and I said to him, well, I haven't got in.
And he said, Oh, don't worry about that.
It's OK.
You know, it's that you could join the Territorial Army.
I didn't know what the Territorial Army was.
So he gave me the number of the Duke of York's HQ in Kings Road.
And I went there and joined 10 Para.
I had the best of both worlds then.
How many jumps have you done?
I only did 7 jumps.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How many jumps have you done?
I only did seven jumps.
But you say only.
It sounds a lot to me.
Well, it's not.
No, it's not.
Qualifying back then for parachuting was eight jumps.
No!
I had an...
No!
At Verizon Alton, I had an abnormal landing and smashed into the ground because I thought the £35 container, which I released from the clips, hit the ground with the thud and I was not in the landing position and creamed into the DZ and smashed my left shoulder and dislocated it.
So that was me out of action for quite some time.
However, you know, Persevered with it and stayed stayed in the regiment for just under three years.
So the thing was back then.
Unemployment was really high.
I left school.
I couldn't wait to get out of school and go to work.
And as I said, I lived with my grandparents.
And yeah, he influenced me.
And he used to sit in the kitchen with me, make food, tell me all these great stories.
Not, you know, kind of gory, glory stories, but just, you know, kind of how You know, you become very resilient and a man.
And I have to say that that experience really taught me so much about myself and resilience, which has served me well for all of my life through the ups and downs of life to keep going.
You get knocked down, you keep going, you get up and you go at it again.
So I have total respect for everybody who's been through that.
And I'm very proud to have done, you know, Just my, you know, kind of my bit at that time as a young man.
I was like 22.
Yeah, 22, I think.
Yeah, 20, 21, 21, 22.
And then, yeah, shortly after, yeah, around, what date was that?
86, I left and I went to America and traveled around the States for just under a year.
I've got two jobs in Key West.
I was working on a construction site in the day with a Vietnam veteran, Dan Drum.
He loved the fact that I'd had some military experience.
And then at night in South Florida's leading restaurant at the time, which was called the Pier House.
Very swanky dockside restaurant near Mallory Square with the sunset.
So yeah, I was a runner in the restaurant there.
Could have ended up working in the kitchens, but my life would have been very, very different as if the army had accepted me that day.
There was this colonel sitting there with his dog.
And they give you a psychological quizzing and ask you what books you read and what music you listen to.
And I said, Tamla Motam, it's soul music.
They probably wanted someone who's listening to heavy metal, death metal or something.
So, you know, I did ask the Army Records, why was I turned down?
And they said, there's no record of it.
But back to what you said there.
No, I'm not part of a military PSYOP with Acid House.
Okay, that was a good, okay.
Your granddad presumably was in the war?
Yes, he was, yeah, in Burma and he was part of the British Expedition Force ahead of the Second World War.
He was a TA man before the war began.
He was in the Territorial Army for a number of years and he was a long service military career and he was in the BF, he was evacuated, he was Shelled at Dunkirk.
He lost most of the members of his platoon and he was evacuated and managed to get off of that beach.
I haven't been there.
I would love to go there, but he greatly inspired me.
And when I went and did P Company in order shots in the summer of 1983, I believe.
Yeah, 83.
I'm sorry.
He died shortly before I got to the Pea Company.
It's Pegasus Company.
It's for the territorial army.
It's exactly the same as the regulars.
It's two weeks.
So it's condensed into two weeks.
So there's milling, which is Boxing for one minute and leathering the shit out of each other.
How's that?
How is that?
Well, it teaches you to stand on your feet and take the blow.
So they match you with somebody and it's really brutal.
It's brutal.
It's the longest minute you could ever have, but it teaches you to stand on your feet.
There's the stretcher race, the log race, there's the 10 miler with a 35 pound backpack and rifle across Long Valley at the time.
So there's the Trenasium where you go 60 feet up on scaffolding.
I look at that now and think, how on earth did I do that?
But at that time, you know, I was quite, I had a good head for heights then.
So there was all of this that happened, but he died shortly before, so all I thought about was getting through the gruelling, gruelling test.
It's a massive achievement.
There was 130 men that started the carder, and there was either 13 or 16 of us that passed and got a beret.
In Malta Barracks in Aldershot, which is adjacent to Browning Barracks, which was the former home of the Parachute Regiment.
So, there you go.
There's an insight into my history.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, obviously, if I'd done my research, I'd have known this stuff, but I don't do my research, because I prefer it to emerge in the conversation.
That's really interesting.
Have you been on a similar journey to me in terms of your understanding of the military and the war and the history of the war?
I mean, people like your granddad, I remain in awe of anyone who went through that experience and came out or didn't come out.
I mean, it was horrible.
But when you realise the true history of the wars and who's funding it and stuff, you kind of get a A rather jaded view about the story.
I have now.
Absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely.
But, you know, as a youngster, I didn't have that capability and understanding of the history.
And as I said, I just wanted to follow in his footsteps and thought it was a good career move.
But would I do that now?
I'm not so sure.
I'm not so sure.
It's like your mate, the Vietnam vet that you work with in Key West.
I mean, presumably he had some stories to tell about his experiences.
Oh gosh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he was a ferocious character.
He was quite a hippie though.
He was one of those ex-Vietnam, kind of grateful dead, but not completely grateful dead hippie, but he was a bit hippie-ish.
Yeah, he was a good builder.
He didn't tell the gory stories, but he'd sometimes hint about things.
He wasn't glorifying it at all.
I think old soldiers tend not to talk about the really nasty stuff.
I think what I've realised now, it took me a long time to realise this because I was a massive fan of World War II, if you can be a fan of World War II.
I used to read military histories and kind of knew all the campaigns and kind of wished I'd seen the elephant, probably as you did when you were jumping out of your plane.
You were probably living out your Arnhem fantasies weren't you?
The Arnhem and Merville Battery are some of the finest history in the regiment.
The sacrifice that was made at Arnhem, the scale of it is huge and the ferociousness of the battle there.
I have been to Arnhem a couple of times.
I was there on the 75th anniversary because it's a pilgrimage to respect forefathers, so I will be going there with friends next year because it's the 80th anniversary.
There might be one or two veterans left, but there used to be You know, a lot of those veterans would be there present.
It's a very moving experience Arnhem at Oosterbrick Ceremony on the Sunday.
There are no birds chirping in the trees.
It's just eerie silence.
There's no wildlife.
You can't hear any wildlife.
It's really eerie.
It's a very moving experience.
Really moving.
Yeah.
On a sort of personal, sort of tactical level, these men were doing extraordinary things, but the bigger picture you realise, I mean I don't know how deep the rabbit hole you are on this, they were essentially a blood, it was all a blood sacrifice.
The whole of the Second World War was essentially kind of a money-making sort of power operation by the people who Yeah, what's going on now, but in a different theatre.
I'm not totally well versed with that, but I need to read more about that.
I'm kind of aware of it.
But this is what's going on now.
It's the same principles and it's the same bloodline families and it's the same bunch of criminals, basically, you know, kind of subhuman criminals.
And war makes money.
The war machine makes huge amounts of money and wealth for corporations and arms dealers and manufacturers.
So it's a real vicious circle, isn't it?
We look at Zelensky, what's going on in Ukraine at present.
You know, where have all these billions gone to that are being just handed over to Ukraine, including UK money, taxpayers money just handed over to a money launderer, a money laundering actor.
But he's only a puppet for who's above him, isn't he really?
It's so murky and corrupt and people are not seeing it.
People are not seeing it.
I mean, there's still people waving those flags.
Come on, let's go and beat the Russians.
I think you can probably count on the fingers of a Saul Miller's hand the number of top international DJs who are making this point, Danny.
Unfortunately, because people are not aware.
People choose not to be aware.
And again, it's a mass formation.
Yeah, I do a lot of research.
I have for the last three years, and I'm aware of what's going on.
I'm very aware of it.
It's not just through researching, I'm just consciously aware.
And when this began, within a matter of a month, I knew that this was not right and that there was wrongdoing going on.
And then I started seeing, I saw a video of you in Hyde Park, which was featuring one of those early demonstrations in Hyde Park.
It was the first one!
That's right.
I watched that and I thought, these are my kind of people at this rally here.
Gosh, what's going on?
I wasn't at that rally because I didn't actually know about that.
I think it was a Keep Britain Free rally, wasn't it?
I just remember I almost got arrested.
Police were wandering around.
It was weird.
And I didn't realise then.
I saw all these weird people, these anti-5G people and anti-vax.
I thought, these people are a bit strange.
I'm just here to protest against the lockdown.
But whatever, yeah, they seem nice.
Yeah, I watched that video and I just thought, yeah, something is happening here and I feel that I belong with these people here.
And that's what's happened over the course of this three years, particularly Those massive rallies in London, they had to put a stop to that, didn't they?
There was like two million people on one of those rallies.
It was incredible the way, you know, people travelled from all over the country from those early demos in Hyde Park at Speaker's Corner.
But then I started looking at London Real with Brian Rose and I do believe that Brian Rose really platformed a lot of the people like Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
and Judy Makovits and Dr. Rashid Batal and all of these great minds and people that are totally in opposition to this whole plandemic.
And it is a plandemic.
It's all been planned.
It's an agenda.
And anybody who's in denial of that is completely blind.
It's so overtly obvious and clear.
And many of us are aware and we caught it early on.
I went through an experience of corporate extortion in 2017.
I spent close to a decade under this massive financial pressure through corporate extortion with an American vulture fund and collusion from Clydesdale NAB Bank in the UK.
I was involved in an eco house building project and the bank sold their top what they termed toxic debt book to the American Vulture Fund, who then pursued personal guarantees on commercial loans.
Lloyds Bank did this as well.
They were the first bank to do it.
Now, it's a scandal.
It's unregulated financial extortion and practice.
And there's bank fraud that's gone on.
Wholesale bank fraud.
Anyway, to cut a long story short, That taught me so much about the corporate machine and the extortion from corporations and the banking cartels.
And I do believe that, you know, as really challenging as that was, it put me in a much stronger position when this thing come along.
Could just smell it a mile off.
This is total deception.
This is deception.
Yes, that sort of partly answers my question, which is why you?
Because I think people go down the rabbit hole in different ways.
They have different entry points and stuff, but normally there's something that happened to them to put them in the mindset whereby they started asking questions and they didn't trust the system.
And so that was your first taste that this is not the world that we're sold.
It's not the world where there is a functioning legal system to protect us and that politicians are there to do our bidding because we vote for them and it's a democracy.
All these illusions we're sold.
So was it a kind of sudden thing?
or was it a, I'm going to change the light battery because it's flashing.
Here we go.
So you knew something was up.
You saw that video of the first demo, but what were the, you've become quite radical.
What were the things that... I'd been in Asia on a tour in Australia and the day after leaving Perth they closed the country down in Australia and there was no one, no one was able to get out of there for months.
So we would have been stranded in Australia and thank God we got out of there and I was watching the TV in the cafe in Perth Airport And they were taping off the shops and taking stuff off the shelves.
And they were preparing for their, I don't like to use that L word, because that's prison talk.
They were preparing for, you know, closing things down and restricting society.
Got out of there.
But in Asia, it was the Asian culture are used to wearing masks.
and it was a requirement.
And I was on the flight and I wore it for a couple of hours I said, I'm not wearing it.
And I'm not wearing the bloody thing.
I can't breathe in it.
I don't care.
If I get some illness, I'm going to get the illness, aren't I?
May sound a bit irresponsible to some, but I knew it didn't feel right on my face.
And yeah, I, you know, I didn't, I didn't.
How did the flight crew react?
They were OK actually.
- Were they okay? - They were okay.
There was no, no, there was no, no flight crew came and said, you must put that on.
They offered them.
I think at that stage, it was still a bit optional.
It was a requirement on the Asian airline and in the airport in Bangkok as well.
But Australia, they didn't have those restrictions in January.
And I was seeing these news clips come out, BBC News in the gym in Thailand.
Of all of those people being chaperoned into those box vehicles, those police box vehicles.
And I just thought, this does not feel right.
We know about China's human rights record through my activities with the Free Tibet campaign.
However, I looked at that and just thought, this is not right.
And people dropping dead in the street, you know, kind of collapsing and stuff.
All this stuff on BBC News.
Not sure.
Not sure.
That seems very over the top, and China are breaking down people's doors and everything.
Well, that's the Chinese way, isn't it?
So, coming back here, it started with the two weeks to flatten the curve.
That was it.
So I thought, OK, well, we'll just get on with this.
It's two weeks.
We'll just get on with it.
I had a full diary of work.
I turned a corner, and my financial path was looking great.
Full diary the whole year.
Two weeks later, it was extended, wasn't it?
And I think that was the point, from memory, that was the point where I really started to No, this is definitely not right.
It's not right.
And then I started seeing all these videos.
Then I started looking at London Real, watching all those videos on there.
I followed Kate Shemirani on Instagram and I was drawn towards the information she was presenting.
So that's how it began for me.
But I had I had been very aware when I watched Zeitgeist, the movie back in early 2000s.
In fact, Mark Devlin will tell you the story that I recommended him to watch that film.
I didn't know it!
It's called Zeitgeist, the movie.
I think there's two or three editions of that film and that just exposes everything.
Everything, as you were saying about the Second World War and the money machine and all of this, everything combined about Climate change and just everything.
Religion.
So really, really, the pharmaceutical corporations.
So around that time, or shortly after, I think it was 2000, it was when Facebook began, was that 2006?
If you remember right, back then, there was the swine flu scare.
And the health secretary at the time was a chap called Sir Liam Fox.
And he instructed this mass.
They were going to mass vaccinate the British public.
Do you remember that with the HN1 jab?
I was very vocal on Facebook at that time.
And there was a lady called Jane Bergermeister, who was this character who Didn't reveal her identity, was living in Austria.
So that's the, I believe, where she was living.
But she was really vocal with the information and Facebook was very democratic and open back then.
There was none of this bloody nonsense of false checkers and, you know, that pathetic nonsense.
We're watching you.
And yeah, we were very vocal about that.
And the BBC went out on the streets of Brighton.
You can see this clip on YouTube and they were interviewing people in the street.
And all of the people that they were interviewing said, no way, we're not having we're not having that bloody that vaccination.
No, we don't need it.
It's a flu.
We don't need it.
And I now I really can say that that was a trial run for what we what we've experienced in the last couple of years.
It bombed and it failed miserably.
They were seeing what they could get away with, weren't they?
They realised we were not ready.
We hadn't been prepared enough.
Absolutely.
And the public were aware and dismissed it.
They dismissed it.
Most of them.
But there were people who were injured from from that rollout.
Health workers.
There's a number of people that were injured.
And that was presented in some quarters in the press.
And that put people off as well.
So they were not ready and they didn't get the they didn't get the uptake.
So there was millions of these vials of the blooming Snake oil that were just destroyed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I was very vocal on Facebook back then.
Very, very vocal about the hoax of all of that.
You must have suffered professionally because of your your principled stance and all this stuff.
Yeah.
What's happened?
Yeah.
I mean, as I said, in 2020, we all lost the right to work in the music scene.
So the whole year of work evaporated.
And I got very depressed for a few weeks.
And I'm not a depressive person.
But, you know, everything had gone.
There was no work.
And that's my sole income.
And having that other experience, turning a corner with that and then going out of one fire into another was a lot of a lot of mental pressure, a huge amount of mental pressure.
But also, I have.
Yeah.
Like most of us who have stood up and who are standing on the right side of history and have been vilified and, you know, all, you know, kind of all of this toxic, you know, kind of reactions.
And, but I believe that now there's less of it.
There's less of it than what there was in 2020 and 2021.
Oh, your conspiracy nut jobs and all of this and anti-vax and all of this.
No, we are critical thinkers and we're free sovereign beings.
Our DNA is our DNA.
God is in our DNA and we protect our DNA.
Our DNA is not the ownership of the state and pharmaceutical corporations.
And people don't think about this.
They don't think about what their DNA is.
They just don't understand it.
I think it's maybe out of the capacity to think.
And the fact that your body is, your health is paramount.
So putting some trial substance into your body is horrific.
It's horrific.
I just couldn't even consider that.
I couldn't consider it.
Well, you get that, I get that, and probably most of the people watching and listening get that.
But there hasn't been much resistance from, well, anywhere really.
But let's focus on the music industry because that's your realm.
I mean, okay, Mark Devlin apart.
Can you name any DJs who've been?
There's a handful of us.
There's Slipmat, the Rave DJ.
There's some others there, but yeah, there's a handful of us.
Has Fatboy Slim been speaking out?
No, none of those.
Paul Oakenfold?
None of the, you know, kind of stadium filling DJs have spoken out about it because I don't know what their views are on it.
Some of them may be harbouring views, but that's their decision.
You know, I was taught by my grandfather to stand up to wrongdoing.
And that's what I apply in my life.
And this is wrongdoing.
And I stand there fearlessly against this evil.
And can see it for what it is.
I don't give a shit what people think about me on what they kind of have thrown at me.
And there are promoters who've refused to book me.
I lost work.
You know, I used to work for certain promoters, regular.
Don't work for them anymore because of their views.
And this is the great divide.
This is the great divide, James.
You know, it's divided society, hasn't it?
It's divided people.
There's this massive divide.
Totally.
I wanted to ask you on specifics of that.
So there are promoters who will not use you now.
For what?
For wrong think?
Because you won't... Because of my abuse?
It is ridiculous.
But this isn't just contained to the DJ industry.
This is contained to the, you know, the live music, the gig circuit.
There are bands that have spoken out that, you know, they've they've experienced the same thing.
But I do believe we're coming out the other side of it.
There was this hysteria, this mass hysteria and paranoia.
And oh, my God, we're all going to die.
This fear, this wave of fear and fear is the core driver in all of this.
It's underpinned by fear.
And when people cave and they fold into fear mode, it produces results that are very difficult for people around them who don't share their views and have a viewpoint of their own and are not following the herd.
So, you know, what will be will be.
But I know that Things are improving on the circuit, but I went through 18 months of some very, very challenging times.
Right.
But are you, without wishing to tempt fate, I mean, are you kind of too big to fail?
I mean, if a certain percentage of promoters won't use you for ideological reasons, Are there enough other promoters out there to give you the work?
Yeah, absolutely.
It's only a minority, so you just move on.
I was banned permanently from Twitter for my views.
It was around the time of that propaganda around the Indian funeral pyres of, oh, this COVID epidemic is taking thousands of lives in India.
Well, India, they burn the dead on the Ganges in open funeral pyres.
And what they filmed there and they presented to the public created this hysteria.
And on Twitter, I got absolutely lambasted by The fact that I put videos up of a London rally with everybody, you know, kind of together and Bob Marley playing with a sound mobile sound system.
This kind of click in the music scene.
The Twitterati Musos took a lot of offence towards me.
Did they?
And I do believe that they, some of those, probably some of them had made complaints about my account or reported posts and I got permanently banned from there.
And it done me a favour because I wouldn't go back there.
I would not go back to Twitter.
I was on there too much and it was eroding my time and time is very precious.
Haven't some major names in DJing died of jibby jabs?
Yes, there are some people that have sadly passed away, but in all the fields of entertainment and public figures and sports, the correlation isn't being made.
There's just this, well, it's a sudden death.
I'm trying to remember the names.
Well, there's a handful of people, but...
I can't totally say it's related to the injection but there are a lot of deaths that are arising due to the complications with this MRNA product and there are scores of injuries.
Isn't it right that the ONS have stopped reporting the injuries side of things?
Is that right?
I know that the ONS used to be reliable, but has now kind of joined the PSYOP machine, so you can't really trust their data anymore.
By the way, whenever I try, particularly with people from the music industry, whenever I point out to kind of normies, look, this person has died, a bit young, don't you think?
The line you get back is always, yeah, but they've unhealthy lifestyles, blah, blah, blah.
They automatically assume that it's normal for a DJ to die in his 50s because you're all a bunch of degenerates.
Really?
That's how they justify it to themselves.
They assume you must do a lot of drugs in the late 90s and stuff.
That's why you die young.
Well, it's a way of avoiding the subject matter, isn't it, really?
And there is a terrible lot of avoidance going on, unfortunately.
And again, this is fear-related.
If you could put yourself in that position, and you win in that position, and then think, well, hmm.
Could it be that?
Or, you know, I'm not feeling too good myself, but no, it can't be that, you know?
And that's, those are the lies we tell ourselves.
You know, there's Scott M. Peck's book, is it the, oh, The Lies That People Tell Themselves, I believe it's called.
That's a great book on psychology, which is also very apt for what's going on now.
But I think, you know, kind of being in that position, I don't know.
I think that's where the denial comes from.
It's just the absolute fear of like, oh gosh, have I made a mistake, you know?
It's hard to admit our mistakes in life, isn't it, generally?
Yeah, yeah, it is.
I can see why you'd want to be in a state of denial if you've taken this experimental substance and put it in yourself.
You're a ticking time bomb for the rest of your life.
It's happened to some of my loved ones and I just worry about them all the time.
Do you think that you obviously haven't been jabbed?
Was there a sort of private knowledge within the industry, do you think, that these things were dodgy?
Did people get fake passport passes?
Or did most people just get it thinking, oh, I need to travel and it's going to be fine because they wouldn't lie to us?
A lot of people did step forward for that reason, just to travel.
I know a lot of people who did that without thinking, look, I need to travel with my work and everything.
When there were other ways, there were loopholes with documents and stuff.
But I resided myself to the fact that look, if I've traveled the world countless times and I know I'll travel again.
So there's no way I'm going to put myself through that just to travel.
That's you know, that's.
No, that's bribery.
And also to go into a club with a passport at the time, you know.
That was low.
Absolute bollocks.
Absolute nonsense.
And we stood our ground and we're continuing to stand our ground.
And we're going to stand our ground around digital identity as well.
You know, this is the biggest battle that we face.
But all of that, a lot of people did Just go down that road because of what was attached to it.
Well, you can't travel without it.
You can't go into a venue without it.
It created this urgency and this fear.
And the campaigns that they drove behind it, you know, those dreadful marketing campaigns, just awful, appalling, fear-based campaigns.
You know, the Tavistock Institute, PSYOP, an absolute PSYOP, put so much fear into people.
I used to look at those signs in absolute disgust, contempt and annoyance at the evil nature of how that marketing was conducted.
It's completely evil.
It's evil.
It's sadomasochistic.
And I also believe that we are living in a very sadomasochistic society through the dumbing down of culture.
Whereas people have become masochistic, you know, answering to the, being obedient to the perceived master, the sadist masters.
Well, you travel, I mean, you get around a lot.
You must know lots of DJs and stuff.
What were they saying privately?
Were they more on your side, but not admitting it in public or what?
Don't really talk about it.
Really?
No, no.
Generally, I go to gigs, but that's not really discussed.
I mean, I had a couple of talks back then in 21, when in July, when it was Freedom Day, when we could all go back and have the right to work in clubs and stuff.
But yeah, it wasn't really mentioned.
It was just it wasn't the thing.
They know, I know, and just there's no point talking about it generally because we're on the couple of occasions when we did speak, it's like, you know, they just kind of look straight through you as if you're like some crazy head.
That vacant stare and like kind of shock.
Have you become known on the on the circuit as the sort of the voice of the resistance?
Are you attracted to kind of a new following of awake people?
I think Well, that gig at Hope was that was a great gig.
Have I attracted a lot of awake people?
I'm not really sure, actually, but I don't know.
That's a good point.
Yeah, I mean, I used to take the speaker backpack to the rallies and walk the route.
A lot of people took those big Weighs about 30 pounds.
Strap it on and it's booming.
Soundbox speaker.
So I took that to four rallies and thankfully, my friend Ben, he did a crowdfunder and somebody from Stand in the Park from Hertfordshire put half of the money in to buy that.
And we crowdfunded to get this speaker to take to the rallies.
So, you know, thank you to everybody who did contribute to that.
It will make an appearance again.
But yeah, I think crowds in clubs and festivals, there are people from both sides.
And I feel it's not as extreme as what it was in the height of it in 20 and 21.
Seeing this shift on social media in 2022, in the early part of 22, Things started to shift.
There was less toxic insults.
There was less, you know, kind of toxic reactions and all of this.
And that people were more asking questions and gravitating towards the information and saying thanks.
A lot of people say thanks for sticking your neck out, and that's, you know, I'm not looking for thanks, but it's nice to get someone to say thank you to, you know, for your efforts, because I put a lot of effort into this, like all of us.
You know, we're at war here.
This is a spiritual war.
It is?
Yeah, it's a spiritual war between good and evil.
Okay, so good and evil.
Where are you on the devil?
Does he exist?
How does it work?
Well, I don't think the devil exists, but there's an energy force of demonic evil energy force.
I mean, we've got all this satanic ritual abuse that is all being exposed.
And it's so dark.
It's so macabre and dark and evil.
And all of this is being exposed now.
And they must be trembling in their boots, the perpetuators of this.
Let's look at Epstein Island.
Where are those?
The flight logs, you can find them on the internet.
There's all those names on there.
But why has nobody been brought to court?
Because they're so high powered.
And it's this whole circle of deceit and grotesque evil, harming children.
And it's just, it's abhorrent.
But this is part of this demonic agenda, and we can see it in the in the music industry, in the corporate side, as we spoke about Sam Smith earlier and some of these artists dressed up and, you know, kind of and there's demonic imagery as part of the set and all of these leanings towards it.
And there was that Travis Scott concert in Middle America where all those kids died.
And there was this frequency being pumped out of the sound system, a very Yes!
frequency that is evokes hate and evil frequency is very important and a lot of people died at that concert so there there is this movement around this demonic energy absolutely and there are different variable degrees of evilness within this uh this energy field yes i i've noticed this
they've got much they've got much more overt haven't they in their right Absolutely, yeah.
It's like Marina Ambrovich, isn't it?
Her spirit cooking.
All of these, like, celebrities that are there, you know, kind of ogling it all and sitting around the table with all of this, you know, kind of spirit cooking, whether that's a human flesh there, who knows?
There are, you know, kind of, who knows?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's it's bloody evil.
It's absolutely evil.
It's grotesque.
It's all coming out, though.
This is the this is the era of the truth.
And the light of the truth.
And this is the shift and the chapter in all human history.
And this is the greatest deception in all human history.
The grandest fraud of all time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're confident that it all ends happily.
But I mean, presumably you're not a Christian.
You just believe in sort of a force for good and a force for evil.
Is that right?
I do.
Yeah.
Yeah.
OK.
I was christened as a Christian Church of England, but I am not a churchgoer.
I do believe in a higher power and I do believe that the soul is eternal.
And the world of spirit, the other dimension, which is the spirit world.
And I believe in reincarnation and we're reincarnated into the vessel of the body.
Those are my beliefs.
And I believe that when we dream at night, we enter into the spirit world.
We enter into that other dimension, that other place of consciousness.
Like Sandman, like the Neil Gaiman.
Yeah, that's my personal belief.
That's where we go when we're off to sleep at night.
You're right.
We're in another world, another realm of consciousness.
Yeah.
You said people are sort of getting almost back to normal.
Not quite.
Maybe that was a bit of an overstatement, but things have calmed down a bit, slightly, because people think everything is kind of relatively normal, but we know it isn't.
We know it isn't.
All of this is still going on and we can't take our eye off of the ball.
Yeah.
But the other proportion of society just believes, well, everything's OK.
There's nothing going on because they're not looking at the World Economic Forum and the Davos and the climate con as well.
And it is a con, what's going on with this.
This is the plandemic part two that's being steamrolled in.
All of this.
Part one has been the rollout.
You know, this is a ferocious war and we've got bigger battles on our hands.
And I feel that the digital identity is our biggest battle that we are going to face.
And we have to stand united and we have to stand firm in our intentionality and renounce it.
We have to renounce it in non-compliance.
If we have 40% of the British public, just this country, we'll keep it here, who renounce that and do not comply with it, it's over for them.
It's over.
We've won.
And this is what we have to get across to people, is the message of non-compliance.
Lord Jonathan Sumption said this in one of his early speeches that I gravitated towards in 2020, about the British way, how we like to queue up.
And we can only take so much, and then it gets to a point where the British public becomes non-compliant.
And then there's peaceful civil disobedience to end matters.
And I feel we're seeing this with this ULIS and these 15-minute cities.
We're at a very critical junction point here of the 80% We now are seeing some of that 80% coming over to the side of the road of the 20% through these matters that have been put on their doorstep now.
It's impacting them financially.
The same with the orchestrated cost of living Crisis, another crisis.
It's this is a crisis.
That is a crisis.
It's wordplay.
It's all wordplay.
We know this is all part of the World Economic Forum stroke.
Davos, Davos, not so great reset.
This is all part of it.
The digital identity, the social Well, we're free and we're sovereign and they will never enslave us if we stand united in non-compliance.
programmable digital currency to lead to lead us into enslavement well we're free and we're sovereign and they will never enslave us if we stand united in non-compliance we have to have the strength the courage as those men and women did back then close to 80 years ago and stand there and do not falter Do not falter.
And it's over for them.
It's completely over.
I'm totally with you, Danny.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's a good way to go on that rousing note.
So tell us, tell us where we can, where we can find your stuff.
What campaigns are supporting at the moment?
I support Together Declaration.
I'm one of the initial signatories of Together Declaration.
I would have been speaking at the Ulis Rally on Trafalgar Square today, but unfortunately there were some delays for me to get there, so I wasn't able to make it on time.
I support the International Liberty Forum and I support Save Our Rights.
I support Gosh, yeah, who else do I support?
Yeah, International Women's Forum, Save Our Rights and the Together Declaration.
Those are the main groups that I support, but I support all of the groups and we're all, you know, we're all brothers and sisters and we are one in this battle and this war and this is about, you know, it's about unity and Wherever I can lend support, that's what I do.
I'm very active on social media, on Instagram and Facebook and petitioning and lobbying and part of those campaigns with those groups.
And also it's Not Our Future, David Fleming's group, which we went to Oxford and leafleted 60,000 homes with around the 15 minute cities in Oxford.
So Not Our Future is a great group and there's going to be more ahead this year.
And I also support, on the creative side, Unified Artists for Freedom.
That's a lot of campaigns.
Where can people find where you're playing next?
On my social media accounts on Instagram, I'm mainly on Instagram and a Facebook music page, where I also, those pages are not just dedicated to my music activities.
They are a platform for awareness.
I only share authenticated information.
I do not share fear porn.
The future hasn't happened yet.
Let's not catastrophize the future.
I personally feel the future is abundant.
We've got a way to go with this and it's going to be, there's going to be much more challenges ahead.
There's going to be more challenges.
It's not over by a long shot, but we are winning this.
We're going to win this and it's going to give, there's already cracks widening in this whole deception.
They're widening.
I hope you're right.
The whole thing will come crashing down.
It's going to come crashing down at some point.
That's good.
That's good, Danny.
On that reassuring note, I'm really hoping.
And thank you for listening to and watching this podcast.
Please do keep supporting me on Buy Me A Coffee.
That seems to be popular at the moment.
On Locals, on Substack, on Subscribestar and on Patreon.
Please give me your support.
I really appreciate those of you who do it.
Thanks a lot.
Danny, thanks again.
That was great.
Thank you.
Thanks a lot.
And one last thing.
Just bear in mind some of the greatest battles against all odds have been fought and won over the course of history.
And we're not fighting this battle against all the odds.
There's a small percentage of these people, these entities, and we are the many, they are the few.
We stand united.
We win.
In unity, there is victory.
Great.
Thanks, Danny.
Thank you, James.
All right.
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