 That's a weapon. Yeah, all right. Fight them all up. Come on, fire. This is the time to call upon the bodies of the world and to show them up for their inconsistencies and for turning from bulldogs into lackeys into poodles. This is the time, however, for all of us to change tack. We spent, I think, far too long defending an innocent man for leaking the dirty secrets of power. We protested for too long against the right to destroy Julian's body to silence his voice. We have pleaded for far too long so that they stopped torturing a man who dared reveal to us the crimes against humanity perpetrated by our governments in our name behind our backs. I also believe we've spent far too long warning the good people out there who don't give a damn about Julian. But first they came for Julian, then they're going to come for others that reveal their dirty secrets. Finally, they will come for those apathetic people who today don't give a damn about Julian and then those apathetic citizens of the world will have no one to defend them. We have used too much energy trying to impress journalists who fail so spectacularly to support Julian that in so failing they are jeopardizing their own profession. They are mutating themselves. They are allowing themselves to be added to some hit list. They are consenting to their own emasculation. So enough, enough of wasting all this energy. If we are truly in the business of allowing unalloyed truth to be revealed, to have the final word, we must make the transition from defending Julian, from warning against the dire consequences of his extradition for him, for us, the world. From explaining to the apathetic that their apathy equals their powerlessness. Going on from all this defensive posture to turning the tables on the criminals that are behind his persecution, we must turn the current court case into a trial of those who ordered young soldiers to kill civilians to maim and to murder journalists. To shroud whole communities into pain and tears. We must turn Julian's prosecutors into defendants and allow the grandest of juries out there, the demons, to pass fair judgment upon them. This is not hard to do, as such we said before. Thanks to WikiLeaks, the evidence is out of fingertips. It is available to everyone. Is this not why the guilty are demanding Julian's extradition? Is this not why the murders are plotting to entomb Julian in a supermax coffin for 175 years? I hope, Roger, you won't mind it. If I quote from your poem, The Trial, part of the war, something that comes below what you said. So the evidence before the court is incontrovertible. There is no need for the jury, this jury, the Belmers jury, to retire. In all our years of judging, we've never heard before of someone so deserving of the full penalty of the law that someone are those who are persecuting Julian today. So, friends, comrades, we can do it. If Dimitrov in his trial, which let me remind you, took place in Nazi Germany itself, would turn the tables against Gering and Goebbels. Surely we can turn the current court case into a trial of the military industrial national security complex. Noting that even the Nazi courts gave Dimitrov greater opportunity to defend himself, to speak in his own defense than Julian is getting inside the glass box. We can nevertheless use what is left of liberal democracy's instruments to take the fight to his accusers with a glorious, a magnificent, a righteous, a collective we accuse you. For this reason, I salute this Belmers tribunal. I salute today's event. I salute all of you who are part of it, either as speakers or as active observers and watchers. Above all, I salute Julian for having sacrificed so much so that we can accuse those who truly deserve to be accused as is our want, as is our duty.