Tommy and the Squaddies (Image - Tommy Robinson on Facebook)
One of the young soldiers in the photo above has been discharged from the army after the Muslim Council of Britain complained. Why are the Muslim Council of Britain being allowed to meddle in the affairs of the British Army?
The above youtube video is a secret recording of a British Army Major threatening young soldiers for being associated with Tommy Robinson who he calls an extreme far-right activist. This is Major Farley (Foul-mouth Farley) of the British Army passing on a message from the Chief of the General Staff, Mark Carleton-Smith. This common purpose puppet said the word "Fucking" 22 times in 2½ minutes.
Major Farley seems incapable of conducting himself in a manner befitting an officer. His foul-mouthed ranting brings nothing but shame on the Yorkshire Regiment in which he serves.
He says in the audio clip "we fight the Queen's enemies all round the f****** globe, we fight people who oppress other people's freedom of speech and thoughts because they have got a f****** narrow-minded view of what the world should look like."
Yet here he is attempting to suppress the thoughts and freedom of speech of the soldiers in his own regiment. What a hypocrite!
There is nothing in the army rulebook that says soldiers cannot be photographed with a celebrity.
The soldier who made this secret recording is a very brave man who puts Major Farley to shame.
As for Tommy Robinson being far-right, this is based on media lies. Just because the media labels somebody far-right it doesn't means it's true.
There needs to be another Battle of Britain... this time with the traitors within.
The British Army has made itself a laughing stock recently over its latest politically correct recruitment videos.
Prayer time on patrol: Still frame from Army Recruitment Video - Youtube
In the latest video a Muslim soldier is shown washing his face and using a prayer mat while his colleagues sit in silence and wait for him. The caption 'This is Belonging' appears as the soldier gets up again and the squad moves on.
Richard Kemp, who led British troops in Afghanistan, said in an article in the Daily Mail that the Army's new recruitment campaign showed an Army 'being forced down a route of political correctness'.
He said: "What it clearly is doing is trying to appeal to minorities who may or may not be interested in joining the forces. "And by doing that, it's neglecting the main group of people who are interested in joining."