This film was shot between June and August 2010.
Snowy a political activist has spent 2010 traveling across the country, campaigning for his organization as well as staging protest after protest in an effort to raise awareness for his cause and make his voice heard at the highest levels.
A noble endeavour you might think but how will you feel when you learn that the organization he speaks for is known as the English Defence League, a controversial street movement with alleged far right links. Many of their protests have resulted in high levels of violence and some suggest that the hardcore elements of this street movement are nothing but racism and fascism.
Snowy (an alias derived from his first pet, a white rabbit), finds peace on his llama farm where he says he is pushing the cause for the future of his children. As he opens up, he talks off-camera about a dream he had eight years ago in which his son is fighting with an army called the Northern Alliance against an Islamist uprising in a bitter English civil war. He believes events have unfolded in a way that are taking this country toward that conclusion and he already talks of imagined daily bombings and supposed guerilla warfare on the streets of Britain.
What will you make of him as you learn, joining him on a boat ride in his picaresque hometown in Yorkshire, of his beginnings as a crack user on the streets of Manchester and a troubled history littered with jail terms.
To understand how a man can allegedly reform himself from this to a political and religious character that is held in reverence with hoards of people across the country the filmmakers have set out on their own journey, following in the wake left by Snowy. Documenting him on his campaign trail through countless gloomy pubs in recession-ravaged towns to plush hotels in secluded holiday spots, they experience not only the truth behind the EDL and Snowy but also the state of their own underreported society.