 But first of all, you're going to play the role of outrage correspondent because we've got our own troublemaker in the building Aaron Bostani. You've probably seen him being denounced from many a quarter in the last five days. So Ash, I'm passing over to you. I mean, so let's have a little look at some of the bruja that you've managed to generate. You have angered the Daily Mail who described you, I think, as a top Corbin attack dog, disrespecting troops, etc. We should have a little image of that. There we go. Yeah, attack dog saying people saying that you should be trying out of the party. Yeah, I know that marble does look great, doesn't it? Very, very pleased with our design team for that. You were disavowed on Ridge on Sunday. This is the only time I've watched Ridge on Sunday. So thanks for that. Nea Griffith, Shadow Defence. NATO Nea. NATO Nea, she loves a bit of NATO. Who was saying that your membership of the party should be called into question. You shouldn't be in it. And you also... Obviously I didn't watch it because while I watched Nea Griffith on Sunday, but I shouldn't be a member. What rules were broken? Well, no, she said the party will do it. She said she'll leave it to the people who do the procedures to work it out. How have I broken any rules? This is ridiculous. Well, save the... Save the biggest of the dogs till last. Yeah, go on. You've managed to rile up none other than Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, Tom Watson, who tweeted about you, who has distanced himself from your comments, your appalling statement. Be fair to him for a second. Yeah. Be fair to him. You did call for him to resign just in August. So I think this is a bit of a back and forth between the two of you. So, Aaron, here's your chance to tell us. And also a lot more has happened in between then. So it wasn't just the usual suspects in terms of the right-wing media. It wasn't just senior figures in the Labour Party. You also had some mad fascists look up an old address of yours and say that him and his friends would hunt down any leftists who were engaged in what he called a disrespectful speech. You'd like to freedom of speech, but disrespectful speech, he would hunt us down. Yeah. Scary times. He was Facebook-living it and he was doing a call out and I just posted a comment and I said, look, if you think calling for better aftercare for 13,000 homeless veterans is so bad, then I apologise. He hasn't replied. He's also broken the law, I think, by... Pretty sure it was incitement. Yeah. I mean, whatever. I've looked at some of his gym picks. Why are you taking selfies when, you know, you can't even bench more than 190kg, silly. Silly. I really hope he's watching. So, Aaron, now's your time. Defend yourself. Why do you hate our boys so much? No, I made several points and I was critical of the poppy appeal, not the act of wearing a poppy. I don't think wearing a poppy is racist. My dad wore a poppy three days ago. Most of my friends and family have worn poppies. I don't think they're all racists. I think the poppy appeal, I said, I think my exact words were, can tend towards military triumphalism, which, yes, of course, would be racist. I mean, military triumphalism by a formerly colonial power, you know, necessarily will obviously have those kinds of overtones. A few other things as well. I felt like it was in quite bad taste. The idea that the First World War and, of course, yesterday was commemorating a century of the First World War ending. The idea that was a war for freedom, I just find quite perplexing because in 1914 British working class men couldn't vote. German men could vote after 1871. Women under 13 this country couldn't vote until 1928. And, of course, the year after the First World War ended, there was the Amritsar massacre in India where 1,000 Indians died. It was seen as the birth of Indian nationalism. I mean, were they freedom fighters, the people that were shooting those people at Amritsar, or, you know, when the Brits got rid of Mossadegh in 1953 in Iran, a democratic government, was that freedom? Or when they oversaw regime change in a range of countries across the Arabian Peninsula, really up until the 70s? I mean, you still have it softly in terms of assisting the regimes over there, you've got Bahrain, Saudi Arabia. So, those were my misgivings. And yeah, I mean, I thought I was pretty clear, but obviously when the sort of the shot to the heart, the silver bullet was obviously these people condensing a 59-minute video to 70 seconds, the things I've said about veterans and so on. Clearly, if your grandma had cancer, you wouldn't be like, oh, thank goodness there's this charity looking after her. You'd be like, well, I pay my taxes to the state to do this. So why, if this country loves its military so much, why is it relying on a charity for aftercare?