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Sept. 15, 2025 - Rebel News
48:48
EZRA LEVANT | ‘Unite the Kingdom’ rallies hundreds of thousands against mass immigration

Ezra Levant reports on the "Unite the Kingdom" rally (September 15), where 250,000–500,000 attendees—including families and diverse groups—heard Elon Musk demand government overthrow to stop mass migration, citing gang violence and voter importation. Speakers like Eva Vlardingerbrook invoked St. George’s legend, while French candidate Eric Zamour faced threats for his stance. Levant contrasts grassroots energy with Labour and Conservatives’ declining support (<40%) and Reform UK’s rise, blaming left-wing persecution of Tommy Robinson for fueling backlash. Musk’s warnings about "woke mind virus" and state-controlled tech highlight urgency: Britain’s future hinges on dismantling oppressive systems or risking irreversible collapse. [Automatically generated summary]

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Hello From Tommy Robinson's March 00:06:43
Hello my friends, I just got back from the United Kingdom where I was there for Tommy Robinson's massive march.
Unite the Kingdom was the name of the rally.
It was about free speech and mass immigration and things like that.
I'll take you through it showing you some of the best speeches, including the surprise speaker, Elon Musk.
That's ahead, but first let me invite you to get a subscription to Rebel News Plus.
That's the video version of this show, and you're going to want to feast your eyes on this rally.
You really do need to see it, to feel what hundreds of thousands of people marching for freedom feels like.
It's a pretty good thing.
Go to RebelNewsPlus.com, click subscribe.
It's eight bucks a month.
And in addition to getting that great content, you'll support Rebel News because we take no money from the government and it shows.
Tonight, the largest British political rally in a generation, maybe ever.
And we were on the front lines.
It's September 15th, and this is the Ezra Levant Show.
Shame on you, you sensorious bug.
Hi, everybody.
It's great to be back in Canada.
I was in the UK for a few days for a huge rally led by our friend Tommy Robinson.
I've seen different estimates of how many people there were.
The lowest estimate I have seen anywhere, and this is by people who hate Tommy Robinson and want to downplay his achievements, was 110,000.
But I think it's got to have been at least 250,000, maybe 500,000.
You know, the largest rally ever was supposedly the rally against the Gulf War when Tony Blair was PM.
Then, allegedly, 750,000 people marched.
I think it's quite possible that were the numbers this time.
We'll never know for sure, but let me put it this way.
It was huge.
One of the reasons that's interesting, see, there was absolutely no establishment support for it at all.
That massive anti-war rally obviously had a lot of fully funded supporters.
The Socialist Workers' Party, the Labour Party, different ethnic groups.
None of that was apparent here.
This was all grassroots.
No elected politicians took the stage, not even Reform UK, even though I imagine the crowd would overwhelmingly have supported them.
Here's Trevor Phillips, the former head of the UK Human Rights Commission and a very interesting journalist.
He's one of my favorite guys over there.
He attended the rally.
And by the way, I saw him at another Tommy Robinson rally about a year ago.
I think he likes going to them.
And I think this is one of the fairest reports you'll hear.
I mean, he has a few jabs at Tommy, but that's okay.
Here, take a listen.
It's quite possible that the person most taken aback by the huge turnout at yesterday's Unite the Kingdom demonstration was its organizer, the hard-right activist known as Tommy Robinson.
150,000 people crammed into central London, most carrying national flags, the Union Jack, the Cross of St. George, even the Scottish Soltire, protesting about immigration, about free speech, and about the decline of Christianity.
There was some fearsome rhetoric, including from Elon Musk, who called for the overthrow of the British government.
At the margins, there was some hooliganism.
But I think that for those who oppose Robinson and his ilk, the most alarming aspect of the event was just how normal the vast majority of the marches were.
I spent an hour or two amongst them, and my own impression was that they were mostly the sort of people you'd meet in a country pub, or in half-time queue for the loo at football or at a concert.
There was a sprinkling of black and brown faces, and the event was brought to a close by a gospel group singing Jerusalem.
All that must worry the traditional mass parties, Labour and Conservatives, now polling at less than 40% between them.
They're draining support to parties like Reform and the Greens.
And yet a man recently out of jail, condemned as an extremist thug by most mainstream media outlets, can rally a demo the size of the entire population of Cambridge or Blackpool.
A feat you couldn't imagine either Sakir Starmer or Kemi Bedenok pulling off anytime soon.
Perhaps the people are sending us all a message.
Let's see if anyone at Westminster's listening.
I was there as a friend of Tommy, his former boss.
He used to work for Rebel News.
I was there as a speaker, invited to say a few words.
And I was with a group of rebels in our free speech mission.
You may have seen me advertise that, hey, come to the rally with me and we'll tack on some events before and after.
And boy, we sure did.
We got started on Thursday with amazing speakers, Dr. David Starkey, if you know the name.
We went to dinner with Tommy for a few hours on Thursday night, sort of right before the event.
You could see he was super energized and excited, still working on last-minute things.
His phone was buzzing the whole time.
That was pretty fun.
Then we went to the rally.
We did other things on the Friday, including going to the House of Lords and we went to the National Gallery.
We did a lot of fun stuff.
Then on Saturday, it was all about the rally itself.
And we went with Tommy to, I guess we could call it the after party.
My point is, we really hung out with Tommy.
And for rebel enthusiasts, I think it was a lot of fun.
Anyways, the rally itself, of course, is what counts.
And I'd like to show you a little bit of how that went.
Let me start with my own brief speech.
Now, I wrote it out because I suddenly became nervous.
I'm generally not nervous giving speeches, but I just realized how many hundreds of thousands of people were watching, not just there in London, but tens of millions of people online.
And I don't think I got nervous that I'd say something dumb.
Actually, my main worry was that I would either go way too short or go too long.
Tommy said it was very strict.
We had to be five minutes or less.
So I actually wrote my speech out word for word.
And I'm not thrilled with how it looked, but I didn't want either of those disasters running long and being cut off or being too brief.
It sort of reminded me, frankly, of my speech to the truckers at the Trucker Convoy in 2022.
Anyways, here's my four and a half minute speech that I gave.
I was actually the second speaker.
Take a look.
Hello!
Hello, and welcome to the hundreds of thousands of you stretching for miles in this great city.
And hello to the millions more watching online around the world.
Hundreds of Thousands Strong 00:07:05
That's part of the story, isn't it?
The establishment media, the regime media, the legacy media, the government media, they haven't mentioned this rally.
They want to pretend it doesn't even exist.
Well, it exists.
You exist, even if the media party pretends you don't.
And if the only source of news we had was the regime media, that would be a problem.
But across the United Kingdom and in my country of Canada and around the world, a new generation of citizen journalists is arising to tell the other side of the story.
Whether it's the Canadian truckers or the Dutch farmers or now the mothers and grandmothers protesting outside Britain's dangerous migrant hotels.
Just as establishment politicians have failed to loyally serve the people, establishment journalists have failed to honestly tell us about our world.
But here's the good news.
Each of you can be a journalist.
If you have a cell phone with a video camera, you can be a journalist.
If you have an X account, you can be a journalist.
To fill in the blanks left by the media party, our host today, Tommy Robinson, is in fact Britain's leading journalist.
And the response from the regime to simply call everyone a racist, it just doesn't seem to work anymore, does it?
And more people will watch this rally online than watch all of the official TV news stations and newspapers in the UK combined.
It's not easy being a dissident these days, though.
Police will find a way to arrest you.
Even just for a post on social media, 30 people a day across the UK are arrested for mean tweets.
Some of them, like the mother Lucy Connolly, are sent to prison for their words.
This in the country that gave us the Magna Carta and set the standard for free speech.
That's why there are so many people around the world watching, because we're worried about Great Britain.
We love you.
You're the place that taught us about responsible government and freedom.
And you're losing both, and it's painful to watch.
The British people are slow to anger.
They're polite.
They believe in keeping calm and carrying on.
They believe in a stiff upper lip.
As Kipling said in his poem, The Beginnings: hating is not in the blood of the English, but even the English have had enough.
Some people want to ban Tommy Robinson, to silence him, to jail him, perhaps even worse.
I don't think he can get a fair trial anymore in the UK courts.
He's become the official scapegoat, the official enemy of the state.
And yet he keeps going, warning his fellow countrymen.
The best time to have heeded Tommy's warnings was 15 years ago.
But the second best time is right now.
And I think that's actually happening.
Mainstream politicians and journalists are now talking about stopping immigration and even mass deportations and re-migration.
Politicians who used to support censorship like the Online Safety Act are now talking about freedom.
They now carefully and modestly support the things that they used to condemn when Tommy Robinson said them.
And we noticed that.
Tommy was just ahead of his time.
That is my hope today.
That the ideas that were censored, the debates that were forbidden, the news that was covered up, the marginalization of patriotic citizens, the bizarre preference for foreign people and foreign ideas over national ideas, my hope is that era finally comes to an end.
And when the British people look back, when you take back your country, you will be able to say, you were there.
You were there at a turning point.
You were there when the people decided in their millions to no longer be afraid to love their country.
Good luck and keep fighting for freedom.
After me, our fellow rebel, our friend from down under, Abi Yamini.
Now, he went in without notes and he just revved up the crowd.
Here, take a look.
G'day, London!
Bloody hell, they wouldn't hear that from Melbourne.
G'day, London!
That's burden.
That's a bit better.
So, for those of you who don't know me, my name is Avi Yamini from Rebel News.
I am Tommy Robinson's taller, more handsome brother.
But on a serious note, how good is this?
I've been to Tommy Robinson rallies for almost a decade now.
Bloody hell in the beginning, I got a lot of crap for him.
But they were massive then, but it is nothing in comparison to what we're seeing here today.
The world is waking up.
Thanks to Tommy Robinson and his leadership.
Now I'm going to be quick because we're running behind schedule and I got told that I better hurry up.
I just want to say to everyone, thank you for coming out because in the last, what is it now, 48 hours, the enemies of truth, the enemies of justice, the enemies of everything that's right, tried to scare you guys into silence by shooting and murdering one of the strongest voices for that truth and justice.
But none of you coward.
In fact, it looks like the numbers doubled or tripled because of that.
And really, it turns out the murder of Charlie Kirk is the turning point for this fight.
And we want to say thank you to Charlie Kirk and thank you to Tommy Robinson.
And Tommy is telling me to be quite here.
Guys, what is that?
we're just gonna all right guys we're gonna go that way That's working.
There we go.
Alright, after me, guys.
I want the biggest response ever so we can clip this.
Versus Evil Dragon 00:03:35
Looking at the camera, mate.
Ozzy Ozzy Oze!
Oi!
Oi!
Ozzy Ozioze!
Oi!
Ozzy!
There were so many interesting speakers, but I have to say, most of them were not known to, I think, the average person attending.
It was European leaders, people from different countries, Germany, France.
I don't want to guess all the countries.
Here's a clip of Eva Vlardingerbrook, who you probably recognize if you follow social media.
She was originally from the Netherlands.
a look britain's patriots my friends today i call upon all of you to invoke the help of your country's patron saint saint george
Legend holds that St. George fought against a dragon that was demanding human sacrifice.
He fought a battle of good versus evil.
And today, hundreds of years later, we are still fighting that very same fight.
We are fighting a fight of truth versus lies, of freedom versus tyranny, and of light versus dark.
And just three days ago, one of our bravest warriors lost his life fighting it.
So today, we also fight for him.
We fight for Charlie Kirk.
We fight for our nations.
Children.
Ladies and gentlemen, St. George's shield became your very flag.
And now, your flag has to become a shield once again.
A shield that will protect us in the fight against the evil forces that just like back then against the dragon, we are fighting this time because they are demanding the sacrificing of our children on the altar of mass migration.
So, my Patriots, raise your flag, wave them high, wave them proudly, because there is nothing that today's dragon fears more than that.
And that dragon resides at 10 Downing Street.
One speaker that was very interesting was Eric Zamour.
He ran for president of France.
He didn't win, but he did very well, considering he's quite an intellectual.
He's not a political partisan.
He gave a speech in French, so I won't run it now.
Migrant Reporter's Insight 00:13:18
But Alexa Lavoie, our Montreal-based reporter who speaks French, managed to track him down sort of in the backstage area and interview him at some length.
And we'll publish that in the days ahead.
I'm really excited.
And I'm really proud, of course.
You know, I'm proud of having a reporter in Quebec.
She does work in English, but she does some en français.
And I think we may have been the only Anglosphere reporter in Alexa who spoke French to interview him.
So he certainly was generous with his time.
And just as a note, he came with his own security, because you can imagine being a critic of Islamic immigration to France, you are marked for death terribly.
And these were actually the toughest looking bodyguards at the whole place.
Now, there was a surprise guest, and I sort of knew who it was.
And maybe you can guess or maybe you know, Elon Musk.
He didn't join in person.
That would just be logistically too difficult and a security risk.
I think Elon Musk probably has security on par even with the president of the United States.
Maybe not quite as much, but it is an extreme security issue.
He joined not in person, but by a video stream.
So he joined live.
Here's just a taste of that now.
It was an 18-minute exchange.
It was sort of a QA with Tommy Robinson himself.
I'll just play a bit, but actually I'll end today's show with the full 18 minutes.
I encourage you to watch it.
Here's Tommy Robinson and Elon Musk, and boy, the crowd just went nuts when they saw him.
You may notice this t-shirt that I'm wearing.
This great British author George Orwell.
What would Orwell think?
I think that's generally a good way to look at these things.
He would want freedom of speech.
He'd want the people to know what's real.
He'd want the people to fight against government oppression and fight for the truth and fight for the future of Britain.
And then you see how much violence there's on the left, with our friend Charlie Cook getting murdered in cold blood this week and people on the left celebrating it openly.
The left is the party of murder and celebrating murder.
I mean, left, put that sink in for a minute.
That's who we're dealing with here.
That is who we're dealing with.
And then you see how much violence there's on the left with our friend Charlie Cook getting murdered in cold blood this week and people on the left celebrating it openly.
The left is the party of murder and celebrating murder.
I mean, let that sink in for a minute.
That's who we're dealing with here.
That is who we're dealing with.
It was a total triumph for Tommy Robinson.
First of all, logistically, it went better than any of them had before.
I know it sounds funny, but they had a lot of porta parties.
I mean, that's something you maybe don't think about until you have a few hundred thousand of your closest friends show up.
There were massive TV monitors on the back of massive trucks spread out down the street.
So you didn't just have to be near the front to see and hear things.
This is something new.
This was not there for Tommy Robinson's rallies in the past.
He would typically have just one stage.
So it really went well.
It was very high quality production.
And it's incredible this all happened when just a few months ago, Tommy Robinson was in prison.
Not just in prison, he was in solitary confinement.
I do verily believe that they tried to kill him.
And frankly, I don't think the state has done.
And he was almost jailed again for that train station attack.
Remember when Tommy was at the St. Pancras train station and some thug tried to chase Tommy down at the last minute?
Tommy punched him and down he went?
If it weren't for the closed circuit TV surveillance footage, I think Tommy probably would have been jailed again.
The government really treats him as an enemy of the state, but he was the star of the day.
You know, I have been following Tommy for a while for actually just more than 10 years.
I got to know him in the final year of Sun News before Rebel News started.
So I've been following his career.
And he has not changed what he has said.
He's the same guy I knew when I met him 10 years ago.
He has not changed.
What has changed is the rest of the United Kingdom.
So things that Tommy Robinson was saying a year ago, let's say, that the entire establishment would attack, now the entire establishment is saying them.
Nigel Frog, just as an example, the head of Reform UK, a year ago, he told our friend Steve Edgington that he was against mass deportations.
Now he's got a specific plan, five flights a day, keep migrants on military bases, not in hotels.
I mean, it's incredible how quickly the world has come.
The Overton window has shifted.
But I think what's so interesting is that this was a mass protest by ordinary people.
There were no big backers, no political parties, definitely no regime media, no big financiers.
It was truly a grassroots event, which I think is pretty incredible.
The difference between this rally and other rallies, I mentioned some of them, is it's clear now that Tommy isn't going away.
If the regime thought that by throwing him in prison and defaming him and throwing the kitchen sink at him, he would somehow stop.
He hasn't stopped, has he?
The crowds aren't deterred either.
In fact, they seem to be bigger than ever and more diverse.
As Trevor Phillips noted, lots of moms and dads, lots of couples, even kids and grandmas and grandpas.
The crowds are no longer deterred either by the risk of something bad happening, whether that's anti-fotaking around things or the police themselves.
I think Britons have just decided that this is the moment they need to protest.
And we've seen this around the country with protests outside those migrant hotels.
I think the most interesting thing is that people just don't care that the media call them all racist.
It just doesn't stick anymore.
And even if it did, they've decided that it's not more important to them than winning their country back.
Trevor Phillips himself, that's a black journalist who was the head of the British Human Rights Commission.
So it's interesting.
They can't really call him a racist, can he?
He pointed out, whatever the number is, 200,000, 300,000, 400,000 people.
Could any politician in the UK get that right now?
The Prime Minister Kirstahmer or the leader of the opposition, Kemi Badenock?
No, other than maybe to jeer them and say they hate them.
I think this state's treatment of Tommy, the persecution, the defamation, it's sort of backfired.
I think it's helped Tommy.
A terrible price to pay for Tommy.
But when Tommy was in prison, that's what made his cause a cause celebre.
That's why Elon Musk, for example, took an interest.
And Elon Musk doesn't seem to be as close to the Trump administration now as he once was, but his concern for freedom of speech in the UK is certainly maintained and shared by JD Vance and Donald Trump, who is going to the UK this week.
I don't know if you know.
And that's interesting.
I think the U.S. is starting to pay attention to Tommy, whereas a year ago he was only of interest or even known to a small number of conservative journalists.
I was asked earlier today if things in Canada are as bad as things are in the UK, and that if we would ever have a rally of 1,200,000 people, well, first of all, I don't know if we ever have.
I know there was a rally in the tens of thousands in October of 1995 when Quebec, the province, was having a vote on separation, and there was a rally to save Canada, a unity rally.
I don't know if there's ever been a rally of six figures in Canada before.
And I don't think that things are quite as critical yet.
We do have migrant hotels, as David Benzie showed us.
There's 5,000 migrants staying in hotels in Niagara Falls, just wrecking the tourist economy there.
We do have rapes by migrants.
We do have sex trafficking.
We do have mass cultural change.
All the problems they have in the UK we have here, except we don't have an exposure of these, at least not in the language of being linked to immigration.
I think the vast number of temporary citizens who all want to stay here, the foreign students, the foreign workers, has sort of shocked Canadians in the last year.
But I don't know if they're at the point of taking to the streets yet, because I think ordinary Canadians detect that the Conservatives might be able to absorb that energy.
Now, they didn't do so in the last election, but I think Pierre Pollyev regrets that and is going to make that his issue.
So if there is a political party into which this energy can go, I don't think you'll see 200,000, 300,000 people on the streets.
But in the UK, like I say, the Labour Party and the Conservative Party were both complicit in this mass immigration and all the shenanigans.
That's why the energy is going to the Upstart Reform UK.
I guess my point is here in Canada, I think people are still hoping this system will work, although I think we're running out of time.
I'd like to leave you with the full 18-minute exchange between Elon Musk and Tommy Robinson.
I was standing near this stage.
Was very exciting.
It shows, like I said before, that the propaganda about Tommy Robinson and against Tommy Robinson is just not working.
I was quoted in an article today by The Observer in the UK that rehashed Tommy Robinson being an employee of ours.
I think that's seven or eight years ago now.
And I said to the journalist who reached out to me, I said, Really, you're just reheating a seven-year-old story you think that's going to do it.
It hasn't worked for seven years.
And by the way, that's not serving the British people who are curious about what's going on.
Whether they like it or not, it's a second question.
But the first question is, what's going on?
And if the UK Observer and the Daily Mirror and the other newspapers over there, the regime media, just smear Tommy and call him names as they are, I mean, that'll please the regime.
That'll please the Prime Minister and some radical groups on the left.
But ordinary Brits are craving information.
And I got to tell you, whereas maybe five years ago there was only a handful of citizen journalists, including Rebel News, now there's dozens.
And if the Daily Mirror or, well, frankly, every regime newspaper wants to smear the March and smear the March leaders, I almost don't think it matters anymore.
The propaganda is not working, and people, it's forcing people away from the mainstream media.
Elon Musk appearing shows that because Elon Musk, of course, is famous for many things, including he owns X, formerly called Twitter.
He owns the largest means of social communication in the world.
So who cares what the UK Observer has to say?
It shows that Tommy actually has friends in high places, friends with resources.
I think there's still a class system in the UK, and Tommy is a working-class guy with a working-class accent, and that's an issue in UK politics.
Well, Americans don't know about that kind of stuff.
And Elon Musk, I mean, he's from Canada and South Africa originally, but he's got an American mindset of meritocracy.
He doesn't care what your status is.
So Tommy does have friends in high places, no matter what the snooty reporters at the fantasy papers say.
And I think Tommy's supporters felt encouraged by that too.
Tommy's supporters are working-class people who have been called names, like football hooligans or whatever.
And now they know that, at least in the case of Elon Musk, they have friends in high places too.
Anyways, it was a very exciting week.
It was almost a week.
And I hung out with a lot of rebels.
Rebel News is well loved in the UK.
On the protest beat, as you know, we've recently hired a new freelance reporter, Emma Dunwell.
We met up with her.
She's doing great.
So we care about the UK.
I mean, obviously, our home is here in Canada.
But the stories I've just talked about, the issues I've just talked about, they're as relevant here in Canada as they are anywhere.
Anyways, without further ado, let me leave you with Elon Musk's 18-minute interaction with Tommy Robinson.
Good night.
Rallying the People of Britain 00:14:34
Congratulations.
Congratulations, Tommy, on putting together an amazing event and really rallying the people of Britain.
Elon, none of this could have happened without you giving the British public access to the truth and giving us free speech and fighting for our free speech on behalf of Great Britain and the British public.
We're incredibly grateful, Elon.
You're most welcome.
You're most welcome.
And you may notice this t-shirt that I'm wearing.
It's great British author George Orwell.
What would Orwell think?
I think that's generally a good way to look at these things.
He would want freedom of speech.
He'd want the people to know what's real.
He'd want the people to fight against government oppression and fight for the truth and fight for the future of Britain.
Elon, we are incredibly grateful for your time.
We know what a busy man you are.
Why is it important for you to be here today speaking at this United Kingdom event?
Well, I am of primarily British heritage, British ancestry.
I want Britain to be greater than it ever has been.
I want Britain to remain Britain.
I think there's something beautiful about being British.
And what I see happening is a destruction of Britain.
Initially, a slow erosion, but a rapidly increasing erosion of Britain with massive uncontrolled migration, a failure by the government to protect innocent people, including children who are getting gang raped.
It's unreal.
The government has failed in its duty to protect its citizens, which is a fundamental duty of government.
This has got to stop.
There needs to be massive government reform in Britain.
And the people need to be in charge, not some bureaucracy that doesn't care.
Elon, I believe that's what we've started today.
Power by the people, sending a message worldwide.
Elon, you spent an incredible lot of money on X. Why is free speech so important to you?
Well, I believe you can't get to the truth of things without freedom of speech, without active debate.
And there's so many on the left that want to just crush debate and put people in prison just for talking, as you were, just for speaking their mind.
You know, the essence of democracy is it should be a government for the people, by the people.
And in fact, this is a government against the people and not for the people.
This is why everyone is gathered here today, is something's got to be done.
This is unacceptable.
The government needs to be responsible to the people of Britain.
It needs to protect Britain.
It needs to protect the weak, those who cannot protect themselves, especially the children.
And when I read about some of the horrific stories and how the government did nothing and tried to hide it, they tried to hide these horrific crimes.
And then you see how much violence there's on the left, with our friend Charlie Cook getting murdered in cold blood this week and people on the left celebrating it openly.
The left is the party of murder and celebrating murder.
I mean, let that sink in for a minute.
That's who we're dealing with here.
That is who we're dealing with.
Elon, to so many of the British public who are scared to exercise their free speech, they're worried about being imprisoned, they're worried about being attacked, even to share their speech on your platform of X. What message would you give to them?
The message is really, my message is to the reasonable centre.
The common sense.
So, my appeal is to British common sense, which is to look carefully around you and say, if this continues, what world will you be living in?
This is a message to the reasonable center, the people who ordinarily wouldn't get involved in politics, who just want to live their lives, they're quiet, they just go about their business.
My message is to them: if this continues, that violence is going to come to you.
You will have no choice.
You're in a fundamental situation here where whether you choose violence or not, violence is coming to you.
You either fight back or you die.
You either fight back or you die.
And that's the truth.
Today, Elon, I think the British public are telling the world that they're ready to fight back.
Good.
Yes.
Come on.
Come on, Gregory.
Come on.
We've inspired the nation.
Elon, you've spoken a lot about woke culture, the woke mind virus, and how it damages innovation and freedom of thought.
We know that DEI often sees people getting jobs when they definitely don't deserve them.
Do you think this culture is holding back progress in the West?
And what do you think needs to happen to reserve it, to reverse it?
Yeah, again, I'm appealing to sort of common sense and fairness.
I want to emphasize just common sense and fairness, which is that we should make our decisions based on merit, on how if somebody is talented and hardworking, then that should be the only means of advancement.
There should not be discrimination on the basis of sex or religion or any race or anything else.
And what a lot of the woke stuff is, it's actually super racist, it's super sexist, and it's often anti-religion, but only anti-Christian.
Like, well, why only anti-Christian?
That's unfair.
So, this is why, again, my message is to the reasonable middle.
Do you not want a world where there is fairness and common sense, and you advance as a function of how hard you work and your talent and your integrity?
That should be all that matters.
And the woke mind virus, that I call it, is against all of that.
It's wrong.
Thank you, Elon.
Elon, we hear so much about censorship being pushed by governments and global corporations and organizations.
A lot of people don't understand why we're allowing mass uncontrolled immigration into all Western nations.
Do you believe that there are powerful forces outside of elected officials, someone controlling governments that are trying to control the flow of information?
And how do we resist that pressure?
Yeah, I think when you look at the behavior of organizations or people, you have to say, what is the incentive for these organizations?
And frankly, there's a massive incentive on the left to import voters.
So if they can't convince their nation to vote for them, they're going to import people from other nations to vote for them.
This is a massive factor.
And frankly, it's a strategy that will succeed if it is not stopped.
And it is, thus far, it is succeeding.
And you see strong movements to allow people who are not from Britain to vote in Britain, to allow people who are not from France or elsewhere to vote in those countries.
And thus depriving the citizens of their democratic power.
It's really a voter importation thing.
And if they are allowed to succeed, if this is allowed to continue, they will succeed in importing voters, swaying the elections, and taking your vote away from you.
That is 100% what is happening.
Do you know what's great?
The BBC and the mass media cannot control this, can they?
I love it.
I mean, the BBC is complicit in the destruction of Britain.
And we pay for it, Elon.
We pay for it.
Yes.
We're forced to pay for it.
You're forced to pay for your own destruction.
It's insane.
It's unfair.
It is wrong.
Elon, a lot of ordinary people that are here today, they feel ignored.
They feel censored or they're labelled just for speaking up about their legitimate fears and concerns in their communities.
Do you believe technology like X or even AI can finally give power back to those people?
Or do you think it will make censorship worse or even automate it?
I mean, that's a complicated question.
It really depends on what government is in charge.
The government can obviously use whatever powers are available to suppress the people.
And so I really think there's got to be a change of government in Britain.
And you can't, we don't have another four years or whatever the next election is.
It's too long.
Something's got to be done.
There's got to be a dissolution of parliament and a new vote held.
And really what matters is rallying the people of Britain.
Really getting the people of Britain to get the message out there, talk to your friends and family, and build a massive power base among the people.
And like I said, you really got to appeal to the sort of average, just the normal people that just want to go about their business.
That are sort of in a village somewhere, they're working, they just want to mind their own business.
But you've got to point out to them that if we don't take action, they won't be able to mind their own business because other people are going to come and maraud them.
There's genuine risk of rape and murder and the destruction of the country and dissolution of the entire way of life.
And so, yes, in the normal course of business, if you weren't under a massive attack, then people should go about their business and just live their lives.
But unfortunately, if the fight comes to you, you don't have a choice.
You have to fight.
So you have to rally all of the people of Britain to fight for the future.
Let me ask you.
And if this doesn't happen, there won't be a future.
Are you ready to fight for your future, Britain?
Fight for your future.
Do it!
Go!
Will we be gagged any longer, Britain?
But you know what I mean, Tommy?
You know what I mean?
I talk to my friends in Britain, and they're like, yes, they live in a village here or there, or a town or city here or there.
And they're like, well, it doesn't seem like it's really that much of a problem.
I'm like, well, if you want to know What's going to happen to your town and village?
Just visit London.
And you'll see that it's filled with crime.
It often doesn't feel like Britain at all.
And it's only a matter of time before that is what happens to your town or village.
It starts in London, but it will spread to every town and village in the country.
And no one will have any peace.
We're running out of time, people.
We're running out of time.
Elon, you've built rockets, you've built cars, you've built satellites, you've built AI.
Things most of us couldn't dream of.
It's fair to say you're a visionary.
When you look at leaders in Europe and the UK today, do you think they share the same talent for future vision?
Or do you feel like they'll be left behind and out of touch?
Well, I think we've got to have a freer country, a freer, you know, Europe in general has to be freer.
It's stifled by bureaucracy.
I think it's good that Britain left the EU because there's just too much bureaucracy in the EU.
But frankly, instead of really going down a path of personal freedom and deregulation and getting rid of these stifling regulations, unfortunately, the British government has pretty much stayed on par with the EU, if not in some ways made the stifling regulation worse.
So if you have excess government regulation and oppression, you stifle the freedom of people to try new and great ideas.
And Britain used to be a country that did amazing things, some of the boldest things on the entire planet.
And that is possible in the future.
But it can't be done if you've got this massive oppressive bureaucracy and a government that doesn't care about its people.
And that has to change.
There has to be profound change.
And there's not much time left.
Elon, you've said before that civilization is fragile.
Path To Greatness 00:03:31
We agree.
It's precious.
When you look at the West right now, every country in the West, with its wars, its divisions, its censorship, and its declining trust in institutions, none of us trust them at all.
None of the public trusts them.
For good reason.
Are you optimistic or pessimistic about where we are heading?
I think if the people of Britain take charge and actually ensure that there is a government that represents their interests and not a government that represents foreign interests, then I think Britain has a great future.
And I think we can be optimistic.
I think there's amazing things that are possible.
If the technology that's coming is used in the right way, we can have an incredibly exciting future, one which is, you know, sort of Star Trek made real.
It's sort of like the exciting utopian sci-fi where we have spaceships and we've got robots and we've got incredible technologies that are really exciting.
But we need to preserve civilization long enough for that to happen.
And we need to go onward and upward.
And we need to fight for such a future.
Such a future is not inevitable.
We have to fight for such a future.
I think the many British people had lost hope.
But after today's scene, have you got hope again, Britain?
Britain is awake.
Thanks to you, Elon.
Thanks to your input.
Can we just solve it?
Thanks to you, Tommy.
Thank you, brother.
Can we ask, what do you see as the future of the UK and Europe in your vision?
Where are we heading?
What's the future lie for us?
Well, I think there needs to be a future where the people take charge, where there's deregulation, a massive reduction in bureaucracy, and generally a new hope where people look forward, wake up in the morning, look forward to the future.
They're excited about what's going to happen next.
But we must have revolutionary government change for that to occur.
And this is not ordinary course of business sort of stuff.
This really requires everyone to sort of marshal the people to take charge, reform the government, and make sure that you actually have a government that is for the people, by the people.
And that's essential.
And so we're really at a fork in the road here.
We're at a fork in the road to darkness or greatness.
And that will be decided only in a matter of years.
And we must take the path to greatness.
And that's the path that's exciting and inspiring and will make life worth living.
Elon, you've done more than anyone to shine a torch on the crimes committed against the generation of our daughters on behalf of everyone and on behalf of all of us in Great Britain.
You know what?
We wouldn't even be in the fight.
Not only are we in the fight right now, but we're on the advance.
Thanks to free speech being fought for us by Elon Musk.
We're very grateful, sir.
You're most welcome.
Thank you.
Well, that's our show for the day.
Until tomorrow, on behalf of all of us here at Rebel World Headquarters, to you at home, good night, and keep Keep fighting for freedom.
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