 ...bydd y dynod o'r ddweud, i ddim pan hiwn i gweithio sy'n cyffredin... ..dydd y bod ni i'n clyw i'r dynod eich cyffredin oherwydd mae'n grannu i fynd chi! Yn y peth yn ddweud â nifer gan yr hyn, yn rwyf iddyn nhw mai'n byddon y dynod. Yn y peth, mae'n ddim gallu cael y ddechrau'i gwneud i ddweud! Yn ei hwn, yna ydych chi'noliaeth, yna y dryf yn ddwy raised ymddangos! Maen nhw wedi ei ddweud yn ei ddweud sy'n hynny. ond ymddoedd yma? Ni'n gweld ar y dad i hwn. Mae hynodog yna dda ni – tataeth genny, hwn dechrau'n wahanol. Mae'n gweld ar y dad i hyn – ymddoedd yma, mae'r aelod o'r gwneud. Felly ar gweithio'n gwomp functional yma y cwmp yma. Yn ni efall Буд yn y'r unwyddiad sydd o'r fiğrhaid, o'r ffodd i'r ffordd? ac yn dweud y cael fymlwys i gwyddiad mewn masigol i gydithio ddarluniau, addwn ni wedi'i cael y bydden yn fawr i fainlwysu eu profiad. Bydd y bydd i'n dda i'n holl o'r cyhoedd ychydig, o'r cyhoeddwch, ac mae'n ddim bod yn ei wneud wrth ddweud eich bod ni'n cael ei bobl yn cofodol i ddechreu eu parti. A byddai'n dweud iddyn nhw ar y digwydd. Os ychydig hyn i'ch cwc a fyddwch yn ddweud, fel y p däru, mae teachers ry��라고 yn wneud rhywbeth ymlaen. Mae gennym d ownas penderfyniadol yn yr cynhyrch Daisy You have every right to do so and nobody should be able to stop you. Free speech is absolutely.... I find it ironic that those who want to silence, those who want to silence, are claim to be fighting fascists. Isn't the first step that people take when they're truly off fascists is to silence the opposition. I don't want to silence anybody. I don't want to stay out of a real conversation. Ac mae'r bobl mae gennw'n hyn o'n gwneud hynny'n gwybod, ma'r byw ffordd o'r ffordd i'w zionio'r ffasys a phryg o'r pwyllai gwrdd, mae mwyn ffasys! Mae'n cyrraed oherwydd yr ysgol, mae'n fwy o blygu eisiau unrhyw o'r ddefnyddio a'r ddefnyddio. Mae'n cyrraed oherwydd o unrhyw o unrhyw o'r ddefnyddio, mae'n cyrraed o'r ddefnyddio o'r ddefnyddio o'r ddefnyddio, ..mwneud os yw un peth o bobl addodd. Sarwch gennym yn 17,先 ddim yn Ymysgol iconol a gyda gyda phablaeth. Mae'r ffordd yn maes ar hyn o y gyn amwys o hyn neu ddim yn y Gwyrdd. Mae gennym yn y gwybod yn y Gwyrdd. Mae gennym yn Ymysgol Merthyr 14 gan 5. Mae'r gwneud hynny yw wedi bod y gwneud yn amser. Mae'r gwneud yn arwt y gwyrdd. Mae'r gwneud yn y gwyrdd. Mae'r gwneud yn y gwyrdd yn y gwyrdd yn y gwbl. Ma wnaeth eich platform yw'r arbennig. Mae'r iawn cyd-flet tentinol. Mae'n ddiwedd. Mae'n rhan fyddais drwy'r rhan dim yn Yw. Mae'r tanhwylo'r entysivu ei wneud o'r ffordd yw'r gryffydd. A oeddwn eich ymwlad y Yw yw, Yma yna ddim yn y platform. Mae'n ddim yn y Yw. Ond, y ddigonwch o'r rhain yw y yw Yw mae'n meddwl yw'r rhain, yna ddim yn ddiweddur y stathiaith i'w rhan ddylu'r maen nhw yw, a dweud o gwybod i ddweud eich gyfrannu cymryd yn cael ei ddweud. Yn ddechrau'r Cymru, dwi'n meddwl i chi, dwi'n nodi'n gwneud i'n fynd i chi'n gweithio'r ddweud i gael gael allu'r ddweud, mae'n oed i gael ei bod yn y ddechrau. Mae'n ddweud i'n ddweud i chi. Mae'n ddechrau'n gwneud i chi, dwi'n edrych chi'n gweithio gyrddwyr, mae'n gweithio'n ddweud i chi, doesn't just require government to be free speech? No, this is the difference. If they came in here and protested, if they turned their back on us, or if they booed us periodically... I would say that they should be in the room. Absolutely bring them in the room. I want protesters like that, right? Who let us speak but who expressed the fact that they disagree. What we were not allowed to do is silence the other party, right? So what they are doing is shutting us up i fewn i'r gweithio gyda'r Fawr, ac mae'n ddiddordebeth yng Nghymru, sy'n ddiddordebeth ydw i'r gweithio gyda'r Fawr, sy'n ddiddordebeth ydwe, sy'n ddiddordebeth i fewn i ddim yn ddigonio. Ydw i'n ddiddordebeth y Youtube yn ymlaes o'r cyllid y dylliannol, a'r ddiddordebeth yma, felly, mae'n cael eu cyflosion ar ddechrau. Ychydig i'n fflaes i ddim yn fflaes i ddim yn ymlaes, We can say you can stick with the spirit of a university and I agree with completely. We can say you can stick with the spirit of YouTube if you can't sue them. You can come up with your friends not to use them, but you can not use the government against them to promote your education. That's interesting. I don't know whether it's going to work and also the biggest YouTube experts. I have no idea. I hope it doesn't because I still think the courts in the US respect property rights. So if you come out into my house, I get to decide if you say something obnoxious, I can keep you up. And certainly a university has a right, if we say something obnoxious here, they have a right to keep us up. Whether it's right to do so in the context of university and institution of learning in which there's supposed to be a free exchange by years is a separate question. Then the legal, the proper legal right to decide what is said and what is not said in a private forum. Take this as a private forum, they have a right to do it. I don't oppose them on legal grounds. I oppose them on, hey, this is university. My ideas are not that nutty. Let's have a discussion if you think so. Let's debate them. Let's discuss the ideas. And I'm open to your ideas. Be open to my ideas. After all, universities shouldn't have free speech zones. Because we're here to learn from one another. The whole point is to expand your mind, to expand your knowledge, to be challenged, to be provoked. Not to just accept the status quo. So that would be my argument. Not, hey, it's the first amendment. No, the fact is I don't have a first amendment right at Harvard or I don't know if King's College is a state school or not. But if it was a private school, I don't have a first amendment in private school. I think the difference is that when people are being excessively legalistic, they're not following the principle that they are supposed to be as matters. That's what we're referring to, I think, about the spirit of it. Because just because you can do something doesn't mean you should do something. Now, this is a good example. Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should do something. This is not no. I disagree. I think this is great. They disagree with us. They think we're bad guys. And they're making their voices no. Now, if they were in the room not letting us speak, that would be wrong. But they're outside there. I actually think it's great. I think it's right. They really think we're bad people. I mean, it's sad that they aren't coming to the room and actually listening to us and stuff, they're actually really nice and all the points of view are not crazy. But if they want to stand there and they want to let the world know that they disagree with what's being said right now, although they have no clue what's being said right now, it's funny. They have every right and I actually think it's a good thing. I mean, I actually think it's good that audiences boo people and so on. Because, you know, just like you clap when somebody says something chewy, if somebody says something you disagree with, you're done. That's okay. I agree because we have bad bones as well. That's absolutely true. My point is like, for example, before we ended up coming in, we had a legalistic argument with the organisers of this event and with the faculty. The reason they're so many empty seats is because there are people who have been told that they can't even let them in. Students here and for some reason there was a crossfire somewhere in the administration and they're not allowed in. And it's no real reason to not let them in other than we have a rule and we're going to make you follow it. And as soon as you start running a society down these highly legalistic lines, then it's not about the principle, it's not about the spirit of the thing, it's about what you can do and what you can't do. And so there's no reason for someone who wants to do something that isn't necessarily something that should be done, but it is within the boundary of the law to just do it to you as hard as they can. Because what's stopping you? Why shouldn't it? So this is why I'm against this kind of oppressively legalistic interpretation of absolutely every rule to be heard for you. And I realize that might be controversial, but maybe, just maybe, we can also go back out and have a conversation. I think you're right in what's really sad is the fact that in that sense the protests were won, that is it's interesting that the rule, we only found that about at least the rule, after the protest was put up in the Facebook page. That is in that sense, it appears, whether this is true or not, there's a question of fact, but it appears the administration gave into the protest. That's what the rule will see, that's what the protestors will see. And that's sad because then they now have, you know, they have more incentive to do more of this, and more incentive to disrupt more often. Because they want a small victory, that is, there are a bunch of people standing out there in the cold who came from all over London and were not allowed in India, even though originally we told them we were allowed to come in. And what a victory it is, I mean, the objectives are some of the most effective people at deconstructing fascism, you will ever meet. And then I've spent the last three months of my life being to the old rambun per brass, constant on my mind. Why they would think that we are the people to protest is beyond me. But at the end of the day, we're the best at gods. But never think there will be people that actually want to protest on these stages, which is just how... Because the old rambun per brass is the colour of the city. But it's not the old rambun per brass, the old rambun per brass would beg for a platform to be used. But it's fascinating, I find it fascinating, because I'm constantly attacked by the old rambun per brass online, as being this wind that's not realising what's a race or whatever, constantly rated as some kind of lefty by the old rambun per brass. The left attacks me as a racist and a fascist. And actually, after this exited event, I don't know if you know about the exited event that happened here to go, where some people tried to silence me. Finally they're going to knock out the security...