 Felly ar gyfer yw'r cyfnod yn gyfawr, rwy'n meddwl i'r wneud yw'r gwylliant. Felly mae'r cyllidau yn ein rhan o'r byd neu'r cyrraffaeth, a'r cyfnod a'r bobl o'r hyffordd arall, o'i mwyn gwybod yn mynd i'r llwyddoedd a'r amser a'r gweithio ar gyfer y mynd i'n gwneud. I want to thank everyone for watching these videos, by the way, for getting in touch with me and telling me about things that Gary wrote to me last week to tell me about his ambition to run a marathon. He said, you're absolutely right, it all begins in your head and he never thought he would run and complete this marathon, but he did. So, thanks to everyone for getting into it and for letting me know the little hobbies that you've taken up during the lockdown. Now, I have taken up quite a few, the stuff I should have done, I wanted to do anyway, and now that I spend a lot of my time travelling around the country, because we can't do that now, so I've taken up things that I've always been interested in and always wanted to do, and now I've found myself with a bit more time to do it, and I'm making myself have that little bit more time to do it as well, to relax. It's really, really important that we relax, and particularly with the time that's in it and not just lockdown, but what else is going on? We've absolutely entered the age of censorship, and we all know what's been happening with Donald Trump and having his being blocked from all the mainstream social media, even though Hamas and all other Jihad-y terror groups, among others, are still on there, and regularly actually do incite violence. And another brilliant tweet from Titania McGarm on my all-time favourite accounts on Twitter, pointed out that, now that the big players, the Googles and the apples and Amazon and all the rest, are getting together to, or have gotten together to take parlor offline, and sadly have been successful in it. The other alternative was Gab. Now, I do have a Gab account, and I never really took to Gab, to be honest. I found Parlor, but I'm going to go back on it, I'm going to give it another try. And apparently they have had a lot of traffic since this thing, this kicking Donald Trump off social media happened. People have been going to Gab. But back to Titania's tweet, she said, they keep telling us, go on the rules of Twitter, go make your own platform. So Parlor did that, and now they've gotten together to take Parlor offline. Unbelievable. So we really are living in an age of censorship. So I would encourage people, and I'm going to go back on Gab myself, I'm going to put a little bit more effort into Rumble as well. So I'm going to put videos onto our Rumble account and onto our party YouTube account, the ones I can risk on party YouTube account, because I don't want to risk that account. But we do want to get people over to Rumble, and we've got a little something planned, which I can't tell you about. At the moment, you will find out fairly soon to try and get some people over on to Rumble. So I'll give you a bit more information about that as time goes on. Right. So what have I been doing hobby wise to escape the madness? Oh, right. You remember last week, I told you about, I had taken up building cities from Lego. Always allow your inner child to come out. Your inner child is very wise and will help you relax. So I built so far, I built London, San Francisco and New York, and I had Paris. I got Paris over Christmas. These things aren't cheap, so I won't be able to afford a great deal of them. But they are completely addictive. They're so very relaxing. So I'll show you in a sitting, a single sitting last night. Here's where we got to. Isn't that fabulous? Now obviously the Eiffel Tower is incomplete. I'm actually a little bit difficult. It's not easy to put together at the Eiffel Tower. I'm finding that one a bit of a struggle. But it's completely addictive. I could sit for hours and hours and hours doing this. I highly recommend it. Like I say, it isn't cheap. But if you do have the means, I highly recommend it. And it's very, very therapeutic. Something that's a little bit cheaper that I've now decided to take on this task. We're not a little task. I do a big task actually. I like art. By the way, the drawing that I started, sometimes you have to admit defeat. Move on to something else. This isn't working. You'll find your things. You'll find it. Like Lego. I'm absolutely loving it. Drawing didn't quite work out so well. I have to accept the reality, the fact that I am not a good drawer. Unlikely ever to be. But there are other ways. I like art, but I know nothing about it. I particularly like Vincent van Gogh. Probably one of the reasons for that is because when I lived in Amsterdam, there were two places I spent a lot of time sort of havens for me. One of them was Anne Frank House where I went to a lot. The other was the Van Gogh Museum. Beautiful, enormous museum in Amsterdam. So what I found was a canvas of Starry Night by Van Gogh, which is here. And you can see that it's got little letters and numbers across it. So what you do with it is stick this, when you pull that film off, it's sticky. And these tiny little beads, you stick on by number and by name. Make your own Van Gogh if they still are a bit. So that's going to take me a bit of time and effort, but I think will be very relaxing and focus the mind. When I was building Paris last night, I was thinking about Paris and with this Van Gogh thinking about Amsterdam and thinking about our beautiful ancient continent and how I sadly believe that it is in many ways being lost. It isn't lost, but we are at risk of losing it if we don't fight for it. And I do mean fight for it. We've had a lot of virtue signalling this week about fighting, fighting for something. I don't feel I should have to qualify this every single time, but I will. Once again, very few people actually want what happened on Capitol Hill, these notorious scenes now on Capitol Hill. But the point is, nobody is listening. There are millions of Americans who genuinely believe and with good reason that they have been deprived of their rightful president and have had an anti-fair Black Lives Matter type, in other words, a complete and utter hypocrite who threatens everything that the United States is supposed to stand for, that they have instead had this guy imposed upon them instead of their rightful president. And no one's listening. The media, because it's not a media, it's an arm of Antifa, the publication of the anti-democratic movement, so represented now by Joe Biden. If you take away, and nobody's listening, the courts aren't listening, the media's not listening, so if you take away people's voices, it is our nature, it is our history. We can virtually signal all we like, but the history of man is war. And people will resort to violence if they are deprived of every other means. Now, I hate violence. I even hate raised voices. I don't like conflict, but nor will I run away from it. And to be clear about one thing, I'm a Democrat. I still believe our way out of this age of censorship is through democracy. And I fully intend to devote my life to democracy. In fact, I haven't devoted my life both to Great Britain and to a defending democracy in Great Britain. However, to be clear, I am willing to fight the death rather than become a slave. And that is the reality of it. And I think a lot of people feel the same way. But we are at risk of losing Europe. And as I was building this last night, I was thinking about some of the memories that I've got. And we're using it to be clear through immigration. Mass, mass, mass, mass, mass immigration. So let me take you through a couple of little things. I've been to Paris a few times. Building this brought back some memories. Let me know what everything is. This is the Arc de Triomphe. This is the Champs-Elysées. This is the Grand Palace. This, of course, will be the Eiffel Tower. And this is the Louvre. And you've got to love the little triangle there outside the Louvre. This is the tallest skyscraper in Paris. And it escapes me. Mont Paris is something. It escapes me the name of it now. But it made me a little bit. It reminded me of the sheer history and the romance of the history of our amazing continent. I remember the first time. The first time I went to Paris was a present for my 20th birthday. Oh, my 19th birthday. I think it was my 19th. By the family that I was au pair. I was an au pair in Germany. And the family that I worked for, for my birthday, bought me a trip to Paris, which was absolutely lovely. My first time there. A few days, it was a few days after Princess Diana died in Paris. And we did a sort of a tour bus. And the tour bus took us to the tunnel where Diana had died only a matter of days earlier, which was open and open to traffic, which I found really bizarre. But there was still a lot of press floating around. And what have you. And I went to the Louvre that day. And this, again, takes me back to the art. I love art. I just know absolutely nothing about it. I think it's a great journal maker of history and historic events and historic change. And I went to the Louvre that day and I saw the Mona Lisa. And that absolutely blew my mind. I don't know if you've ever seen it, but it's much, much smaller than you think. And a bit like the crown jewels, one of the most fascinating things about it is the security around it. So I was thinking about Europe and I'm thinking about how we have to fight for it. And we have to fight against the mass immigration, which is changing the face of it completely. And we have to fight, in order to do that, we have to fight against the censorship, of us who wish to save and preserve our ancient continent and stop it turning into something completely unrecognisable and something that isn't ours. We are going to have to fight for that and we need to get up, go out and take back democracy, which for the last couple of years hasn't been easy to do because we haven't had. We didn't have any elections last year and it's looking like we're not going to have them this year either. So it's getting much, much harder. What else have I got? A little Christmas present I also wanted to show you. Do you remember this? I remember this back in. This is one of the nicest Christmas presents I've had. I've got this as a Christmas present this year. It's got 900 and something games on it from the 80s and 90s and including the original Mario Brothers, the only video game I've ever, I'm not a gamer by any means, the only video game I've ever played from start to finish is the original Mario Brothers and now I have it again and I did have a little play of it and I thought actually I'd remember more than I did but at the same time it is amazing what your brain will retain. So I'm looking forward to doing that. We used to do, back in the 80s, go to arcades and play Space Invaders and Pac-Man. Pac-Man is on there. For some reason I can't find Space Invaders on there. Unless I'm missing it, there are over 900 of them but I can't find Space Invaders on there but Pac-Man is on there and I'm looking forward to playing that. That really does take me back to the 80s but of course Mario. Myself and my sister got this as a joint present back in the early 90s or probably late 80s actually and as I say it was the only game I'd ever played from start to finish and I've got it now again and I can't wait to get back into it. One other thing that I've decided to do to take up or to have a look into at least is this, the art of Japanese living. I had two major bucket list countries left. One of those was India and the other is Japan and I went to India in, I can't remember what year it was, was it 2019? Was it 2019? I think what was it, 2018? Anyway, I went to India to work on a volunteer at an animal shelter. Oh, and by the way, the Greyhounds. Oh, I love the Greyhounds. I put up a video on Parley, which is now gone of course. Last week I went in to have a puppy section and these are months old only, these dogs, months old and it was heaven. You walk in and they just swarm at you. Absolute heaven. Jumping all over you, completely covered in mud, which I love. So it's going amazingly and really these dogs, these Greyhounds are absolutely wonderful dogs and I already want to bring them home with me. There's one particular dog, Mary Ann and she likes to go in and give her a bit of a cuddle. She likes to get down and go on her back for belly rubs and I'm already completely in love with this dog and I've already told them that I want her to come home with me. I don't know what Jenny and Steph, you will think of that but probably not great, probably not much, especially Jenny. Jenny doesn't like dogs that are bigger than her. Jenny didn't have the best start in life. She came from Puppy Farm, she came from Puppy Farm that was so bad, it was closed down by the police. So she didn't have much socialising. When she came to us she had four different bacterial infections in her lungs and so she was on several different sets of antibiotics from very, very early in her life. She couldn't get her inoculations while she was on these antibiotics and because she couldn't get her inoculations she couldn't go out until we couldn't bring her out for a walk or out to play until much later than she needed to because she was really, really ill. So she didn't really get the socialising that she needed. The Puppy Farms take them away from their mothers really, really young so she didn't get the teaching from her mother, she didn't get the socialising. So she's not a fan of dogs, obviously she knows our other dog, Steffie. She lives with her, they're best mates actually. But when we go out for walks, Jenny is terrified of dogs that are bigger than her which is heartbreaking. So I don't know if I'd ever be able to get a greyhound into this house but I would really love to. But anyway, back to this, I've decided that I'm going to have some really interesting things in here. And Jenny's philosophy is really, really interesting. And they've got, there's food in here, there is, they're bathing, proverbs, furniture, floral arrangements across the bonsai I'm going to have to get myself a bonsai. So this is something that, a little challenge that I'm setting myself for this year is to learn a bit more about Japanese culture and practice it and see, because I'm absolutely, absolutely fascinated by Japan and even origami. I mean it's just so much wonderful stuff in here that I'm really fascinated by and I really want to get into. So I'll let you know how I get on. I've got to start on this week. The first one, icky, icky guy. I don't know whether I'm pronouncing that correctly. It is the finding what gives you a meaningful life. And this is the fourth chapter and this is the sort of stuff I love, as you know. So Japan is on my, the last major, not the last one, I've got, well, now that I've done India, India and Japan are two places I really want to see. But of course I'm not able to go five minutes down the road at the moment, much less to Japan. So instead of saving my pennies to go to see Japan for myself, I'll instead spend the year trying to learn and practice in Japanese culture, which I'm really looking forward to. Okay, books. What have I been reading this week? I've been reading a book this week called, which is recommended to me by one of our supporters in the United States. And I'm going to do a book review on this Friday, because I really do think that this is where we're going. And it's The Case Against Socialism by Rand Paul. And it's probably the best book I've ever read on this topic. I'll just give you an idea of some of the chapters. Socialism destroyed Venezuela. Socialism, rewards, corruption, interfering with free markets. Capitalism is more moral. Income inequality does not ruin the economy or corrupt government. Some controversial stuff is really, really, really interesting. And it's some of the best that I've seen on this topic. It also talks a lot about where America is going in terms of open advocacy for socialism. It talks about Bernie Sanders and others. And they're, like I said, they're open advocacy of socialism. They mention a lot in the United States, the socialists in the United States talk a lot about Scandinavia, and how Scandinavia is an example of a high standard living, well-off society that is, according to them, a socialist society. What's interesting, and what they don't mention, is that Scandinavian countries themselves deny in any way that they are socialist countries. And the reason they deny being socialist countries is because they're not socialist countries. Yes, they are high-tax countries. And yes, their welfare system is very, very generous. But they make their money on the capitalist markets just like everyone else. Norway, Sweden, Denmark are very successful countries, yes. Well, let's see in a few years what the mass immigration does to them. But they are not socialist countries and they fully deny themselves being socialist countries. But yet they're used in America by socialists there as an example of successful socialist countries. They are all free market economies, all Scandinavian countries. Part three of this book is entitled A Bootstamping on the Human Face. And this was really controversial. It goes into Nazism and that old argument of whether or not the Nazis were socialists. He argues that, yes, they were. He goes on to talk about how socialism doesn't create equality and it expects things from humans, which are simply not human. It's a brilliant book. It's a brilliant book. So I'm going to do a full book review of that on Friday. Tomorrow I won't be doing, we won't have our normal half past seven stream tomorrow night because instead I'm going to be on with David Vance tomorrow night. But I'm also going to do a video tomorrow. And Simon, thanks Simon, sent me and this is very relevant to the age of censorship that we're living in. Legislation introduced a parliament to protect us from so-called online harms. And given what's going on at the moment, the last thing I think we need is the Tory government calling for and legislating for even more censorship on the internet. So I'm still reading through this. I'm reading through the legislation itself. I will get a review of that up by tomorrow night. I am going to go back on Gab. I'm going to put this out on Twitter in a few minutes actually just to try and drum up a bit of support for this. There's a book coming out in the United States called Unmasked. And it's by Andy Noe. Now Andy Noe is, I've never met him in person, but I've talked to him many, many times. He's a really, really great guy. He has been documenting, bravely facing, and he's faced violence for doing it, bravely facing up to Antifa, particularly in Portland in Oregon, for quite some time now and documenting it all on Twitter and elsewhere. And he has written this book, Unmasked, how Antifa is the radical, I can't remember the subtitle, Antifa's radical plan to destroy democracy. Now in Portland at the moment there is a group of Antifa protesters outside a bookshop, a bookshop which was going to stock this book. And they have been protesting outside this bookshop for days wanting this book banned, threatening this bookshop not to stock this book. There's a video on Andy's Twitter account of a woman masked up, standing outside demanding this book be withdrawn while thinking, genuinely thinking, she is protesting against and opposing fascism. You cannot, you genuinely, you can't make this up. They haven't got a clue what they are talking about. Not a clue, absolutely not a clue. They throw around these big words like racism and fascism without an iota of what they are talking about. They whip up violence all the time. They engage in violence all the time and with the both implicit and explicit support of the very same Democrats who are currently trying to get Donald Trump impeached for inciting violence, something he did not do. This is the age we live in, everything upside down and inside out. However, as you very well know by now, I strongly believe that we, the Democrats, the people who believe in democracy must and will win this. If we do not, if we do not fight for our democracy, it is inevitable, inevitable that the result will be violence. Because, how do I know that? Because that's always been the result. Throughout this, this isn't the first time that we've had to, that democracy has been taken away from us. It's not the first time that our freedoms have been taken away from us. So, throughout our past, people have both fought violently and non-violently to get their democracy back and they have succeeded. But if we lose democracy, it is inevitable that violence will result. And it will be the fault of those who take our democracy away. The Democrats, currently, trying to impeach Donald Trump for something he hasn't done, have and do, condone and support the violence of Antifa. Now, support Andy. Andy, no, he's a really good guy, support him. His last name is spelled N-G-O. Many of you will probably know him. They desperately want this book banned and that makes me want to read it ever more. And I will be ordering it as soon as I can. Okay, so where are we? Okay, so let's get on with our three words of wisdom. I'm going to go through this book until we finish. I'm going to finish this book. I'm going to take another book. Another book with similar things. So this is the book I've been reading for the past some time. Words of wisdom, inspirational quotes and thoughts on optimism. And we're up to number 15. I think there are a hundred and something of them. So we have a way to go. Okay, so number 15. There are no shortcuts to any place worth going. Beverly Sills. Now, sadly, I don't know who Beverly Sills is. She's right about this. Whoever she is, she's right about this. This is again similar to what I was, what I talk about every week really on this, on this video. Is the instant, the culture of instant that we live in now. And people wrongly believing that if you can't succeed instantly, you can't succeed. I actually believe that to build something of substance, even in the age of instant celebrity, to build something that will last enough substance can't be done instantly. Easy com easy go is a very apt phrase. And I also believe that in the age of social media, given this extraordinary level of control and power that the Silicon Valley billionaires hold over us, if you build yourself on social media, you have given your enemy the power to destroy you. So I'll say it again, and again, and again, and again, because it's true. If you want to succeed, you're going to have to work hard, which is good for you, and where you make friends and meet people, and that's what life is all about. So I'll read quickly the explanation on this. One of today's biggest misunderstandings is that people want a quick fix. Three steps to happiness, three keys to financial freedom. The problem is there is no quick fix, and thinking that there is leads to more on happiness. Now wonder we have higher depression and suicide rates than ever before. Happiness is possible for you, financial independence is possible for you, but you have to be ready to do the work. Be patient and fail over and over again. I talked a little bit about that last week as well. I think it was one of these Dragon's Den people who was speaking about bankruptcy. He'd previously been bankrupt, and you can see that a lot. People are going on to be millionaires and billionaires having failed businesses behind them, or Gordon Ramsay having failed restaurants behind him. In many respects, a lot of people would argue that failure is actually in order to learn how to succeed. You have to at least, you don't have to I suppose, but what you can do is take failings and learn from them and not make that mistake again. You will have to take rejection over and over again, but in the end you will succeed. If you waste your time looking for the shortcut, you will be doomed. Yes, you might win the lottery, but did you know that statistically you have a better chance of being struck by lightning? Stop searching for the shortcut and start working on your goals now. Your future self will thank you. As I said, the idea that hard work and a long journey is something to be feared, I completely disagree. Hard work is good for you, genuinely, genuinely good for you. It's good for you mentally, it's good for you physically, and you meet people and you build alliances and you make friends, and you learn lessons, and it's all round enriching. Okay, the sweetest pleasure arises from difficulties overcome. Publius cyrus, again, I don't know who that is. We all want a life fee of problems and difficulties where everything goes our way and we get everything we want. Unfortunately, few of us have a life like that, except on social media. That's an interesting point. I shouldn't go into more detail on that. But stop a minute and think back. Wasn't it the difficult times that shaped you most? Didn't you learn life's most important lessons from the difficulties you had to overcome? Didn't your confidence grow every time you managed to overcome obstacles and solve problems? Aren't difficulties and overcoming them exciting? Yes, they are. Weren't your biggest losses the seeds for your greatest victories? Remember, it's the biggest storms that make the best sailors, not the calm waters. Similar to the first one, but deserves repeating if you ask me. Okay, next one, number 17. I think whether you are having setbacks or not, the role of a leader is to display a winning attitude. That's Colin Powell. Science has proven that our attitudes are more important for winning than talent, genius or anything else. Setbacks are a normal part of life. They will come sooner or later. As the leader of your life, you must maintain a winning attitude, knowing that you will prevail in the end. You have overcome setbacks before and you will do it again. Having a winning attitude means that even in the face of a loss, you are convinced that you will win in the end. Sometimes learning from a short-term loss can set you up for an even bigger long-term victory. These are all along the same theme, obviously. But that point needs and deserves to be repeated over and over and over again. It is your attitude that will determine whether or not you succeed. It is your belief that will determine whether or not you succeed. And it is your ability to take things that go wrong, to take failings and learn from them and even, and I can see that the next ones coming up are going back to my old favourite, gratitude, even be grateful for them because had they not happened, had this mishap not happened, this failing not happened, you wouldn't have learned the lesson you needed to learn. So even be grateful for your mistakes and your failings. I've started to read this week. Now I'm going to go through this in one of these videos as well. I've started to read this week the classic Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People. It's quite a short book but it's absolutely fascinating and I'm learning a lot from it. It is six parts to it and it's essentially how to treat people. It's a guide how to treat people, how to treat people properly, how to be an upstanding decent human being and treat those around you with respect and dignity and that is essentially what this book is about. And it's excellent and I'm going to, when I'm finished here I'm going to go and read another chapter of it before I make dinner. OK, and that's it from me for this week. Thank you everyone for joining us. It has to go up onto the Forbidden account because my own account. Once again for criticising the police for not doing anything but grooming gangs. I've had my YouTube account suspended until April, which is a real pain. There was something else I wanted to mention to you before I go. Oh yes, thanks to Martin who sends me all these wonderful videos and one of them that I've seen is a guy in America. I'll post it on Twitter now since I'm done here. A guy in America who is giving a talk at a conference about lockdowns and masks and I'll not say too much in order to run the risk of getting into trouble with YouTube, but do have a look at it. He shows data proving that after the introduction of masks into countries where they were introduced, the curve of coronavirus cases goes up and up and up. Countries that didn't mask, countries that didn't lockdown, like Sweden. Sweden is a great example. It's always the word he even said himself. One word, everyone, all the pro lockdown and the pro mask people, there's one word they hate hearing and one word is Sweden. At Sweden's, you can see its graph is pretty much stable going across, across, across, across, no lockdown, no masks and compared to countries with lockdown and masks which are going up and up and up and up and up. It's, again, I watch a lot of this stuff. I go through, I wade through and I'll tell you about the best of them. Lastly, Rumble. I put up a video on Rumble last week, the cult of COVID. Have a look at it. I review a book called The Cult of COVID which, again, of all the books I've read on this, that's probably the best one. This video which I'll share on Twitter now is probably the best talk I've seen given on the lockdowns of masks. Again, I'm not going to say too much here because I don't want to get into trouble with YouTube. Right, that's it. I'll be back. I'm on with David Vance live tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. There'll be a video from me about the latest legislation aimed at keeping us from online harms, in other words, censoring people. Friday, I'll be back with a book review of the case against socialism. Over the weekend, I want to have a little chat with members. We've got a, for members watching this, we've got a committee meeting this week. I will be contacting you all about what is, what we are going to decide to do as a party about what is going on in terms of elections and what have you. So thanks to everyone for sending in ideas on what we are going to be doing. This will all be discussed on Friday. I'm going to spend a good chunk of the weekend communicating with members about where we are, what we're doing and how we need to get out of it. We will fight for our democracy by using our democracy. OK, that's it everyone. Thanks very much for joining me. I shall see you tomorrow night live with David Rans at 8 o'clock. Take care, see you soon.