Britain’s `Royal Society of Arts’: an Opponent of Truth and Free Speech?

Dr Vernon Coleman





I used to be a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts but the RSA expelled me without a hearing or a debate or a chance to properly defend myself. They expelled me for daring to tell the truth about covid, for being unfairly ‘mugged’ by BBC television and for daring to question establishment lies.

I have no idea who complained.

Maybe someone from the security services. Maybe someone from the Government. Possibly someone from the BBC. Whoever it was they didn’t approve of anyone telling the truth about covid – and trying to save lives. (For the record I never monetised any of my videos and never charged a penny for access to my website – which carries no advertisements.)

And whoever it was I hope I’ll be forgiven for wondering if they and all at the RSA are fully vaccinated. If they are I wonder if they realise yet that they may well be on a remorseless one way journey to brain decline and to dementia and to heart disease and to turbo cancers.

The more vaccinations they had, the quicker the end will come. They will be willing victims of their own ignorance, blind obedience and hubris. Maybe if they’d been prepared to open their minds and listen to an alternative view.

The RSA said they were expelling me because ‘of my views and my involvement in the BBC panorama programme’.

That’s what they said.

This seemed to me to be a bit like arresting someone because they’d been mugged.

I was never invited to appear on the programme they mentioned which was, inevitably, a one-sided ‘hit’ job, criticising those of us who were daring to tell the (provable) truth.

The RSA didn’t seem concerned that the BBC, a propaganda mouthpiece for corporate and political liars, boasted that it wouldn’t ever give airtime to those questioning vaccination ‘whether they’re right or wrong’.

Everything I said and wrote about the covid fraud was factually accurate and it becomes ever clearer that everything I warned about was correct.

Indeed, things are worse than even I feared.

I wonder sometimes if the intellectual terrorists at the RSA feel just a little embarrassed.

Even if I had been wrong, what sort of organisation expels one fellow because one or two other fellows don’t agree with something they have said?

Does everyone in the RSA have to agree with one another? If so, who makes the rules and why don’t they publish their manifesto of acceptable beliefs? Or is freedom of speech a commodity only allowed to a special few? Or is it just Truth Tellers they exclude?

My expulsion from the RSA was, at the time, rather a low point. Early in 2020 I was banned by Facebook, Linked-In, Twitter and the rest of the social media. YouTube and other platforms ejected me for telling the truth. Publishers abandoned me as though I had the plague. (I’m still banned just about everywhere.) A serious attempt was made to kill us both – with deep cuts being deliberately made to the inside of our car’s front tyres, when it was parked in a locked, secure area. Seemingly endless and often absurd lies on the internet (stirred up by Wikipedia and Google) had led us both to think about suicide. The endless unjustified abuse made it difficult for me to leave the house or to meet people and made us both seriously depressed. The abuse meant that even workmen refused to come and do essential repairs on our home. We had little or no support.

I will never forgive the RSA because their wicked censorship helped depress us both.

Antoinette was also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. In disgust and out of solidarity with me she resigned the day I was expelled.

Everything I said and wrote was accurate. Assuming there is someone there who can read, the RSA must know that now. But no one at the RSA has had the courage or the decency to apologise and say `we were wrong to expel you for sharing your professional views and telling the truth’.

What a gutless bunch.

And as far as I know not one of the Society’s thousands of Fellows (FRSAs) objected to the RSA’s actions.

My conclusion is that the Royal Society of Arts is, like other organisations such as the BBC, an oppressive, establishment opponent of free speech and truth.

Copyright Vernon Coleman March 2026





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