 Game on Tesco, don't talk to her. Who is your superior? Tesco's finest what? Tesco's finest torture chambers, don't touch me. Oh, we're going down into the gas. We're going in any corner. All right, so basically what we're going to be doing is going to, we're going five minutes down the road. There's a big supermarket headquarters there. We're going to distribute signs before we leave so you can leave with your signs. I want to try to like walk inside with the screams blasting. So everyone is clear about where we are going? Yeah, see you off the stairs. My name's Aaron. I'm the head of the future protest. This is private area. Can you do it outside? Yeah, we can. But can you give me like five minutes? I just want to tell everyone why we're protesting in an old outside for you. That's a good deal. I'm sure pretty much everyone knows. No, no, no, they don't. I'm sure they know. People of Tesco, pigs are being tortured in CO2 gas chambers and you... I retrieved this footage myself. Can you hear it? We can hear it. You can hear it as a bunny? Is it funny to you? You have to come off private property. They're being tortured. 90% of pigs are being tortured. In CO2. Please, you can come this way. Come this way. Tesco, torture pigs to customers without telling them. Aren't you just as concerned? With the fact that pigs are being tortured? This is private land. Who are you, my friend? I'm the head of security here. I'd like to let you know formally now, both of you, you have your opportunity to make a message. You're on private property. This is private property? It is. Where's the police? The campus is private, the police are on their way. OK, cool. OK. So where's public land? The road that brings you in. Are you telling me that all of this is private land? It's all private property. Shire Park is private property. And when's the police coming in? They're on their way now. Excuse me officer, can you please come over? The boundary of public land will be the edge of the business park. So this road isn't even for public? No, this is part of Shire Park, which is private land. OK. There's nothing in here that's open to the public, actually. No, this is private land. This is all owned by Tesco. As far as I've been informed. So you don't know? I don't know what's private. So the security told you it's all private? Yes, that's right. So you don't actually know? I've been informed by security and I was sent to the security office. OK. So I should take the security's word for it too? I believe so, yeah. OK. So it's time to leave now, OK? Can you start someone from Tesco to come and talk to us? I'm from Tesco. No, and we're talking about people from the officers that make decisions. It's not going to happen today. Be very clear, that's not going to happen today. Just calm down, bro. Just relax. Just relax, bro. We are disrupting them because pigs are being tortured to death. Did you not hear us? I've heard your message. OK. But I've been very clear with you. Yeah, but why are you afraid? We're not going to harm you. We're not going to leave. We're going to go to public land. That's fine, yes. OK. I think you should try to do that. I don't need to listen to you. OK, what I am telling you is you need to leave. Yeah, I'll just move off of Tesco's land. Well, that's private. Because you've asked me to leave Tesco. It doesn't matter. The private landowner has not asked me to leave their land, but you've asked me to leave your land. This footpath is not yours. It's not ours. OK, great. Right, it's private. It's still private. Hello. Apparently this footpath does not belong to Tesco. OK, so I can still see Tesco from here. This is great. Can anyone hear me? Actually, the sound travels better from over here, which is great. Thanks to our security. It echoes throughout the entire complex. And we want the entire complex to know, and the world, that Tesco are supplying the customer with pigs who have been tortured in CO2 gas, and they're not telling the customer. I think the customers would really like to know, so they could make an informed choice. Shame on Tesco. Shame on Tesco. Shame on Tesco. Shame on Tesco. Do you even give a damn who supplies you with pig flesh? Do you even care the animals in your name? Every supermarket is a count of transparency. As chamber, look at customers as who may. Intelligent beings. I wonder what's over there, man. We should blast some screens in there too. Shame on Tesco. Enough of me. Listen very carefully to me now. Shame. Disappointed. Happy animals on green grass. Tesco are fine in this building. Knows that have been tortured to death in CO2. Intelligent. Hi, officer. Is everything all right? So, just guys on the speech here, just... What about... We want to make it very clear that now is the time to vote Tesco. And private security. Now is the time that you need to leave the site, OK? It's gone on now for a while. No, no, no. I was told we don't have to. I was just told by the plane that the police said we don't. I'll leave it. The police say that this is... We're not going to arrest them. We can keep going. Just like normal. Keep going. OK. What are you talking about, dude? So, why are you lying to us? I'm not lying to you. I'm not lying to you. Is this footpath private? Yes. Who owns it? Your owner? Are you the owner? Are you that landowner? I'm the security manager on site. Where's the landowner? Are we going to be arrested if we... Or charged if we stay here? They've asked you to leave because it is private property. I'm asking you a question. Yeah. Are we going to be arrested for a crime for standing here on the sidewalk? Why didn't I answer it? Excuse me, officer. Who is your superior? Who is your superior? Sir. Is this your superior, sir? Yeah. So... Excuse me, officer. Is this your superior? Yes. OK. I just want to know if we're going to be arrested for standing on the sidewalk. That's what I want to know. No decision to be made about any police action. Yeah, but I want to know if I'm committing a crime right now. You're not... You're being very mysterious and dismissive right now. No, I'm being dead set. See, I'm filming you. You're being mysterious and dismissive. I just want to know if we're committing a crime. It's not my decision to take action. If you want privacy, you have to create your own privacy. Right, it's not my decision to take action. OK, I will wait for my bosses to decide what action needs to be taken. So I can't decide or I can't tell you. OK, well, OK. Well, I just want to know from the superior... It should be very clear to you, as a police officer, if we're committing a crime. I don't know if I'm committed currently. Hello, are you the superior? Are we going to be arrested for standing on the sidewalk? No, but that might change the situation. Can you tell us? Can you please let us know if we're about to commit an offence? So we'll definitely just... We'll just move. Because he's telling me I'm committing a crime, which is why I went to you. No, no, no. You're committing a civil trespass. Yeah. So that's why we... You speak civil matter. Civil matter. It's a civil matter. You've already lied to me. What are you lying to me about? You're saying that we've got to leave the property. We don't have to leave the property. Shame, shame, shame on you! Shame, shame, shame on you! Can I help you, sir? No, it's OK. No problems, yeah? You'll be willing to go and speak with Tesco. All right, if they had a spokesperson come out to talk with me, we'll leave. What level of person would he be satisfied with? The other day, Sainsbury's director came out to us and I showed her the footage and she went away. That's what this sound is, isn't it? Sound out... Well, yes, it's a sound out of a CO2 gas chamber that I recorded. That's the end. We know people are going to buy the bacon, but they should be able to buy it in an informed way. All right, OK. So if we want someone from here to make a pledge or something, that they are going to be transparent with their customers. Right, OK. That's it. So you're not calling for the wholesale withdrawal of the product you're selling? We don't think that that's practical. I would like that. I don't want to picture me killed at all. I'm with you, but I'm just trying to, as I said earlier, I'm just trying to get my head around it. At that minimum, they should tell the customer that what CO2 does to the pigs at the point of purchase, people should be able to read that and go, or there's a sign there just warning you customers that if these pigs are being caused immense suffering and fear and agony and distress, every scientific study done on this and put that for their customer to see. They call it happy animals. So if someone from Tesco wants to make that pledge or look into that for us, then we'll leave. That little farm logo, that farmer-shored track, the thing, isn't that meant to represent approved... No, all those animals go to the gas chamber. RSPCA assured, red-tracked are animals. RSPCA assured, pigs go to the gas chamber. Right, and is... 90% of all pigs go to the gas chamber and Tesco are being supplied with gas chambers. That mean? Yeah, humane wash. Is the method of slaughter, is that an approved method or an unapproved method? It's a legally approved method. It's a legal slaughter. It's assured by the RSPCA. And it's been exposed. So all them red-tracked stuff that we just spoke about, if they slaughtered pigs in this fashion, we'd still get that stamp. We'd even get an RSPCA stamp. Right, okay. The highest welfare animals that they sell, Tesco's, Finest, whatever it is, free range, organic. 90% of all pigs are killed in gas chambers. Free range as well. I'm really sure that Tesco supplied 100% of pigs that have been slaughtered in CO2 gas chambers. I made a statement about it in 2018 that that's what they were trying to phase in. I don't know if they've achieved that goal. Right, okay. But they should at least tell the customers. Right, right, right, right. I'm with you. I'm not with you, but I understand. I've got my head around that. Yeah, okay. We'll continue to protest. Wow, isn't that peaceful? Isn't that peaceful when you don't have the desperate begs for mercy from the pigs who are being tortured to death in Tesco gas chambers? Is it uncomfortable hearing those screams? If it's uncomfortable for you to hear them, imagine how uncomfortable it is for the pigs who have to experience the torture. Do we have to force transparency and show as many of your customers as possible the torture chambers that supply you? Have you seen the footage that came out of Pilgrim's torture chamber? I released it nine months ago. It's also on Amazon Prime right now for everyone to see. Wouldn't it be a great gesture for customers to put out a statement, to put some accurate labelling on the products, to put a sign in the meat aisle, saying, hi customers, if you don't want to pay for torture, you better not buy these pigs here because they have, by every definition, been tortured in CO2 gas chambers. What's picnic to find out more? I was down there talking to Tescos and I said, ultimately, one of your aims here is to have a meeting with someone and that you want to speak to someone in the public relations or public affairs or someone like that in relation to the labelling and the message that you're here for. That can't be done today, but they're happy to take your information, if you take their information, and you can have that conversation by email or something to arrange a later sit there. Yeah, look, I'm happy for them to offer that. I'll accept that. But also, I would like them to actually do that. Not just say they're doing that so that this goes away. When you say do that, you mean honour the meeting? Honour the communication, at least. Honour the communication. If they don't honour the communication, we'll have to continue protesting and doing what we're going to do and I have no way to enforce the... To make that happen. I know, I'm just ready. Tesco, you've got to understand. I will protest like all of the people who are complicit in these gas chambers, right? If they say they're going to communicate about it and they don't, then I don't have any reason to stop protesting. I'm obviously protesting for a reason. It's just up to them. I would like them to say, hey, yes, at Tesco, we are going to start letting our customers know about these torture chambers, that we're lying to little children and parents and stuff about what they're consuming. I'd like them to say, at Tesco, we're going to take a stand, and we're going to be the first to not bow down to the pork industry and we're going to actually put proper labelling on. If they did that, I'd be like, you know what? We're going to be the first people from buying bacon, but you can at least inform them, you know? That's it. So this documentary and your ultimate goal here, AIM, is here, it's that Tesco inform their customers. My ultimate goal is that people stop murdering animals. But that's nothing here nor there for this discussion. This is specific to the supermarkets and their complicity in their marketing. Tesco, obviously they have culpability, complicity and responsibility. The other thing that I wanted to pass along was earlier we were talking about the red farm and the red tractor and RSPCA and all that, right? If they change their stance on the most humane way to slaughter an animal, and I appreciate that's a bit of an oxymoronic sentence, they won't. They will incorporate that into their supply. They won't change it. I know they won't. They're not going to. There's no alternative. They've known this has been horrifically cruel for 20 years, at least. Zephyra's own farm welfare council told them to ban it 20 years ago, 2003. They have it because there's no alternative. They don't have an alternative. The electric stun method is worse. They say it's worse in many ways. So I'm saying there isn't an alternative but educate. People should be informed about what they're buying because right now at Tesco, it says Tesco's finest and there's all this grass and pastures and humane labelling. That's the problem. So if Tesco say to a customer, these pigs were killed in CO2 gas which is scientifically known to be aversive and they experience asphyxiation and agony and pain and distress, are you happy to pay for that? Now if the customer wants to go, yeah, then that's the customer's decision. Similar to the warnings you get on cigarettes. Cigarette packets. If you want to take my email, you can give it to them and see if they accept it and if they want to give me a contact email. I'm happy to take your email. It's joeycarbstrongatgmail.com Now that's a correspondence address for them. I've given them one. If they want to give me a correspondence address they probably can get one easily from their website. But I would like a personal one or someone that is willing to engage with this topic. If Tesco were to give you the personal email of someone to communicate with you, would that be enough for you guys to move on from this site today? Yeah, if you come back with a correspondence email of someone who's got some power, we'll take that. I'll email them personally. We'll leave. Telling that building as a human being who has a heart. Tell me what your conscience says when you watch those pigs suffer to death in those CO2 gas chambers. Shocking. Torture. Disgusting. Cruelty. Your customers deserve to be informed. Shame on Tesco! Shame, shame, shame on you! Shame, shame, shame on you! So once we have an email... Have you got the email? They're going to get me a business card of someone to provide you with that. We don't need to know anything more than that, do you, mate? I was just trying to figure out... You're trying to get intelligence, that's what you're doing. I'm trying to figure out if I can go for lunch. If we've got the business card then we can leave the ball in Tesco's court, that would be great. While we wait for the business card we will let you listen to the screams of these six-month-old pigs as they scream and beg for mercy and terror. What do we have here? So I've got the resilience director. Group security and resilience director. This is a security guard. This is a security guard. This is a joke. This is what I've managed to get. What I've been explained is... They're making a mug of you, mate. That's the security officer. We already spoke to group security already. So what they want is me to speak to a security officer so they can do the dirty work for him and tell us to piss off. I can't speak on their behalf. I've had conversations with you. We just talked to the play security. What he's saying to me is he's part of the senior management team at Tesco. OK. And that he will have that conversation with you as we've discussed. With the view to have a meeting. Yeah, that's fine. I think we can actually find better emails than ourselves if we just looked online. We're looking for some willingness from Tesco to have the conversation. We can hook him into the email. We can BCC him in so they feel safer with their security officer in there. But it's just the bloody email. What do they think we're going to do? Hack their email? This is what I'm going to do. I'm going to take this card. We're going to actually send Tesco an email and we're going to see how they respond and if they do respond. And that's me giving my little bit of good faith here. Acting in a bit of good faith. So right now we're going to leave. We're going to leave. That's mugging us off a little bit though. That's just saying that is mugging us off a little bit. They're too high up to talk to the peasants, are they? They're too high up to talk to the peasants, aren't they? They're too high up to talk to the peasants. But that's alright. I appreciate it. It's not directed to you or any security officers here. The security officers have been chatting to us and they've had to take the brunt of this when really they shouldn't have to take the brunt of this. The people who are in charge of making the decisions should have to face this. But they don't. They get to sit in their comfortable office. We're reasonable people. We're here for a serious issue and we'll take that gesture and we appreciate you liaising today. We're appreciating for having our right to protest upheld. That's it. Yeah, that's it. I appreciate that. Thank you. We've taken a card, Tesco. It's to be a little bit transparent here. We have a card from that group security and resilience director. It doesn't sound like someone who has the power to make a difference here at Tesco. But we will take this as a gesture of goodwill. And maybe something will be done. But you can expect an email and I will VCC mat in. Okay. And we'll be emailing some people at Tesco to see how they respond and if they do respond. And you will know exactly who it's from. Don't tell me you won't know who it's from. Okay. You have my email address. Click on Amazon Prime. Type in Pignorant. Okay. Inform yourself about this issue and please do respond to the email. Thanks for your time. It's a bit of a stitch up. But we're going to take it from face value. We're not naive. We're not naive. It's a security doing security via email. That's what it is. We've been cooperative. As cooperative as angry protesters that are angry about torture can be. I think. It was okay. It wasn't all too bad. Okay. Thank you mate. Are you Matt? This is your card is it? So you'll be liaising with us about this. So what I'm going to write. Send me an email. I will then connect with the public relations team. Yeah. The public relations team doesn't have their emails public on Lincoln. What I'm not going to do. So we're really clear. If somebody comes here and walks around our lobby with megaphones demanding to speak to the public relations team I'm not going to make that up. That wasn't just our demand. We're just protesting as well. We're just letting the test go on. I'll make sure that I get you liaised with the email. And I'll make sure that you get connected too. We'll be CCU in it. We'll be CCU in. Yeah. Your security officer. It's got nothing to do with you really. This topic's got nothing to do with you. It is when you're here. The topic that we're concerned about has literally nothing to do with you. It's out of your hands. We can just do that on LinkedIn mate. We can get everyone's email on LinkedIn. Everyone's got a public email here. How do people contact them? Yeah. We're only doing this as a gesture of good will. Yeah. Because we thought maybe if we... I gave my details. You gave yours. I don't even know if they told you to give your details or not. Or you just don't know. So we leave as a little bit of a trick. A little bit of a mug off a bit. But I'm just going to take it at face value. Yeah. Anyways, thanks very much. Can't say we won't see us again. Can't say you won't see us. Or hear those screams again.