Audience with Le God: An interview with Matt Le Tissier
'I think it can be summed up very succinctly. It was my conscience. Simple as that. I knew something was wrong, and I couldn’t sit in silence about it’.
The Gospel according to Matthew and John
‘Things have been revealed to me in the last few years that make me very uncomfortable with the world that I’m living in.’
Is there a connection between Matt Le Tissier’s career-long loyalty to Southampton Football Club — eschewing the chance of a mantelpiece laden with medals to remain loyal to the consistently mid-table club which had made that career possible — and his decision in 2020 to speak out about the Covid crime? If not, what would motivate one of England’s most loved footballers to risk everything for the truth?
Four years ago, the former Southampton and England footballer could have done what the vast majority of sportspeople, former sportspeople and public figures chose to do, and remained silent as a globalist coup seized human freedoms regarded as sacred all his life, but now declared forfeit by authoritarians without authority.
He was doing well. Long retired as a player, he still had a high profile and solid income as a TV football pundit. He could have buttoned his lip like almost everyone else and continued as he was. Instead he chose to stand up and be counted, resulting in massive losses of income and immense public abuse, particularly online. Since then, he has emerged as one of Britain’s most visible, articulate and courageous advocates on behalf of those injured and killed by mRNA poison injections/bioweapons masquerading as Covid vaccines.
In this Honest Conversation with John Waters, he revisits the reasons why he decided to risk everything to speak out at a time when almost no one else was doing it.
Matt Le Tissier — ‘Le God’ to Southampton fans — played 443 times for Southampton between 1986 and 2002, scoring 161 goals. Between 1994 and 1997, he was capped eight times for England. Working as a football analyst with Sky Sports until 2020, he was dropped due to his repeatedly critical public interventions on the Covid psy-op. More recently, he has publicly advocated on behalf of people — including many athletes in their prime — who have suffered serious injuries and death after receiving the mRNA bioweapon poison injection. In time to come, Matt Le Tissier will be remembered as one of England’s greatest ever footballers, but even more as the one who spoke the truth when it was trampled underfoot by ruthless politicians, purchased scientists, unprincipled doctors and corrupt journalists who, adding immeasurably to their own considerable evildoing in the Covid subterfuge, tried (unsuccessfully) to silence those like Matt Le Tissier who stood against the Most Heinous Crime in History.
‘I think what triggered me was how the government felt like they could take so much control over your life, and, you know, stop you from leaving your house! You know; the basic curtailment of your freedoms as a human on this planet, I felt, was quite insidious. . . . I’d always had a basic mistrust of politicians. I’d never felt like, when I saw them on television, that they were genuinely interested in doing good for the people of this country. I always felt like they were somehow in it for themselves, or in it [on behalf of] other people.’
‘There is a certain group of people who wish to have a one-world government. That is the biggest plan, and I think the media’s job is to steer people away with all sorts of stories and scandals and things, to steer people away from that one goal , which is the ultimate goal for those who want power over everybody in the whole world.’
‘It’s difficult to put yourself into the minds of what I believe are probably psychopaths or sociopaths, which I believe is what a lot of these people are. So it’s difficult to grasp what they actually want to achieve from all of this, because these people already have more money than they’ll ever need, more money than they could ever spend. Now, when you get into that position, the only other thing to go for is power — power over other people — and that’s what they get their kicks out of.’
‘I’ve never really deferred to authority just because they’re authority. People have had to earn my trust. I don’t just trust people because they’re older than me! I’ve always had a little bit of a disregard for people in positions of authority who say things that go against what my gut is telling me.’
‘We’d gone back to work and it was the first show back, and thirty seconds before, we were given these badges by the producer — the Black Lives Matter badges. George Floyd was all over the news. And I look at [the producer] and I said, “Do I have to wear this?” Because I knew what Black Lives Matter stood for — I didn’t agree with a lot of their stuff, and I was pretty uncomfortable about it. And he looked as me and said, “It’s probably in your best interests if you do!”.’
‘All my interactions with the public have all been pretty positive. Even back in 2020. Nobody’s ever been . . . I dunno, if it’s brave enough to say it to my face . . . you know — because I’m six foot and fifteen and a half stone!’
‘I’ve been fortunate in my life that I’ve had a pretty strong mentality — pretty headstrong and don’t get affected too much by outside influences. But not everybody is like that, not everybody is as mentally strong as perhaps I am. And I think that’s why we’ve had the society that we’ve had, and the people in charge know that. They know these things and they play on them.’
‘I’ve had a lot of people still in the media who’ve messaged me privately, saying; “Matt — brilliant what you’re doing! I agree with everything that you say, but I can’t say anything because I don’t want to lose my job!”’
‘There was definitely a time when my family were worried about my mental health. Y’know, obviously, when the pandemic was at its highest and I was speaking out, they were very much buying into all the propaganda. But, as the time has gone on and they’ve seen what’s happened and how things have gone on, they’ve definitely been more supportive of me, and definitely don’t think I’m crazy anymore!’
‘I’ve always been fairly comfortable in my ability to survive, to be able to adapt, you know, and to find new ways of earning money to pay my bills. And so to have that confidence as a back-up probably made it easier for me to [speak out].’
‘I’ve managed to find different sources of income. I don’t have the same quality of life that I had a few years ago, but my life is pretty good and I’m very happy with it.’
You know, I had a dream as a kid to be a professional footballer and play for England, and Southampton Football Club gave me those chances, and I did that while I was at Southhampton. And I felt like I owed them. I don’t think I could’ve lived with myself if I’d left Southampton and then they’d got relegated. I think that would have been playing on my mind too much. I felt like it was my responsibility to stay there to make sure that they stayed up.’
‘I never did lose friends, Obviously, I had differences of opinion with people, but what I feel I’ve been able to do is have a difference of opinion with people but not fall out with them. I think we’ve lost that skill in this world — to be able to agree to disagree.’
'But there’s a big pushback against all of this. And I think that they’re going to find it incredibly difficult to implement all their plans. I think they’ll keep trying and they’ll keep trying, but I believe — and I wholeheartedly believe — that they will not win, because their plans are so radical that enough people will stand up and go, “No! I’m not doing that! I will not comply!”’
‘I certainly feel that there has been an awakening of sorts over the past few years. I’ve certainly seen a change in attitudes of quite a lot of people around me, in regards to how they now view government, how they regard the police force, how they view doctors. And there is definitely a change afoot. It’s happening slowly, but I think it’s definitely happening. So I do have hope for the future, because I do honestly believe that there are many more good people on this planet than there are bad. And I think that, when everybody realises just how corrupt things are in high places, I think that is when we get to have a bit of a tipping point.’
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