Saturday, August 31, 2024

It's Their Mind and They'll Think What They Want


Since we're all officially admonished to THINK (which used to be the IBM corporate slogan, IIRC, long before it became a verbal bludgeon of Britain's police bigwigs) let's spare a thought for the UK's lower-class sort that is the target of all this oppressive Nanny-Statism. 

What do you suppose they're thinking? And might it be a massive load of anger and resentment directed squarely at their 'betters'?  
 
But baby (Baby) 
Remember (Remember) 
It's my life and I'll do what I want 
It's my mind and I'll think what I want 

- It's My Life (1965), Eric Burdon and The Animals 

Eric Burdon had the best male voice in '60s pop music, if you ask me. And his best songs had a working class edge that, if you further ask me, the British need to recover today more than ever before.   

Check out the opening lyric: It's a hard world to get a break in / all the good things have been taken. 

Does that not speak to the Brits we've seen pushing back at the national leaders who are hosting all the illegal entrants they can find while arresting Brits for speaking out about it on line?

There is a long and storied tradition of Anglo-Saxon rowdyism which is triggered by unfair treatment, and it doesn't take much imagination to see such treatment happening all over the UK today.     

So the top of UK society warns the lower class to THINK before they speak, or else face vaguely sinister "consequences." Well, once the lowers have thought about it long enough, the uppers just might see that threat blow up in their faces.  
 
 

Sunday, August 18, 2024

Britain's Future Looks Fabulous Under PM Starmer, But Only If You're Into Glitter


The Britain's Future branding raises this pathetic incident to the level of comedy, which is a great improvement over what it would be otherwise, such as 'unbelievable security failure' or 'PM's girly-man reaction to personal assault.'

Not auspicious, to say the least. The UK's top security detail allowed a protestor onto the stage with Starmer and then stood by stunned for ten long seconds while - better, whilst - the loony deployed an IGB (Improvised Glitter Bomb) on their protectee and then held hands with a clearly non-consenting Starmer.

It's hard to say which offense is the worse in today's UK: the exuberant public speech or the unwanted physical intimacy.


Thursday, August 15, 2024

Harry Dunn Sequel Finally Gets Close to Show Time


That goofy kid cracks me up, but - seriously - don't lend him your car.

Well, a judge in Texas has now certified that Agent Double O Aspergers can be extradited to the UK. That sends the matter to the executive phase of extradition, and to the final decision of the SecState. 

Assuming Blinken agrees to extradite, there will be a trial date set in the UK, and if we have learned anything from following this story, it is that the UK takes a very long time to process this stuff. 

I'll skip ahead a bit and just assume that our hapless driver will be convicted. Upon that, I expect attention to shift to the international prisoner transfer program which creates the possibility that our International Man of Mystery could be sent back here to serve his UK-imposed sentence in a U.S. prison. 

I'll further predict that Team Harry Dunn will work with the few crumbs of speculation and misreporting that it has to insist that this sad sack is actually a master spy, and that he was at the center of some monstrous U.S. plot to do something unimaginably sinister when he caused a car crash last year. 

They'll have fun with that although, frankly, it will be a big, big, step down from their glory days of White House visits and media attention from years past. 

It's a sequel, after all, and those usually disappoint the audience.
      

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

EU-crat Breton Might Have Acted Without EU Approval When He Sent That Letter to Elon Musk


That's Elon Musk on the left, opposite a childless cat lady, it appears. 

The FT's headline and story say that EU Commissioner Breton overstepped his authority and sent that cautionary letter to Musk without first getting EU clearance. 

However, that is refuted by this sentence in the body of the report:
Breton is empowered to oversee enforcement of the Digital Services Act and can communicate independently with companies.
So, who knows? 

Whether it was with or without approval, Breton made an empty threat towards Musk and X, and empty threats always lead to embarrassment. I say an empty threat because Musk has the means to connect the EU's 500 million consumers with direct internet access from his network of satellites if he wishes, bypassing the EU and other authorities completely. 

To misquote the most famous line from the great Hilaire Belloc poem The Modern Traveller, "whatever happens, he has got the Starlink gun and we have not."

Much more to come on this, I hope.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

When Boyhood's Fire Was In Their Blood ...


Check out those four-foot tall Oirish insurgents tossing petrol bombs at Northern Ireland police vehicles. Don't miss the bag of chips that appears towards the end. 

This is some sort of children's crusade, unlike the riots we saw last week elsewhere in the UK. 

I can only imagine that they're following in the footsteps of their fathers and grandfathers, who may have handed down some experience at making firebombs. 

There is plenty of old inspiration there.

Saturday, August 10, 2024

Don't Tell Me Who I May or May Not Insult! Reform UK's Section 5


Until today I was not aware of the Reform Section 5 movement. Now, I'm its biggest fan. 

I particularly like Atkinson's point that the "insulting words" test does not even require that there be a victim, just some expression that someone in power - who exactly? - deems insulting. 

He arrives at the same solution the U.S. Supreme Court did in 1931: the 'counterspeech doctrine' that says the solution to speech you don't like is more speech not suppressing other speakers. 

That's how free societies behave. Anything less is simply an all-purpose excuse to lock up any party whom the police disfavor.
 

Friday, August 9, 2024

Not a Crazy Idea - Give Political Refugee Status to Opinionated Brits


I say, Defund the Thought Police! But until then, what would prevent the U.S. from extending refugee or asylee status to Brits who are oppressed by their government for the expression of political opinion?

Here's what opinionated Brits are facing today. I'd say it qualifies them for refugee status.
 

Actually, that post is misleading, or as the Crown Prosecution Service itself would probably say, it is disinformation. The law in question extends to content that is "threatening, abusive, or insulting," which goes well beyond inciting violence or hatred. 

All those terms are fundamentally subjective anyway, so the CPS is threatening to prosecute Brits for expressing political opinion that some unnamed party in the CPS dislikes. 

Moreover, by threatening to extradite offenders from abroad, the CPS threatens to take its oppressive nanny state to everyone everywhere. 

Well, the 1st Amendment stands between me and the CPS, so I feel pretty safe. Over here, we still adhere to the constitutional 'counterspeech doctrine' which holds that the best remedy to combat harmful speech is “more speech, not enforced silence” (Justice Brandeis, Stromberg v. California (1931). But our British cousins have no such protection. 

Maybe a significant number of Brits will now notice that constitutions work a lot better when they are written down, as their Chartists knew. 

But until then, why should we not welcome mouthy political refugees from the UK to come over here and breathe the sweet air of freedom?