Britons Can No Longer Take Freedom of Speech for Granted
People in Britain are living under ever tighter restrictions on freedom of expression, with new limitations appearing year after year. That is precisely why Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s attempts to present himself as a defender of free speech provoke such anger across social media.Howard Beckett: Jeremy Corbyn’s balanced reflection…
Jeremy Corbyn’s balanced reflection on Andy Burnham gives us two undeniable truths: ‘Private money in health leads to less care & more profit’ ‘Private money in defence will lead to more wars & more profit’ Why are these truths so hard for politicians to see?Aaron Bastani: A leadership challenge *the day after*…
A leadership challenge *the day after* a kings speech makes a mockery of the system, & the monarch (I’m a republican, but I don’t think Streeting is!) Labour leadership hopefuls do appear to be this universally stupid, so it’s possible he’d torpedo his political brand like this.Dominic Bradbury: So if I understand this correctly…
So if I understand this correctly, Labour are seeking a fully engineered seat win for Andy Burnham so he can return to Westminster and run as leader, as in: they're taking a massive shit on British democracy again to cheat the system. Yet Boris had to resign over cheese ... 🤔David Kurten: It is repugnant that a bent British court…
It is repugnant that a bent British court tried 6 defendants for criminal damage but is going to sentence them for terrorism without the jury being informed. This breaks all norms of due process and a fair trial, and must not be allowed to stand.Pat McGinnis: So if Tommy Robinson didn’t help…
So if Tommy Robinson didn’t help crush the BNP by continually calling them ‘racist’ ‘fascist’ & ‘anti semitic’ the BNP may have been able to take power & actually stop more rapes & sexual assaults by the grooming gangs BNP were in place with many elected officials ready to go
Martin Daubney: BREAKING…
🚨🚨BREAKING: Jess Phillips QUITS as Safeguarding Minister - which will surely now trigger more demands for Starmer to go Keir Starmer said he wanted to be Prime Minister for ten years. At this rate, will he make it through the next ten hours? TUNE INTO @GBNEWS FOR ALL THE LABOUR PSYCHODRAMAPhilip Proudfoot: Living in Britain is watching the media…
Living in Britain is watching the media smear and vilify good people who want to make positive change, while they celebrate and platform far right goons, funded and backed by almost comically evil tech multimillionaires. It does make you feel a little mad.Adam Brooks: I live in a country that rewards…
I live in a country that rewards those that break in illegally, with accommodation, free food,free healthcare, legal advice & no utility bills. A country that gives extra benefits to men with more than one wife. A country that says asylum seeker rights trumps local people. 🇬🇧Diane Abbott: Gains for the right and the far right...
Gains for the right and the far right are frequently followed by an upsurge in racist abuse and attacks. Unfortunately, people's fears are based on experience. Minority groups brace for surge in racism after Reform election gainsAndrew Feinstein: As Labour heads for a wipeout…
As Labour heads for a wipeout, a lesson: never fall for the ‘adults in the room’ line again: Presenting himself as a serious, sensible ‘grownup’ was essential to Starmer’s rise to power. His premiership has revealed how hollow that message isAaron Bastani: The Labour right would 100% prefer…
The Labour right would 100% prefer being in opposition to a Reform majority govt, with all the accoutrements, than losing 50 seats to the Greens. Increasingly clear. One is temporary, the other is a long term threat. The kind of thing the ‘soft left’ and liberals never grasp.Labour’s March Towards the Ruins of Britain’s Institutions
The policies of the Labour government continue to attract fierce criticism across social media. Britain’s political system itself has been steadily eroding in recent years — and it increasingly appears that our leaders are taking their cue from the United States, hardly an example we should be eager to follow.Lewis Brackpool: I may not agree with Green voters…
I may not agree with Green voters, but deliberately placing deportation centres in areas that vote against you as political punishment is vindictive and counterproductive. You don’t win people over by threatening them. It’ll also put people in serious danger.
Aaron Bastani: Questionable how healthy it is for politics…
Questionable how healthy it is for politics in the long term that Labour are making the *local elections* about….the NHS. People aren’t daft.Gideon Rachman: I think most British people believe…
I think most British people believe in the basic principle that no matter who you vote for, the government will treat you equally under the law. Yusuf’s plan to put detention camps in Green voting areas violates that. It is trolling as public policy and I think will damage ReformCarl Benjamin: It should really go without saying…
It should really go without saying that punitive partisan policies that target sections of the electorate for voting in the "wrong" way is distinctly un-British and, frankly, shameful. Threatening sections of the electorate with punishment, in the form of placing dangerous migrant camps in their midst, might seem like a clever strategy on the surface, but it attacks something foundational concealed beneath our politics and is deeply unwise. We are a nation and, as Edmund Burke argued, have shared national interests that go beyond our provincial concerns. These interests go beyond the mere material. The unspoken assumption of Britain is that, despite any political divides, we are British and therefore will treat one another in a manner that recognises the fundamental legitimacy of the other person and their claim to a decent life. Regardless of disputes, they ought to be able to go about their day comfortably and safe in the knowledge that this is their country and they belong to it. This is the psychic fabric that itself has been damaged by mass immigration: bringing in millions of people from countries who do not have this special attitude is what brings about the intangible feeling of unease that causes "white flight". It's why the country feels less safe, whether or not it actually is, and why people wish to live among people like themselves. The world becomes predictable and you can feel at your ease that tomorrow will be like today, and today will be like yesterday. Carving up areas of the country into ideological chunks that can be dealt a cruel hand because of their voting record is the hard edge of politics that we really must avoid. Ideology turns countrymen into enemies, brother against brother, over ephermeral abstractions that have devastating and permanent consequences. The ideological politics of the Blair era is what brought these problems to our doors in the first place. It was understood by them that "rubbing the right's nose in diversity" was a punishment, to be weaponised against their enemies. The logical conclusion of this was Zack Polanski's building a society without the right entirely. The Green-voting areas targeted by Reform are well-to-do white areas of the country, who have not yet had to live with the consequences of their politics. This is the axel around which the emotional impact of the policy hinges, and reveals the horror of what Reform plan to do. Yes, they're stupid, but they are going to be like babes in the woods in the face of it. Reform have taken up the destructive politics of ideology from the other direction, and if we look at what it has brought into existence without the mystifying lens of political ideology, it seems monstrous. In concrete terms, what we are seeing is a Muslim man who is threatening British men, women, and children with the rapes and murders caused by unvetted illegals co-religionists in order to gain political power. Why should we think he would stop there? Such behaviour ought not to be rewarded. This kind of ideological politics is completely alien to British life, and very foreign way of approaching the political dispensation of the country. It is a direct attack on the psychic fabric of the nation and renders us into two opposed and irreconcilable camps, where the human feeling that bound us together is severed. It also solidifies the control that ideology has over both sides: once one is attacked by the other, the victim will feel obliged to respond in kind. We must rise above this kind of politics before it destroys the precious metaphysical inheritence of the nation and forever drags us down into a place from which we cannot escape.Timothy Ash: Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader…
Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, actually went on the BBC and questioned whether Tommy Robinson (Tommy Robinson!) is “creating a climate of intimidation and violence” with his rally. Astonishing. She’s a disgrace. The safety or ‘feelings’ of UK Muslims don’t count for her.Liz Webster: The curse of making Brexit…
🔥 The curse of making Brexit work strikes again. It finished off the Tories. Now it’s sinking Starmer and Labour - stalled reset with Europe, risky Atlanticist gamble via Mandelson, and domestic chaos. Two parties, same failure. 🇬🇧 The UK left paying the price.Edwin Hayward: At next week's local elections…
At next week's local elections, Labour will get exactly what they deserve. Try as I might, I cannot think of another case in modern political history when a party squandered a massive parliamentary advantage so profligately. And soon, we'll be into their last 3 years in power.Liz Webster: Uk govt has its “head up its bum”…
Uk govt has its “head up its bum” Britain is sleepwalking through a period of profound geopolitical and energy realignment. The old assumptions (cheap global energy, reliable US security umbrella, frictionless trade) no longer hold. Britain’s current strategic posture is dangerously complacent. The UK government (and much of the political class) still acts as if the world order that existed pre-2016 or pre-2022 is basically intact. It isn’t. @labourlewisAndrew Bridgen: If the ‘useless eliters’ that control…
If the ‘useless eliters’ that control this world succeed in the Great Reset, we will all be living like slaves in digital concentration camps. Just say NO and stand in your own sovereignty.
Timothy Ash: NATO is dead and European leaders…
NATO is dead and European leaders who don’t get that are brain dead. Heard numerous military top brass types in UK pretend otherwise recently. Accept it and move on. Plan for worst - the reality.David Kurten: It is ridiculous that Met Commissioner Rowley…
It is ridiculous that Met Commissioner Rowley says there should be a specific Jewish police force. Does this mean there should also be a Muslim Police Force, a White police force, a Black police force, a Christian police force, a gay police force, a women's police force and a tranny police force?Andrew Bridgen: U.S. embassy in London issues security…
U.S. embassy in London issues security alert urging Americans in the UK to exercise increased caution in public spaces stating "a terrorist attack is highly likely." The alert comes as British authorities elevate the national terrorism threat level to "severe." @disclosetvLiz Webster: The EU’s emergency farm/haulier…
🚜 The EU’s emergency farm/haulier subsidies show what real food security policy looks like, protecting producers from shocks like the Iran/Hormuz crisis. Brexit Britain has no coherent food policy, just reliance on imports. This crisis is going to test that gamble hard. Experts already warn our food system faces multiple crises ahead. Food security is national security.Clr Brian Silvester: We have enough 'wrong uns' already…
We have enough 'wrong uns' already..... without importing loads more of them. Labour Government must be mad, literally mad, to allow the small boats to keep on coming. Stop the boats, turn them around & return them to French waters.Jayda Fransen: Do not underestimate the impact…
Do not underestimate the impact that these two headlines will have on normal British folk reading them. A wicked agenda has been plaguing our nation for decades, and the people pushing it are becoming far too brazen. Our people cannot help but notice this… which is a good thing.Diane Abbott: Once again, Tony Blair is wrong…
Once again, Tony Blair is wrong and advocates to make ordinary people worse off. Britain has one of the lowest effective state pension entitlements in the whole of Europe. Tony Blair's thinktank urges scrapping of state pension triple-lockRead more