Hello everyone.

Hello everyone.

Create a powerful spoken-word protest speech delivered with urgency, moral authority, and controlled anger. The voice should be calm but intense, building steadily into passion. Tone: intelligent, grounded, uncompromising. Pace: slow at first, then accelerating with emphasis and deliberate pauses. Theme: global corruption in governments and institutions sustained by public labour and taxes. Emphasise that people in power—politicians, celebrities, police, institutions, schools—have failed to protect children. Make clear that continuing to work and comply financially rewards corruption. Focus on the 13th of May as a decisive moment: women withdrawing consent by removing children from school, not working, and disrupting the system. Frame this as ethical resistance, not chaos. End with a clear call to action: support women, protect children, withdraw consent. Emotion should peak at urgency: this moment is now.

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Lyrics

Hello everyone. My name is Storm. I am standing here today because silence has become complicity — and participation has become permission. This message is for women. And for every person who understands that protecting children is not negotiable. Across the United Kingdom — and across the world — corruption within governments and institutions has reached a level that can no longer be dismissed as isolated failure. It is systemic. It is entrenched. And it is protected by money, power, and our continued participation. Every tax pound you pay. Every hour you work. Every system you keep running. All of it feeds a structure that rewards those at the top — even when those same structures harbour, enable, or conceal the abuse of children. We have seen it exposed time and time again. Not only in politics. But among celebrities. Within law enforcement. Inside institutions. Inside schools. People placed in positions of trust — using that trust as cover. And when those crimes surface, what happens? Delays. Denials. Non-disclosure. “Investigations” without consequences. Because the system protects itself. And as long as the system continues uninterrupted, those in power have no financial, political, or moral incentive to change. That is why what women are doing on the 13th of May matters. On that day, women are withdrawing their participation. They are removing their children from schools and nurseries. They are refusing to go to work. They are refusing to provide the unpaid labour that holds families, communities, and the economy together. This is not chaos. This is leverage. Let me make this very clear. In the UK, the economy generates roughly £7–8 billion per day. Women make up nearly half of the workforce, and they perform the overwhelming majority of unpaid care labour that is never accounted for in GDP. If even a fraction of women withdraw for a single day — If schools close. If workplaces stall. If childcare stops. The government does not lose opinions. It loses billions of pounds. And when money stops flowing, power listens. That is why every major social shift in history involved disruption. Not violence. Not destruction. Withdrawal. Refusal. Collective action. This is not about harming society — It is about exposing how much society relies on women, while failing to protect their children. And I want to be absolutely clear about this next part. I am calling on men and transsexuals to stand with women. Support your wives. Your mothers. Your sisters. Your daughters. Your friends. Your aunties. Do not undermine this action. Do not minimise it. Do not distance yourselves from it. Stand beside them. On the 13th of May, do not go to work if you can avoid it. Take your children out of school. And spend that time where it truly belongs. Help your neighbours. Check on the elderly. Support the vulnerable. Feed the homeless. Care for those who are struggling. Turn away from sustaining corrupt systems — And turn toward protecting human life. Because this is what this moment is really about. Not ideology. Not politics. Not division. But children. Children who cannot protect themselves. Children failed by institutions meant to keep them safe. Children whose suffering has been buried under reputation management and legal immunity. I fully support the actions of these women. I am proud of them. Proud of their courage. Proud of their clarity. Proud of their refusal to accept a system that demands obedience while endangering children. This is not extremism. This is moral adulthood. And history does not remember those who kept systems running. It remembers those who had the courage to stop them. Stand with women. Protect children. Withdraw consent. Thank you.