Posted below the talk David Icke gave while standing in the Haltemprice by-election - the one that re-elected David Davis on a podium of civil liberties.
Icke exposes this position as a sham - Davis's own campaign website was funded by a member of a consultancy that has been persuading governments worldwide to take up ID cards.
More shocking is the discovery that Shami Chakrabarti, the often-quoted head of Liberty, is a member of several think tanks that promote British-American relations with funders such as GM giant Monsanto.
Icke is brilliant at exposing the shallowness of the UK civil liberties debate, a stage show to distract as the bandwagon marches on to ID cards and eventually chipping.
Also impressive is his exposure of 'The Agenda' and the group of people seeking to assert increasing worldwide control. He talks about how The Agenda is designed to split right and left, black and jew, gay and muslim as well as nation states - dissolving their natural unity into forms more easily manipulable.
Conspiracy theories are a big turn off for many people but here is man who has evidently done a substantial quantity of research and whose past predictions are turning out to be true. The video stretches our concepts of what takes place in the world and for this alone deserves to be seen.
For those that find it a bit hard to swallow, consider the following analysis of UK politics (my own interpretation, not Icke's):
A few years ago the Guardian relaunched itself and drifted rightward, hiring former Times editor Simon Jenkins and his counterpart at the Telegraph Max Hastings as prominent columnists.
At the same time Cameron’s Tories began espousing an agenda that many Guardian readers found palatable, indeed a life that is promoted relentlessly in the lifestyle section.
The Guardian openly supports Labour but with a mish-mash of unconvincing columnists such as the clueless drum-beater Polly Toynbee. The headlines shout ‘Brown’, the content speaks for Cameron.
Is this another case of divide and rule?
Remember this takes place in one small theatre with networks of control that make it easily replicable over and over again.
Watch Icke and decide or yourself.