Tony
Blair, the 'Devil Incarnate', is
calling for restrictions on what people can say on social media.
Any
journalist can tell you, that there are already plenty of laws that restrict
free speech in Britain, so why do we need any more laws? We've already seen 'keyboard warrior's' sent to prison for
what they said online during the recent riots. Many of these were jailed for
stirring up racial hatred online or inciting violent disorder. We're also
seeing journalists being arrested in Britain for making online comments about
the deaths and destruction in Gaza.
Many
politicians and even journalists, are pissed off at the way in which social
media has broken down barriers and given people a voice to influence public
opinion. King Henry VIII, was opposed to translating the Bible into English
because he thought it would give every pot boy an opinion. William Tyndale, who
was the first to translate the Bible into English, thought that every ploughboy
should be able to read it and he was burnt at the stake for doing so.
I
find it laughable to hear a politician like Lindsay Hoyle, tells us that "Misinformation can be dangerous."
Blair misled and lied to the British people in order to drag us into a phoney
war against Iraq at the behest of the Americans, following the 9/11 attacks.
Blair introduced a Freedom of Information Act, and later declared that it was
the worst political decision he'd ever made.
I
think some politicians should be locked up for the dangerous misinformation
that they spread and the dangerous rhetoric that they use, to inflame public
opinion. These dirty dogs, pour fuel on the fire to stir up the people for
their own political purposes and ends. The job of a responsible politician
should be to curb the instincts of the mob and not to exploit it.
The
pro-hanging, populist politician, Lee Anderson, who was formerly the
Conservative MP for Ashfield, was suspended by the Conservative Party, when he
claimed that 'Islamists' had got
control of the mayor of London. He provided no evidence to substantiate this
scurrilous and ridiculous allegation. The mayor of London, Sadiq Khan,
described his remarks as "pouring
fuel on the fire of anti-Muslim hatred."
The
Tory peer, Baroness Warsi, accused the Conservative Home Secretary, Suella
Braverman, of using dangerous "racist
rhetoric" that put British Asian families at risk. Braverman had
claimed that grooming gangs had a "predominance"
of British Pakistani males, who hold cultural values totally at odds with
British values. Baroness Warsi said that Braverman "was tarnishing a whole community" by focusing on British
Pakistanis, who were a "small subset"
of perpetrators in a context of half a million children a year being sexually
abused.
A
2020 Home Office study, that Braverman must have been aware of, had found that
offenders in child grooming gangs "are
most commonly white", based on data from just under half of all police
forces.
In
2023, the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO), ruled that the claim
made by the Home Secretary, Suella Braverman, that UK child grooming gangs were
"almost all British-Pakistani men"
was misleading. IPSO instructed the Mail on Sunday to publish a correction to
an opinion piece written by Suella Braverman in April 2023. A source close to
Ms Braverman, called the IPSO ruling "perverse."
Politicians
have always used inflammatory and divisive racist language to further their own
political ends. I remember the headmaster, Peter Griffiths, who was elected the
Conservative MP for Smethwick (north-west of Birmingham), in the 1964 General
Election, using the racist slogan, "Vote
Liberal or Labour and get a n….r for a
neighbour." The Labour leader, Harold Wilson, called Griffith's, a
"Parliamentary Leper."
This
sort of language would shock many of us today, but it was quite common to hear
this kind of language expressed in 1960s Britain. Birmingham was a bit like
Birmingham Alabama for racism and segregation. It wasn't unusual to see lodging
houses displaying a sign in their window which said: "No Blacks, No Dogs,
No Irish!"
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