Rebel News Podcast


EZRA LEVANT | Rebel News covers the U.K.'s fight for free speech


Summary

In this episode of The Ezra LeVant Show, host Ezra Levenant is back in London, England. He's visiting Tommy Robinson in prison, and has been banned from seeing him. He also went to Jordan Peterson's conference, and talks to the headteacher of a pro-Britain school, Catherine Burble-Singh.


Transcript

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00:00:56.680 Tonight, the battle between freedom and tyranny in London, England. It's February 19th and
00:01:11.840 this is the Ezra LeVant Show.
00:01:16.240 Shame on you, you censorious bug.
00:01:26.680 Hi, everybody. It's Ezra LeVant. I'm in London, England. I'll be back in Canada tonight. I'm here
00:01:35.200 for a number of reasons. My first reason was I was supposed to visit Tommy Robinson in prison,
00:01:41.380 but that was banned. His rights are being removed, including his rights to see visitors.
00:01:47.340 My second reason was to go to the ARC Conference. That's Jordan Peterson's amazing conference of freedom-minded
00:01:54.680 people from the UK, America, Europe, and Canada, too. And the third reason is to live tweet Tommy
00:02:02.200 Robinson's hearing under the bogus charges under the Terrorism Act. That's where I'm standing now.
00:02:07.760 I'm going to go into the court in a moment. But let me show you some of what we've done over the last
00:02:12.240 few days, including with our new British reporter, Sammy Woodhouse. I mean, it's one thing to interview
00:02:18.200 newsmakers. But I think we should also occasionally talk to people who have certain philosophy or a
00:02:25.880 worldview of freedom. And here's one, Sammy talking to Catherine Burble-Singh. Who's she?
00:02:33.640 She's actually called Britain's strictest headmistress. She runs a school that would be called
00:02:42.760 challenging demographically. But through a combination of discipline and pro-Britain ideology,
00:02:50.200 she's managed to unify the kids and make them into academic successes and patriots, too. Take a look
00:02:57.400 at Sammy Woodhouse talking with Catherine Burble-Singh. You and your school are known to be quite
00:03:02.600 controversial. Why is that? Well, we're super strict, so people don't necessarily like that. But I always say
00:03:09.480 that strict means that you love them enough to keep your standards high for them. I always say
00:03:15.160 we teach the children small-c conservative values, things like personal responsibility, having a duty
00:03:20.440 towards other people. You might sacrifice something that you want for yourself in order for the whole
00:03:26.200 to benefit. We also believe in our children being British. We have a British flag outside and we sing
00:03:31.240 God Save the King. That is quite controversial because, you know, we're in the inner city, so it seems
00:03:37.080 odd that we would sing God Save the King. But I think that our children are British just as much as
00:03:41.240 any other white kid would be British, you know, and we should all be British together. But those things
00:03:46.760 are quite controversial in 2025. It should be, but I know it is. Now, I've worked in schools. I'm also an
00:03:54.440 activist and I go into schools and I try and educate them on criminal and sexual exploitation. I'm sure you've
00:04:00.360 heard, especially over the last few months, how children have been getting gang raped throughout, you know,
00:04:04.920 the country, but they're also exploited into committing crimes. Is this something that's
00:04:09.560 ever been an issue at your school? No, I mean, it wouldn't be. I mean, as I say, we're very strict.
00:04:16.440 And so we're constantly warning the kids on not putting themselves in the wrong place at the wrong
00:04:23.800 time. So when they, at the end of the day, we get the kids on buses immediately so they can go
00:04:29.960 immediately straight home. We strongly encourage the families not to give their children smartphones
00:04:35.320 so that they're not accessing the web. In a more lax environment, that's when kids end up pursuing
00:04:44.840 routes out there that are really quite horrifying. And then parents don't know what's happening to their
00:04:50.360 child. And it's just awful. And it's the kind of thing that I'm warning parents about all the time.
00:04:55.000 So, no, we haven't found that. The UK is an interesting place now politically. Nigel Farage's
00:05:01.800 reform party only has five or six seats in parliament, but it's leading the polls. Trouble is,
00:05:08.120 the official opposition, the Conservative Party, they don't want to go away. Their leader is Kemi
00:05:14.040 Badenoch. Can these two parties hash it out? Well, when we landed here in the UK, one of the astonishing
00:05:20.520 things we saw was Keir Starmer, the extremely unpopular prime minister. By the way, his government
00:05:27.160 approval according to a new YouGov poll is just 16%. He was only elected last July. I mean, that is
00:05:35.960 Trudeau level low numbers. But instead of 10 years, it's just not even, I mean, just six months,
00:05:42.760 for at least seven months. Keir Starmer made an announcement. It felt like he blurted it out.
00:05:47.960 In fact, he sort of said it, reading off notes and rustling papers. He's talking about sending
00:05:54.120 British troops to Ukraine. Here, take a look at the announcement, which was very weird. He's talking
00:06:00.280 about sending British boys off to war, standing around, flipping through papers. Take a look.
00:06:06.200 Good evening. I want to thank President Macron for convening us this evening. At stake is not just
00:06:13.560 the future of Ukraine. It is an existential question for Europe as a whole, and therefore vital for
00:06:23.000 Britain's national interest. This is a once-in-a-generation moment for the collective security
00:06:30.360 of our continent. Only a lasting peace in Ukraine that safeguards its sovereignty will deter Putin
00:06:38.520 from further aggression in the future. Now, recent statements by the US administration
00:06:45.480 should not come as a surprise. President Trump has long expressed the wish for Europe to step up
00:06:54.920 and meet the demands of its own security. That he wants to get a lasting peace agreement
00:07:01.800 to end the war in Ukraine. So today's informal meeting of European leaders was a vital first step
00:07:10.120 in responding to that challenge. On defence, it's clear the US is not going to leave NATO. But we Europeans
00:07:23.080 will have to do more. The issue of burden sharing is not new, but it is now pressing. And Europeans will have
00:07:33.160 to step up both in terms of spending and the capabilities that we provide. On Ukraine, we're at the very early
00:07:43.400 stage of the process. Europe must play its role. And I'm prepared to consider committing British forces
00:07:51.960 on the ground, alongside others, if there is a lasting peace agreement.
00:07:58.120 I thought that was sort of astonishing. To be candid, I didn't quite understand what the proposal was.
00:08:03.480 But I had about a half an hour to kill in central London. So I asked people what they thought
00:08:09.160 about that plan. Here's what some of them told me. What do you think of sending troops to Ukraine?
00:08:15.800 George Starmer suggested it. I'm from the US. Oh yeah? Well, the British prime minister suggested
00:08:20.920 sending soldiers to Ukraine. Did you hear that? Yes. What do you think of that?
00:08:24.440 I mean, I don't like sending troops anywhere. But I think that Trump's policies are terrible.
00:08:33.560 And the EU needs to come together. And I'd like to see the whole world come together for Ukraine.
00:08:40.760 Brilliant. Oh, why do you say that? What do you think the troops should do over there?
00:08:44.360 Because you've got to get Russia out of Ukraine. Simple as that. No, I mean, it's fine. No more
00:08:49.400 next to his head. Brilliant. No. Can you expand on that? Why is it a bad idea?
00:08:57.720 I don't think they should get involved. They're not part of. I think because of the fuel crisis,
00:09:03.640 yes. But where Trump's going, no. I'll be honest with you. I think it's actually rubbish the fact
00:09:09.640 they've left the Ukrainians out of the negotiations. It just seems to be America and Russia again.
00:09:15.560 And we'll end up with another divided Europe and it'll all go up in the air. Well, peace is a good
00:09:20.200 idea because obviously people are not getting hurt then, aren't they? But war makes money, doesn't it?
00:09:24.440 That's the problem. That's a good one. I think Ukraine should be supported.
00:09:30.360 Sending troops in combat zones is politically difficult. But there's a point where you have to
00:09:38.120 ask yourself, you know, where do we draw the line, really? Because if we let Ukraine fall down,
00:09:44.040 who's next? What do you think of sending troops to Ukraine like Keir Starmer's proposed to do?
00:09:49.480 Um, mixed feelings. If it ends the war, then fair enough, I think. But it's got to be done in a
00:09:55.400 sensible way. You've got to do it so it's safe for people, really. So it seems sort of like he blurted
00:10:00.200 it out. I'm sort of surprised by it. How do you feel Keir Starmer's doing? I mean, the polls show
00:10:07.160 he's, do you think this was an attempt to switch the topic of conversation? I'm just trying to
00:10:12.520 understand it. Yeah, obviously the Labour Party and Keir are not the most popular people
00:10:17.160 in the country at the moment. And so whilst we're worrying about what one hand's doing,
00:10:21.080 the other hand's not being ignored. So, yeah, it could be an attempt to shift interest in what's
00:10:25.880 going on. Yeah. It's been three years, though. If it hasn't happened yet, is it going to happen now?
00:10:34.440 Yeah, if it's a cop, boy, I have a lot to say about this. You caught me off guard.
00:10:39.160 I don't, I didn't mean to. I appreciate this. No, I'd love this.
00:10:41.720 I mean, it's just a new thing. I mean, I think he caught a lot of Brits off guard.
00:10:44.920 Yeah. Well, we should have known better in America. I feel terrible that he's representing us.
00:10:52.200 Do you think British troops would help or are they just, would they be at risk?
00:10:55.640 I think it would at the moment. It'd inflame the situation. But then if you go in,
00:10:58.840 there's a peacekeeping corps. Yeah.
00:11:00.680 Then it would just be an amalgamation of all different armed forces.
00:11:03.560 So it won't pinpoint us, will it?
00:11:05.720 You need peace before you send in the peacekeepers. So you would never send them.
00:11:08.920 He's got to talk. That's the problem. And no one's talked for three years.
00:11:11.960 It looks like the Americans are shifting from supporting the war to trying to force a peace.
00:11:16.920 But Keir Starmer said, well, we're going to send some boots on the ground.
00:11:20.840 Is that realistic if the Americans aren't participating in the same way?
00:11:26.040 Well, if the UK is not alone and other countries like France and Germany join, it might be.
00:11:34.040 But I think overall it means that Europe, and I include the UK, need to think hard about,
00:11:41.960 you know, how to defend itself. Are you worried that that could escalate things?
00:11:46.200 Like imagine if a British soldier shot a Russian soldier or vice versa.
00:11:50.760 That feels like it would take us closer to a larger war.
00:11:53.400 Um, if you play poker, you know what bluff is. Is Putin bluffing?
00:11:59.160 Well, is Keir Starmer bluffing? I find the whole thing terrifying.
00:12:02.520 Uh, it is. But, uh, we know from history that peace at all costs is way too high a cost.
00:12:10.280 Do you think they should be sent in to end the war or after the war's over?
00:12:14.040 Um, I think after the war's over, I think there has to be a decent settlement first and then after that.
00:12:19.400 Do you think other countries would join if the UK really did send troops?
00:12:25.000 Do you think France or Germany would join too? It just seems like a radical idea.
00:12:29.640 Yeah, I agree with you. It's pretty radical. Who knows? Really don't know.
00:12:33.240 Well, that's our show from London, England. I'll be back in Toronto tonight.
00:12:36.760 On behalf of all of us at Rebel News in London or around the world, to you at home,
00:12:42.440 good night and keep fighting for freedom.
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00:13:40.840 independent journalism.
00:13:46.200 Ezra Levant here for Rebel News. It's a blustery winter's day. I'm in London, England, standing outside
00:13:52.440 the Westminster Magistrates Court. What am I doing here? Well, Tommy Robinson has yet another court hearing
00:14:00.360 in the continuing war of lawfare against him. Right now, as I speak, Tommy Robinson is rotting
00:14:08.440 in prison at His Majesty's Prison, Woodhill, a couple hours north of London. I was actually scheduled
00:14:16.680 to go visit Tommy on Sunday. I have visited him before, as you know, but then I got a letter from
00:14:23.400 the prison governor saying I was banned from visiting Tommy because they thought I might put something on
00:14:30.120 my social media about it. Well, and in truth, I probably would have, and that's my right to do so.
00:14:37.000 I would just simply report to people what I had seen in my visit with Tommy. That's in the public
00:14:42.200 interest because they're aggressing against Tommy in a number of ways that I'll describe in a moment.
00:14:49.880 But I wrote back to the prison governor and said, look, actually, I'm coming in my capacity as an old
00:14:55.320 friend, as his former employer, and as someone who is trying to help with his legal matters
00:15:01.960 and actually crowdfunding for his children. As you may know, there's a trust fund for his children that
00:15:07.480 we have crowdfunded for. I also said to the prison governor that I would actually sign an NDA, a
00:15:14.120 non-disclosure agreement, and I would give my personal undertaking not to talk about things. I just
00:15:20.520 really want to see him, see how he's doing. And I'm worried about him because he's been
00:15:26.120 more than a hundred days in solitary confinement and no man is meant to be. I got no answer from
00:15:33.320 the governor. I remain banned from prison, not for anything that I've done, but, and frankly,
00:15:40.120 not even for anything that I would do because I agreed that I would have a quiet visit with Tommy,
00:15:46.360 even though it's Tommy's right to speak and my right to hear. But what am I doing here today
00:15:52.840 while Tommy is in prison? He's in prison, as you know, for publishing a video in the public interest
00:15:59.320 on Twitter, a video that has been seen more than 150 million times. I don't know if you remember,
00:16:06.760 but last week the U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance criticized Europe, especially the United Kingdom,
00:16:14.200 for violating freedom of speech. Here's a clip of that.
00:16:17.720 And perhaps most concerningly, I look to our very dear friends, the United Kingdom,
00:16:22.760 where the backslide away from conscience rights has placed the basic liberties of religious Britons,
00:16:27.480 in particular, in the crosshairs. A little over two years ago, the British government charged Adam
00:16:33.560 Smith Connor, a 51-year-old physiotherapist and an army veteran, with the heinous crime of standing
00:16:42.040 50 meters from an abortion clinic and silently praying for three minutes. Not obstructing anyone,
00:16:49.800 not interacting with anyone, just silently praying on his own. After British law enforcement spotted him
00:16:56.600 and demanded to know what he was praying for, Adam replied simply, it was on behalf of the unborn son
00:17:03.000 he and his former girlfriend had aborted years before. Now the officers were not moved. Adam was found guilty
00:17:11.560 of breaking the government's new buffer zones law, which criminalizes silent prayer and other actions that could
00:17:17.720 influence a person's decision within 200 meters of an abortion facility. He was sentenced to pay
00:17:23.880 thousands of pounds in legal costs to the prosecution. Now I wish I could say that this was a fluke,
00:17:29.880 a one-off crazy example of a badly written law being enacted against a single person. But no,
00:17:37.160 this last October, just a few months ago, the Scottish government began distributing letters to
00:17:41.480 citizens whose houses lay within so-called safe access zones, warning them that even private prayer
00:17:48.920 within their own homes may amount to breaking the law. Naturally, the government urged readers to report
00:17:56.280 any fellow citizens suspected guilty of thought crime. Now, J.D. Vance didn't mention Tommy Robinson by name.
00:18:03.560 He mentioned other cases. But it's clear if you're talking about bullying people in the UK for free speech,
00:18:10.920 Tommy Robinson is the most bullied, most arrested, most prosecuted man. So while he languishes in solitary
00:18:19.000 confinement, in prison, with very few visitors allowed, there's actually another hearing going on
00:18:26.120 here, which is why we're here at the court today. There is a draconian law in the United Kingdom
00:18:32.440 called the Terrorism Act. I would say the closest analogy to it is the U.S. Patriot Act. And one of the
00:18:39.880 provisions in the Terrorism Act is that police can arrest anyone, a British national or a foreigner,
00:18:46.760 any time you're going in or coming out of the UK. So at any airport, any port, any international
00:18:52.920 railway station, you can be arrested without any suspicion, without any search warrant. They can just
00:19:02.120 nab you and detain you for six hours. Again, you don't have to be even under suspicion. There doesn't
00:19:10.280 have to be any probable cause. There doesn't have to be a search warrant. You can be held for six
00:19:16.600 hours. And much more than that, you're compelled to answer any question. You do not have the right to
00:19:23.640 remain silent. You have the right to bring in a lawyer. But all the lawyer will do is tell you that
00:19:29.960 you do not have the right to remain silent. And they ask you anything and you must answer. They'll ask you
00:19:36.840 about your politics. They'll ask you about your religion. They'll ask you about your political activism. Or at least
00:19:42.520 that's what they did to Tommy when they arrested him under this law a few months ago. This law was
00:19:49.240 designed not to grill people about their private lives or their personal matters. It was designed,
00:19:55.080 for example, if you caught a terrorist on the eve of some attack to compel that terrorist to answer
00:20:01.880 questions about where the ticking time bomb was, something like that. But it is being used and abused
00:20:08.760 just to haul ordinary people off the streets and compel them to answer whatever questions
00:20:13.960 these cops come up with. But it's worse than that. I mean, they can ask you anything and you have to
00:20:20.920 answer. But they can also say, give us the passcode to your cell phone and other electronics. And they have
00:20:29.480 the right to rifle through every personal detail you have. I mean, just think about what you have on your
00:20:36.040 smartphone. If you're like me, you have your email, you have your photos and videos, you have voice
00:20:41.320 memos, you have email. Of course, you have all your, you know, browser history of your phone call
00:20:48.840 history, who you phoned, who you took a phone from, your texts. It's all in your phone. That's your entire
00:20:54.520 life. And, you know, we have some confidence if we lose our phone, well, no one can get in it because of
00:21:00.520 the password. But under the terrorism act, you are compelled to give the government your password,
00:21:07.320 no matter how sensitive things are on your phone. And Tommy declined. He said he answered questions
00:21:14.280 for hours, but he said on his phone were confidential matters regarding rape victims who were afraid
00:21:23.080 that if their information came to the knowledge of the police, they would be in trouble a number of
00:21:27.560 ways. I won't get into that now. But Tommy had real reasons. He also, of course, has a lot of legal
00:21:32.680 matters on his phone. So he declined. Well, here's the trick. You can be scooped off the street for any
00:21:40.120 reason or no reason. You can be grilled for six hours with no right to remain silent. And then you let go.
00:21:47.400 But if you don't answer a question, if you don't give them your phone password, then you're charged under
00:21:54.520 the terrorism act. Not for committing a terrorist act, but for not giving them the password. Imagine
00:22:01.080 that. It's like a Catch-22. It's a very Kafka-esque situation. You didn't do anything wrong. They
00:22:07.240 arrested you without a warrant. But because you wouldn't give them your secrets, now you're charged
00:22:13.560 with terrorism. And what could sound worse than being charged with an offense under the terrorism act?
00:22:19.400 It's truly astonishing. So we're here today at the Westminster Magistrates Court
00:22:25.240 because Tommy Robinson's lawyers are seeking more disclosure from the Crown. So to fight the charge,
00:22:33.400 Tommy has lawyers and they need what's called disclosure. That's when the Crown prosecution
00:22:39.160 gives Tommy whatever records they have. Not just the ones that make him look bad, so to speak,
00:22:46.120 but the ones that are exculpatory. The ones about their internal conversations, about their notes,
00:22:52.680 about their instructions. The Crown prosecutor has to give to Tommy any information that could be
00:22:59.720 exculpatory. Anyways, so I'm going to be in here today. Tommy Robinson himself will not be present
00:23:06.120 in court, but his lawyers will be. And they're going to try and convince a judge to give Tommy more
00:23:11.880 disclosure in the terrorism act offense. I don't know if they'll be successful.
00:23:18.520 But what do these things have in common? Tommy being jailed and put in solitary confinement for
00:23:25.400 publishing a Twitter video. Tommy being prosecuted under a BS bogus charge under the terrorism act.
00:23:34.440 What's the common thread? It's called lawfare. The United Kingdom will do anything to silence Tommy,
00:23:41.640 to shut him up, to hassle him, to stress him out. And even worse, and here's what I mean.
00:23:47.320 I know that Tommy has been in prison several times before. And if you know anything about prisons,
00:23:52.200 and I know a tiny bit, many prisons are dangerous places because they're full of criminals. And to
00:23:59.000 be protected within prison, you have to join a kind of prison gang. Now in the United States,
00:24:04.920 those gangs are often broken down by race. There's a Latino gang. There's a black gang. Sometimes
00:24:10.760 there's even a white supremacist gang. And you join a gang for protection. In the United Kingdom,
00:24:17.640 by far the dominant gangs are the Muslim gangs. In fact, many prisons, 30, 40, even 50% of prisoners
00:24:25.400 are Muslim. And many of them become Muslim in prison, converting to Islam to be protected by the gang.
00:24:33.400 Well, Tommy Robinson is a critic of Islam. And anyone who could hurt Tommy, stab him,
00:24:40.440 God forbid, even kill him, would immediately be considered a hero amongst the prison gangs.
00:24:47.400 So that's why the prison has put Tommy in solitary confinement, they say. For his own good, they say.
00:24:56.120 But of course, no man is meant to be in solitary confinement for more than a hundred days, which
00:25:01.960 is where Tommy is now. But that's not all. They've removed Tommy's telephone privileges. The other day,
00:25:09.720 the prison said he wasn't allowed to talk to his own son. How bizarre is that? They prepared Tommy's
00:25:16.040 meals in a kitchen. But who are the cooks in the kitchen? Other inmates. So the meal marked for
00:25:21.880 Tommy Robinson is made by these Islamic prison gangs. He can't eat them. So he needs to buy his food from
00:25:28.360 the prison canteen. But he's being punished and isn't allowed to do that either. I already mentioned how
00:25:34.840 prison visits are being canceled. When you're in solitary confinement, a prison visit is not just a
00:25:40.840 social occasion. It's a necessity for your mental health. And they're canceling visit after visit
00:25:47.160 after visit, usually after taunting Tommy by telling him that the visit is granted. In my case, my visit
00:25:54.600 was granted. Then it was taken away. Then I wrote my letter to the governor and they told Tommy, oh,
00:26:00.040 they're reconsidering it. And then they yanked that away from him. They're playing mind games with him.
00:26:04.680 And he's only a third of the way through his sentence. The British government is trying to kill
00:26:13.640 Tommy Robinson. The irony is that would make him a bigger martyr than ever. But we're not interested
00:26:20.200 in irony. We're interested in saving his life. And that's why Tommy has a group of lawyers that are
00:26:26.360 trying to work this through. It's not fast enough for my taste. It's been over 100 days. It's an outrage.
00:26:32.040 Frankly, if help is to come, I think it's really going to come in two ways. One is street protests.
00:26:40.200 Tommy Robinson can muster thousands of protesters in the streets of London, even when he's in jail,
00:26:46.920 to have a rally like one that was just a few weeks ago. Maybe there needs to be a mass rally
00:26:53.240 outside the prison to let the prison governor know that her torturing Tommy by denying him visits,
00:26:59.720 by putting him in solitary confinement, by denying him food, by denying him phone call,
00:27:04.680 and his other rights are unacceptable. But if I had to bet how this will really end,
00:27:10.280 if it's to end positively, I would guess that it would be through an intervention
00:27:16.760 from the United States. Here's a clip again of J.D. Vance telling Europe how disappointed he is
00:27:23.400 with them moving away from values like freedom of speech.
00:27:27.080 In Britain and across Europe, free speech, I fear, is in retreat. So I come here today not just with
00:27:34.680 an observation, but with an offer. And just as the Biden administration seemed desperate to silence
00:27:40.680 people for speaking their minds, so the Trump administration will do precisely the opposite.
00:27:47.080 And I hope that we can work together on that. The British government's dirty little secret is how
00:27:52.200 it's treating Tommy Robinson. But enough people in Donald Trump's circle know about that now,
00:27:58.600 in part from the coverage on Rebel News. I hope that one day, if not Donald Trump himself,
00:28:06.680 perhaps J.D. Vance or Secretary of State Marco Rubio, will mention the case of Tommy Robinson.
00:28:12.760 Certainly, Elon Musk has many times. And then the dirty secret of how the British government is
00:28:18.920 punishing Tommy, torturing him, and committing lawfare against him, will become an international
00:28:24.600 incident, an international diplomatic incident. Maybe that will get the lad out of solitary. We'll keep
00:28:32.440 trying. Anyways, I'm going to go into the court now. I'm going to live tweet it. You can follow that
00:28:38.680 on my Twitter feed. I know you'll be seeing this video after the tweeting is done. But we're going
00:28:43.880 to continue to follow this case because as the United Kingdom goes today, Canada might go tomorrow.
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