Vile, convicted paedophile Shabir Ahmed has no place in our country.
I am tabling an amendment to change the law so we can bypass the 1971 Immigration Act and rapidly deport him to Pakistan.
No messing around with dangerous criminals—kick them out immediately
This is your reminder that Henry Nowak's murderer wasn't even handcuffed after they finally learned what he did.
White people are second class citizens in this country.
Swinney is terrified of an inquiry and is prepared to use every trick in the book to block one. The Scottish Affairs Committee should press ahead with an inquiry of its own, as this is the only way that the many questions this sordid affair has thrown up will be answered.
Workers must defend their right to hold private opinions as employers increasingly turn into vindictive moral busybodies, says Andrew Tettenborn.
Last week, Lord Moynihan introduced an important Private Member’s Bill in the House of Lords — the Regulated Professionals (Freedom of Speech) Bill — which seeks to protect professionals from attempts by regulators to penalise them for ‘off-duty expressive conduct’. That means anything said outside the practice of their profession.
The only exceptions to the Bill’s protections are threats of violence, threats of harm relating to professional duties, serious sexual offences, or convictions for offences that directly affect an individual’s ability to practise their profession or carry a custodial sentence.
Where the protections apply, regulators would be barred from imposing penalties, disadvantages, compulsory training or any other coercive measures. Say goodbye to being forced onto mandatory diversity, equality and inclusion training programmes.
This is all the more important following the introduction of the Government’s non-statutory definition of “anti-Muslim hostility”.
It is also an important antidote to the increasing policing of social media posts by employers or disgruntled colleagues.
Accusations of bringing an employer into “disrepute” can carry significant consequences, resulting in disciplinary action or individuals being hounded out of their jobs.
Lord Moynihan’s Bill is principled, well drafted and practical. As a Private Member’s Bill, it is sadly unlikely to become law, but everyone — regardless of political party — should support it.
Read more below 👇
As a former police sergeant, I find this footage raises some important questions. From what can be seen, the officer did not clearly identify herself before engaging with the individual. If someone genuinely believed they were being attacked, rather than confronted by a police officer, it is understandable that their immediate reaction may have been to defend themselves. That context is likely to be highly relevant when assessing any allegation of assault against police.
I also remain concerned about the language used by some officers. While I appreciate there are occasions where firm and direct language is necessary, there appears to be a growing acceptance of swearing and unnecessarily offensive language. If a member of the public behaved in the same way towards others, they could potentially face arrest for public order offences. The police should be held to at least the same standard, if not a higher one.
Perhaps I’m old-fashioned, but I believe policing is at its best when officers lead by example through professionalism, courtesy and clear communication. Those principles build public confidence far more effectively than aggression or unnecessary confrontation.
Seeing as though Andy Burnham prefers answering softball questions on Reddit instead of facing real scrutiny from the Press, I’m asking a question of my own on his AMA.
It’s time get serious @andyburnham. Hold a proper press conference, and answer some real questions.
Imagine running the Department for culture, MEDIA, and sport and leaving one of the biggest social media platforms all while complaining that you don’t like the type of free speech and expression…
This Islamic immigrant from the Third World Shahadat Hossain massacred an entire family with an axe in Rome, even killing a 5-year-old girl. Only the adult son survived after confronting the attacker.
In Bangladesh he already had 6 convictions for sexual violence and extortion.
Yet thanks to Italian communist traitors, he was allowed to become a prominent member of the Bengali Islamic Nationalist party in Italy.
He is still on the run.
Copied from Faceache.
I keep seeing adverts for the 'Charity' Age UK showing distressed elderly people in England. You would expect from the name of the charity that all donations would go to elderly UK residents right. Well leaving aside the fact that the CEO takes £200,000 a year and at least 13 other executives are in receipt of £120,00 or more salaries, you might be interested to know where else Age UK operates:
Bangladesh
Burma
Colombia
Ethiopia
Haiti
India
Jordan
Kenya
Kyrgyzstan
Lebanon
Mozambique
Nepal
Pakistan
South Africa
South Korea
South Sudan
Sri Lanka
Tanzania
Thailand
Uganda
Ukraine
Vietnam
Yemen
Zimbabwe
It's always worth checking a few facts when you see these charities advertising on TV.
In Sydney, Australian police kicked out a group of Muslims who had taken over and blocked a street to ‘pray’.
“Public streets are not mosques.”
That’s how you handle it! Nobody does this shit in Muslim countries. They only do it in the West to assert dominance.
If the British state can go to nuclear war, spend £137 billion bailing out the banks, and effectively 'close' the whole country in a pandemic, it can deport Shabir Ahmed to Pakistan. It's the political will that is missing.
🚨NEW: KC Anu Mohindru has been allowed to continue being a barrister despite falsely claiming that he studied medicine at Oxford University and for claiming that he was a qualified doctor.
He also claimed that he had played cricket for the Bar, for Lashings Cricket Club and for MCC, and that he was a cricketing blue having represented Oxford in a varsity match against Cambridge.
A tribunal disbarred him for telling his 23 Essex Street interviewers a “reckless, foolish and completely unnecessary lie” about studying at Oxford, and because he “doubled down" on his CV.
On appeal at the High Court, Mr Justice Johnson overturned Mohindru's expulsion, stating that it "would be wrong to impose the ultimate sanction merely because dishonesty is present".
There have been at least two major rape stories in London in the last 24 hours.
Neither of these were mentioned on BBC London's lunchtime news, which devoted almost half of the entire bulletin to an item that revealed a drag queen is performing in a stage show.
"Perjury claims at Alex Salmond’s trial continue to be investigated by Crown prosecutors five years after a complaint was initiated." Why is there always such a stench whenever COPFS and Sturgeon are involved? #SNPout#ResignSwinney#McMafia
https://t.co/lo0Y6YBYaa
This is pure racism from @haringeycouncil, they are using public money for a ‘Free Walk & Talk’ event, but it’s only for Black & Brown families. Excluded by race.
If this said ‘White families only’ it would be national outrage. Open services to ALL families in need, not segregated by skin colour.
#HaringeyCouncil @haringeycouncil
I’m starting to worry he doesn’t really know what he’s talking about. And has no time to learn. The price of water and electricity is already controlled by the state.