On May 15, 2026, Tommy Robinson interviewed three French women from Collectif Némésis the night before his Unite the Kingdom rally in central London. The next day, May 16, tens of thousands gathered for the rally despite the British government deploying £4.5 million in police and banning 11 foreign speakers from entering the UK. During the event, the three women walked on stage wearing burqas, then ripped them off to reveal Western clothes underneath. The moment was captured on video and spread globally within hours.
The post argues this wasn't spontaneous — Robinson had interviewed the women the day before and knew exactly what was planned, choreographing the stunt to produce maximum viral impact. While counter-protesters chanted death threats and 43 people were detained, the footage that dominated worldwide coverage wasn't the arrests or confrontations — it was the burqas hitting the floor. The poster contends that every government attempt to suppress Robinson's platform since 2010 has only amplified it, and the £4.5 million spent containing the rally ultimately funded his most viral moment to date.
Only when native White brits start to organize does the govt ramp up spending on police. Not for the rapes. Not for the assaults in the streets. Not for the rioters waving foreign flags bitching about a hundred year war a thousand miles a way. Only when the native Brits have had enough
What you watched with the Collectif Némésis women pulling off burqas at the Robinson rally was not spontaneous. It was a 97-year-old technique used with precision.
In 1929 Edward Bernays, the man who invented modern public relations, hired debutantes to march in New York's Easter parade smoking cigarettes. He called them Torches of Freedom. He pre-positioned photographers and framed a commercial objective - selling cigarettes to women for American Tobacco - as a women's liberation moment. The image traveled everywhere because it was designed to.
The structure is always the same. Engineer a single theatrical image. Attach liberation symbolism to it. Make sure cameras are ready before it happens.
Bernays drew on his uncle Sigmund Freud's insight that symbols bypass rational thought and hit emotional response directly. The object almost doesn't matter. What matters is what it represents in the audience's unconscious.
If the technique was powerful enough to make an entire generation of women start smoking cigarettes, it's probably powerful enough to make women tear off their burqas.
The Robinson team ran this play by the book. The interview the night before was Bernays' pre-positioning step - establishing narrative context so the image would land with maximum emotional charge.
The British government spent £4.5 million providing the backdrop. A real Aikido move.
Once you see the Bernays template you cannot unsee it.
Of course it was staged. Did someone think it wasn't? 🙄 Personally, I think it was a good move.
Right? Sounds like a dumb gimmick. The question is who tries to benefit from such blatant jokery.
Dear Father God, protect Great Britain and every country from the "demonic" invaders, in Your Son's Name, Jesus Christ.
Amen
Amen
I worked in Kuwait after the first Gulf War. As soon as the seat belt signs went off, so did the burkas.
On May 15, 2026, Tommy Robinson interviewed three French women from Collectif Némésis the night before his Unite the Kingdom rally in central London. The next day, May 16, tens of thousands gathered for the rally despite the British government deploying £4.5 million in police and banning 11 foreign speakers from entering the UK. During the event, the three women walked on stage wearing burqas, then ripped them off to reveal Western clothes underneath. The moment was captured on video and spread globally within hours.
The post argues this wasn't spontaneous — Robinson had interviewed the women the day before and knew exactly what was planned, choreographing the stunt to produce maximum viral impact. While counter-protesters chanted death threats and 43 people were detained, the footage that dominated worldwide coverage wasn't the arrests or confrontations — it was the burqas hitting the floor. The poster contends that every government attempt to suppress Robinson's platform since 2010 has only amplified it, and the £4.5 million spent containing the rally ultimately funded his most viral moment to date.
SOURCE: https://x.com/USronaldcarter/status/2055962226096259477
So what; the symbolism is the same. Oppress women under the political system of islam
Only when native White brits start to organize does the govt ramp up spending on police. Not for the rapes. Not for the assaults in the streets. Not for the rioters waving foreign flags bitching about a hundred year war a thousand miles a way. Only when the native Brits have had enough
What you watched with the Collectif Némésis women pulling off burqas at the Robinson rally was not spontaneous. It was a 97-year-old technique used with precision.
In 1929 Edward Bernays, the man who invented modern public relations, hired debutantes to march in New York's Easter parade smoking cigarettes. He called them Torches of Freedom. He pre-positioned photographers and framed a commercial objective - selling cigarettes to women for American Tobacco - as a women's liberation moment. The image traveled everywhere because it was designed to.
The structure is always the same. Engineer a single theatrical image. Attach liberation symbolism to it. Make sure cameras are ready before it happens.
Bernays drew on his uncle Sigmund Freud's insight that symbols bypass rational thought and hit emotional response directly. The object almost doesn't matter. What matters is what it represents in the audience's unconscious.
If the technique was powerful enough to make an entire generation of women start smoking cigarettes, it's probably powerful enough to make women tear off their burqas.
The Robinson team ran this play by the book. The interview the night before was Bernays' pre-positioning step - establishing narrative context so the image would land with maximum emotional charge.
The British government spent £4.5 million providing the backdrop. A real Aikido move.
Once you see the Bernays template you cannot unsee it.
https://vintagenewsdaily.com/torches-of-freedom-photographs-of-women-smoking-publicly-during-the-easter-sunday-parade-in-1929/
This is what I like to see! Big props to those women. Hopefully the people there can continue the momentum.
Shouldve burned the burqas like those pieces of shits bur our flags
They are going to blame the French. LOL