Posted on 01/22/2024 9:08:23 AM PST by PJ-Comix
British YouTuber Brendan Kavanaugh has a channel in which he livestreams himself playing Boogie Woogie music on public pianos at various locations. A few days ago, Brendan was merrily playing a piano at a shopping area when he was interrupted by a group from Communist China. The CCP handler of the group then informed Mr. Kavanaugh that he is not permitted to broadcast his video because the CCP group could be seen among the many bystanders watching him play in a public area. What you see here is the resulting confrontation which basically pitted a totalitarian thug against a free man who only wanted to play his music in public.
Mr. Kavanaugh continued to play his piano after the local police informed the Communist Chinese group that he had the right to publicly play the piano and record as well. It seemed to be a happy ending but as you can see in the postscript video from the following day, things took a very bizarre and dark turn.
You can see Mr. Kavanaugh's full video of him playing his piano while being interrupted by the CCP at his YouTube channel link below. The ironic thing is that although the CCP thug handler of the group did not want that group to be recorded, as a result of the weird confrontation that video has over 2,500,000 views as of this writing.
"Police Called To Stop Filming During Piano Livestream"
Gotta love the police woman telling him he can’t call the communist chinese for some reason... there is no hope for Western Civilization, it is committing suicide
I remember all the lefties with their “Free Tibet” stickers and I’d always confront them.
“Free Tibet from who?” I’d ask.
It was fun making them squirm and eventually forcing them to admit that Tibet needs to be freed from communism.
Interesting, but not surprising.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.