We should not forget that Democratic Rights were
Won in the Teeth of Opposition by a Reactionary Judiciary
Contempt For Justice
Today in Britain we
have an unpopular Government and an almost equally unpopular Opposition, both
of which agree on the need to curtail democratic rights and direct action. As
environmental disaster beckons, we have a government intent on ramping up carbon
emissions by approving
of new oil fields in the North Sea.
Their answer to direct
action protests is not to change course but to attack the right to protest. The
judiciary, which likes to think of itself as independent, has joined forces
with the Executive.
As groups like Extinction Rebellion, Climate Action and Just Stop Oil take direct action in response to the climate crisis,
the government, in hock as it is to the oil industry, has resorted to
repression.
First there was the Police,
Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Act and today a Public Order Act
which puts greater power in the hands of the same police forces which are
riddled with corruption, rapists and racists (in no particular order).
This legislation was preceded
by the Overseas Operations
Bill which made it much
harder to prosecute British personnel for serious crimes –
including torture – overseas as well as the Covert Human Intelligence Sources
(Criminal Conduct) Bill (Spycops
Bill) which was even
more abhorrent. It granted a host of state agencies
the power to commit grave crimes with legal immunity. This is a giant leap forward
to a police state yet British judges have remained silent.
There was a time, in
the 1990s and 2000s when a succession of liberal judges presided over the
Supreme Court and as Lord Chief Justice such as Thomas Bingham, described
as ‘the greatest jurist of our time’,
Lord
Taylor who presided over the
Hillsborough Disaster Inquiry
and uncovered Police malfeasance, Lord Steyn, Baroness
Hale and Stephen
Sedley. It is perhaps no accident that Taylor, Sedley and Steyn were
Jewish.
Today we have seen a
return to a reactionary judiciary under Lord
Reed, President of the Supreme Court and the execrable Lord Burnett who presided
over the Assange hearing.
If Burnett had any integrity he would have
recused himself from the Assange case since he is a close friend of former
Minister Alan Duncan, who described
Assange as a “miserable little worm”.
Assange is a litmus
test for the judiciary. He has been imprisoned for four years, without charge because
of an extradition request from the United States. His only offence being to reveal
multiple war crimes.
This is not my
paranoia. Last year The Economist published Britain’s
Supreme Court takes a conservative turn. Prospect Magazine
carried The
government wanted to rein in the Supreme Court. Now it may not need to.
After
the backlash from the right-wing press and the Mail with its ‘Enemies
of the People’ headline, when the Supreme Court rejected
Johnson’s prorogation of Parliament, the Judiciary have unilaterally
surrendered to the government.
The Supreme Court’s shameful
decision on Shamima Begum, which was contrary to international law on
statelessness was one indication of the new ‘security minded’ court.
In another decision, where two mothers challenged the government’s
decision to restrict tax credits and universal credit to two children, Reed
went out of his way to attack those bringing the action.
Nicholas Reed Langen lamented
the “trend towards deference.” This
is the political backcloth to the attack of government and judges on the right
to protest. This increasing judicial reaction occurred as juries have been
returning what the Right see as authorities are ‘perverse verdicts’ of ‘not guilty’ against direct action protesters.
The Establishment was
outraged by a Bristol jury which acquitted
those who dumped the statue of Edward
Colston, a mass murderer and slave trader, into Bristol harbour. The
government sought ‘clarification’ from the Court of Appeal as to whether
defendants could cite human rights in their defence in a case of criminal
damage.
One wonders whether
the judges would have approved of a statue of Hitler being erected in Golder’s
Green yet the Court of Appeal found
that human rights defences should only be considered by courts in
protest-related cases if the damage is ‘minor’ and ‘low-value’. It thus put a
threshold on when people can enact their human rights.
The affront to Black
British citizens never crossed the minds of these miserable judicial wretches
who knew the price of everything and the value of nothing. The courts have
always prioritised the needs of property over people. It was another
reactionary judge Lord Denning who ruled
in LB Southwark v Williams that
“necessity
would open a door which no man could shut…If hunger were once allowed to be an
excuse for stealing the plea would be an excuse for all sorts of wrong doing.
The courts must take a firm stand.”
The ruling by the Court of Appeal found expression in the
decision of Judge Silas Reid in climate change cases to gaol for contempt
defendants who mentioned why they took direct action. This has meant that
people are unable to put forward any defence and is clearly contrary to Article 6 of the European Convention of Human Rights:
In
the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of
any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled
to a fair
and public hearing within a reasonable time by an
independent
and impartial tribunal established by law.
It is also contrary to Article 50
of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights,
the right not to be tried or punished twice in criminal proceedings for the
same offence.
It is or should be obvious
to all except the most narrow minded judge that if you can’t say why you are
innocent the trial must be unfair. None of this is surprising since the history
of British justice is a history of conflict between protest and a reactionary judiciary.
In Fascist
Judges Craig Murray described how in Irmtrud Wojak’s biography of Fritz Bauer, a concentration camp
survivor who became the most important prosecutor of the Nazis in Germany,
Bauer detailed how the Nazis didn’t have to find their own judges. Most of the
German legal establishment had simply adapted themselves to applying Nazi laws.
It was
one of the scandals of the post-war Federal Republic of Germany that judges who
had served the Nazis so well continued in post. Does anyone seriously believe
that if a fascist regime arose in Britain that the judges would defend our
rights? Craig wrote how
The current
legal establishment will adapt themselves to the legal framework of whatever
sort is ordained by the rulers. Anybody expecting judges to defend liberties is
likely to be sorely disappointed. They will happily remove the ability of
juries to defend liberty too.
Judge Silas Reid – a model fascist judge
Silas Reid would have no difficulty in becoming a model Nazi judge, dispatching
a British Sophie Scholl to the guillotine or gallows.
Sent to prison by Silas Reid for trying to
"tell the whole truth"
David Nixon
In October 2021, David Nixon took part in an Insulate Britain roadblock whose aim was
to arouse the public and media to the need to insulate homes, to tackle fuel poverty
and reduce carbon emissions.
Six previous trials
of people involved in similar actions had ended in two acquittals, two guilty
verdicts, and two deferred (in one of these the Judge asked the prosecution whether it was in the public interest
to continue).
Protesters are being
tried for the ‘archaic’common
law offence of causing a public nuisance. Silas Reid told the defendants at
Inner London Crown Court that while they might genuinely believe that they had
been performing a public good and not a public nuisance jurors should not take
their motivations into account.
Appearing at Inner
London Crown Court with three others, Nixon was warned by Silas not to mention
climate or fuel poverty during the trial. In response to an accusation that
8,500 people had had their bus journeys disrupted Nixon told the jury that
coincidentally 8,500 people had died that same year as a result of fuel
poverty.
Silas
Reid cleared the court and demanded Nixon apologise. As Reid
directed the jury to leave the court, Nixon continued:
That’s before moving on to
climate change. Posters around the court building are saying that we are on a
highway to climate hell with our foot on the accelerator.
“You’ve not been able to hear these truths because this court has not
allowed me to say them. Our safety is at risk, our society is at risk.
“I have only one apology: that Insulate Britain did not get our demand
met.”
When he refused to apologise on the grounds that his duty was to
‘tell the whole truth’ he was sentenced to an eight-week
prison sentence for contempt of court. Reid has been accused of “stripping away” protesters’ legal
defences following the sentencing of Nixon because he defied Reid’s instruction
not to cite the climate crisis as motivation for his participation in the same
Bishopsgate roadblock in 2021.
After the jury returned, Reid
told them to disregard Nixon’s statements. Reid told jurors:
This is not a trial about climate change, fuel poverty, etc. Matters
relating to that are not relevant to your deliberations, no matter how much Mr
Nixon wants them to be.
While the jury went out to
consider their verdict, Nixon admitted contempt and declined two offers from
Reid to apologise, telling Silas Reid: “I
wish I could but I don’t think it would be genuine.”
The jury returned to court and
found the four protesters guilty. Nixon was standing trial alongside Kai
Bartlett, Alyson Lee and Christian Murray-Leslie. Reid said he would sentence
them at a later hearing.
On four occasions, defendants
have defied Silas’s instruction in their closing speeches to the jury. Those
trials were immediately halted, juries sent out, and the defendant removed to a
cell for ‘contempt of court’. In three cases, Judge Reid has then gone on to
sentence the defendant to several weeks in prison. Perhaps because of the
concerns expressed, he decided to take no further action in the last case. Barrister
Paul Powlesland said:
"Judge Reid jailing David
for speaking the truth to a jury in his defence is an outrageous threat to some
of our oldest and most precious liberties…. If you are on a jury trying a
peaceful climate protester, the judge may be preventing them from mentioning
the climate crisis in their defence. Remember that you have an absolute right
to acquit them on your conscience.
"Such an acquittal cannot be appealed and you will never be asked to explain or justify it…. Citizens pushing back on judges is what has kept the right to jury trial alive over the centuries."
Several leading lawyers protested
outside the court during one of the contempt of court hearings. In
an interview Powlesland reminded us about the 17th century Bushel’s
case, where a judge locked up the jury without food and water for two days
to try and force a guilty verdict, but which ended up setting a legal precedent
– the right for a jury to acquit on their conscience. The case is celebrated by a
plaque inside the Old Bailey (where it is visible to court users, including
jurors).
Former Barrister
Tim Crosland, who himself has been disbarred for telling the truth,
said:
"The British
courts have lost the plot. Infuriated by the habit of juries acquitting climate
protestors, a new policy has been adopted in which the judge bans climate
protestors from referring to climate change during their trial, and when the
defendant honours their oath to tell the whole truth and explains to the jury
why they did what they did, the judge holds them in contempt of court for
defying their gagging order."
Amy Pritchard & Giovanna Lewis
Giovanna
Lewis, 65, from Dorset; Amy Pritchard, 37, from London; and Paul Sheeky, 46,
from Warrington, were accused of blocking a major junction in central London on
25 October 2021 at around 8am. All three denied the charges.
The jury
heard that 25 arrests had been made that morning as protesters lay in the road
while others glued themselves to the ground, bringing rush hour traffic on
Upper Thames Street and Bishopsgate to a standstill that lasted hours.
In his
opening address Reid warned that the defendants had hoped being able to talk
about climate and ecological crises as motivation for their actions would “touch people’s hearts” and bring
morality to proceedings. Reid said:
“It seems to
me that the desires of the defendants to speak about the motivations of their
actions is that they believe that the jury will look at the case in a moral way
rather than in a legal way. That would be wholly wrong.”
This is
an amazing statement that confirms that judges like Silas Reid live in an
ethical free zone devoid of all morality. See ‘For history to judge, not the jury’:
judge rules climate crisis ‘irrelevant’
This latest crackdown followed a ruling
by the Attorney General after the Home Secretary’s appeal against the acquittal of the Colston
Four (who toppled the Bristol statue). The Attorney General’s ruling, along
with the earlier Ziegler ruling, restrict the defences available to someone
accused of protest-related charges such as criminal damage or public nuisance,
ruling out any balancing exercise relating to human rights or any defence of
‘necessity’ (attempting to prevent a greater evil).
Although there is some leeway for
judges to decide how much a jury can hear from defendants, protest trials often
begin with legal arguments where the prosecution ask the judge to rule out all
such defences at the start of the trial,
while defence lawyers argue the jury should hear them. The judge can also direct
the jury at the end of the trial to ignore elements that are deemed irrelevant
in law.
Real Media reported the five-week trial of Burning Pink activists
during which evidence of the extent of the climate crisis was heard. All
but two out of 20 charges against 12 people ended in acquittal.
A group calling themselves Fair
Justice Project have been posting notices in the streets near the Old
Bailey displaying legal information about the right for jurors to acquit on
their conscience.
The right to
acquit on conscience (but the jury mustn’t know)
On the morning of 27th
March, retired social worker, Trudi Warner, used similar wording on a banner
and stood for half an hour on the pavement of the road leading to the juror’s
entrance at the court.
When she returned to court later
that week, she was ambushed by police and arrested for contempt of court. Held
in a cell for the rest of the day, she appeared before the British version of Roland Freisler,
President of the Nazi People’s Court, at 5pm and told she must appear at the
Old Bailey on 4th April for contempt proceedings (“contempt in the face of
the court attempting to influence the jury”).
After hearing from her solicitor,
Mr Justice Cavanagh gave his decision that:
“It is not the case in any trial that
jurors can acquit by their conscience if by that it is meant they can disregard
evidence and directions given by the judge and decide on their own beliefs
whether a defendant is guilty of a criminal offence. To do so would be a breach
of their jury oath and cause injustices.”
Cavanagh’s ruling is a clear
attempt to roll back the rights of a jury and is indicative of the period we
are living in. A jury can acquit for any
reason whatsoever. They are not accountable for their decision to anyone. It
is clearly stated on the plaque that adorns the Old Bailey, celebrating the
decision in Bushell’s
that
Chief Justice Vaughan delivered
the opinion of the Court which established “The Right of Juries” to give their
Verdict according to their Opinions.
Either Cavanagh is an ignorant
bigot or he is determined to overturn a celebrated decision of over 500 years
standing in the Judges’ attempt to bow
the knee to the present Tory Government. (see below)
Cavanagh ruled that the case
should be referred to the Attorney General. In the meantime, appeals have been
lodged in relation to several of Reid’s Insulate Britain trials and
several trials scheduled for after Easter have been deferred until those
appeals are decided.
A woman who attended in support,
was arrested at the Old Bailey for allegedly “attempting to pervert the course of justice” in connection with
putting up a poster near Inner London Court. If anything it is Cavanagh and
Silas Reid who are guilty of attempting to pervert the course of justice.
Bushel’s case sets a so-far
inalienable right in law. So the question is, where can it be legal to
display a banner celebrating this case, and more importantly, where and why
could it NOT be legal to display this tenet of British law?
Hidden
forces pushing change in our democracy and rights, exposes
some of the power and money behind the recent crackdown on protest rights. See
also Climate
protester confronts judge over ‘amoral’ order on what jury could hear
Four Insulate Britain protesters
appeared at Inner London Crown Court before Judge Silas Reid ahead of their
sentencing next week.
Insulate Britain campaigners (left to right) Stephen
Pritchard, Roman Paluch-Machnik, Ruth Cook and Oliver Rock, outside Inner
London Crown Court ahead of their sentencing for road blockages protests
(Jordan Pettitt/PA) / PA Wire
Another road-blocking protester
who could face jail confronted Silas Reid over
the decision to ban him from mentioning his climate-related motivations to a
jury. Stephen Pritchard used his speech ahead of his sentencing to condemn the
order made by Silas Reid:
I think that your rulings were amoral; I believe also they were
irrational given the situation that we’re in
The Buddhist and former parish
councillor appeared at Inner London Crown Court alongside former probation
officer Ruth Cook, 71, gardener Roman Paluch-Machnik, 29, and carpenter Oliver
Rock, 42.
All four were convicted by a jury
of causing a nuisance to the public by obstructing the highway after they
stopped traffic at Junction 3 of the M4 on October 1 2021. Insulate Britain said they are the first protesters to be convicted
of causing a public nuisance – a common law offence which carries a maximum
penalty of life imprisonment.
Silas Reid had ruled that they
should not mention their climate motivations during their trial, but asked them
to “concentrate as much as possible on
motivation” in their speeches ahead of sentencing. He told them:
“Blocking the road in the way you did, if it was done for no reason, is
a serious matter and would result in a prison sentence.”
Addressing Reid, Pritchard said:
“People’s lives are being lost.
The only possible way I could imagine stopping peaceful civil resistance in
this context is for you to tell me that this country has stopped pumping
greenhouse gases into the air.
“I’m well aware of what prison is
like, having been to prison. It’s not a very nice place. But I feel like I’m
already a prisoner of my conscience.”
Cook said she had spent decades “upholding the law” but resorted to
disruptive protests so she could “look
her grandchildren in the eye”.
Speaking about Silas Reid’s
imposition of limits to their defence, the grandmother from Frome gestured to
the jury bench and said:
I’m really aware of those empty
seats. I am going to say things now that I wish they would have been able to
hear, so that they weren’t discussing traffic data and listening to boring
statistics about traffic, but knew why we did what we did.
Cook, who is also a Quaker, said
her work delivering aid in Africa on behalf of Oxfam and the Refugee
Council and seeing climate refugees on the continent
“changed me fundamentally. I saw the impact that the climate emergency
was having on their lives
The defendants also mentioned the
impact the campaign had had on their friend Xavier Gonzalez-Trimmer, who killed
himself after spending time in prison over an Insulate Britain protest. Pritchard
said:
“He was a brave, gentle and caring human being who could see the future
we were facing and was desperate to do something about it, and now he’s dead.”
Paluch-Machnik used his speech to
highlight the impact of climate change, adding: “This isnt a belief system of mine, this is a measurable process.” The
four will return to the same court for sentencing by Silas Reid.
The Rights of A Jury and Bushel’s Case 1670
Prior
to Bushell’s Case, for nearly four centuries, jurors had been subject to
coercion, fines and imprisonment if they disregarded the wishes of the judge.
The jury was not independent as it is today, but more a ventriloquism act, “the judge with thirteen voices” any time
the judge wished to determine the verdict. The grandfather authority for the
coercion probably was a case in 19 Edward III (1346), which suggested that
jurors "might be dragged about in
carts at the tail of the [Circuit] Justices from assize-town to assize-town
until they could make up their minds". [The
Four Jurors in Bushell's Case, Wilmer G. Mason, American Bar Association
Journal, JUNE 1965]
In August 1670, William Penn, who
went on to found Pennsylvania, and William Mead were charged with “unlawfully and tumultuously” assembling
to preach and speak during a Quaker worship session on London’s Gracechurch
Street. The jury found them not guilty. The outraged judges, the Mayor and
Recorder of London, refused to accept the decision and told the jurors to keep
deliberating. The jury was sent back with the warning that
“you shall not be dismissed until we have a decision that the court will
accept; and you shall be imprisoned up, without meat, drink, fire, or smoke….
With God’s aid, we’ll get a decision, or you’ll starve to death.”
The jury returned two days later,
finding both defendants not guilty. For contempt of court, the judge fined them.
One of the jurors, Edward Bushel, refused to pay the fine required for his
release. Instead, he petitioned the Court of Common Pleas for a writ of habeas
corpus, contesting the legality of his detention. He was released two months
later after the court approved the writ.
The case of Bushel resulted in a
landmark ruling on the role of jurors. Lord Chief Justice Vaughan declared the
fines and imprisonment imposed unconstitutional and held that a jury could not
be punished for its decision, effectively ending judges’ ability to control
verdicts based on political whim and establishing the jury’s independent power.
Bushel’s Case established the concept of jury nullification, in which a jury
overturns an unconstitutional statute by declaring a defendant not guilty,
regardless of whether the jury believes the prisoner is guilty precisely by the
wording of the law.
Lady Justice Hallett
Blackstone Lecture on Trial by Jury.
In May 2017, LJ Hallett gave an interesting lecture on
the role of the jury. For Lord Camden it was ‘the
foundation of our free constitution’. For Lord Eldon the ‘greatest
blessing which the British Constitution had secured to the subject’. For
Lord Devlin, ‘the lamp that shows that freedom lives.’ For Lord Judge, ‘a
safeguard against oppression and dictatorship’. Blackstone refers to it as “the sacred bulwark of our liberties.”
Thomas Erskine said that
‘Criminal justice in the hands of the people
is the basis of freedom. While that remains there can be no tyranny, because
the people will not execute tyrannical law against themselves. Whenever it is
lost, liberty must fall along with it. . .’
Similarly,
in the early nineteenth century, people were still being hanged for sheep,
horse and cattle stealing and for robberies to the value of 40 shillings -
raised in 1827 to £5. Juries deliberately undervalued goods stolen to avoid
sending offenders to the gallows.
Heather Hallett stressed in her lecture that a jury may refuse to convict in spite of the law and the evidence because it concludes that the law is an unjust law. The jury passes its verdict on the law. Secondly, it ensures that the prosecution and the judge are on trial. Hallett went on to quote Professor Michael Zander that the jury can set aside ‘unjust laws, oppressive prosecutions and harsh sentences.’
Hallett gave
the example of the case of Dr Leonard Arthur a highly respected
consultant paediatrician who, as he saw it, put the interests of his patients
and their parents first. John Pearson was born with Down’s syndrome and
abnormalities of his lung, heart and brain. Dr Arthur wrote in the case notes, "Parents do not wish the baby to
survive. Nursing care only."
Despite what to the lawyer may have appeared a confession to the
charge of attempted murder, the jury acquitted him. Their verdict has been
construed as a refusal to convict a doctor of murder for 'allowing a severely handicapped baby to die' even if the law was
against him.
The case in
1985 of Clive Ponting, a civil servant, was another example. In the judge’s
view he had broken the Official Secrets Act by passing on secret information to
a politician but the jury refused to convict, upholding his claim that
disclosure was in the public interest.
To again quote Hallett, the jury
is a check against the
authority of government and Parliament, which ensures that they take heed of
the judgment the public passes on what they do. It is the means by which
individuals can ‘feel that the law is theirs’, that the law reflects and continues
to be consistent with the ‘attitudes and mores’ of society generally.
Lord Sumption: civil disobedience has begun
The views of Lord Sumption, a member of the Supreme
Court between 2012 and 2018 on civil disobedience are also interesting.
Sometimes the most public
spirited thing that you can do with despotic laws like these [COVID laws] is to
ignore them. I think that if the government persists long enough with locking
people down, depending on the severity of the lockdown, civil disobedience is
likely to be the result. … whatever Mr Hancock says. People are doing that to
some extent already.
Sumption went on to say that :
“I feel sad that we have the
kind of laws which public-spirited people may need to break. I have always
taken a line on this, which is probably different from that of most of my
former colleagues. I do not believe that there is a moral obligation to obey
the law… You have to have a high degree of respect, both for the object that
the law is trying to achieve, and for the way that it’s been achieved. Some
laws invite breach. I think this is one of them.”
I point
these divergent views out, even amongst the judiciary because there is now a
clear attempt to suggest that the powers of the jury are confined within the
limits that a trial judge sets. There are many instances when, in order to
achieve social change or achieve the abolition of a bad law, it was necessary
to break the law.
Rosa Parks sitting in the bus
Rosa Parks by breaking
the law on segregation helped change the law when she
refused to give up her seat for a white man.
Hallett’s
observations are the answer to those who say that a jury must blindly follow
the law, or the Judges’ interpretation of the law. There are times when an
oppressive law deserves to be broken. The Poll Tax was an obvious one. Let us
not forget that hiding Anne Frank was against the law whereas deporting her was
legal.
In June-July
1945, the London Conference preceded the Nuremberg trials of the major Nazi war criminals. The Conference created effectively a new law, Crimes Against Humanity. Under the Agreement
for the Prosecution and Punishment of the Major War Criminals of the European
Axis, and Charter of the International Military Tribunal.
London, 8 August 1945
‘Individuals would be responsible
for the perpetration of war crimes irrespective of ‘whether or not in violation of
the domestic law of the country where perpetrated.’
This was the answer to
the defence of Goering, Streicher & co. that they were only obeying orders.
The
suffragette’s breaking of the law in order to reform the law was another. They
were told, by the prosecuting barrister in the BBC’s reconstruction of a
trial that:
Suffrage
is not the issue, it is the criminal behaviour of the suffragettes and their
incitement to partake in militant activity at which 54 windows were broken
Great article Tony but I suggest your reference to New Zealand war criminals is slightly wide of the mark.
ReplyDeleteYes just noticed it. I used short cuts for familiar words and I probably pressed 'nz' for New Zealand rather than 'na' for Nazi! Thanks
DeleteAn excellent article. I want to point out a typo: I presume New Zealand war criminals should read Nazi war criminals. Secondly, sometimes the state will allow people who have commited a illegal act against said state's interests to get away with it. A good example is Katharine Gun who leaked a document from GCHQ just prior to the gulf war. The case is pretty accurately depicted in the film Official Secrets on iPlayer until 20th April. It's another example that the law is not absolute, even it the state's eyes, when it suits them.
ReplyDeletesee above. thanks
ReplyDeleteThanks for this excellent article with all the links to the history of jurors' rights to acquit and the moral obligation to make ethical choices rather than uphold bad laws.
ReplyDeleteBy any standards a stonking piece Tony. We have to be amazed and very thankful someone out there is so incredibly detailed, always with accompanying links and quotes supplying context and corroborations, that makes of your erudite discursive writings second-to-none. And, this even now while you yourself are facing the Elbit trial in Wolverhampton and all that [that] must put upon you personally. There will be angels buoying you up surely? Thank you
ReplyDeleteWhere is Lady Hallett in 2023? Or Jonathan Sumption? Who will confirm Bushell in the face of this ebb-tide?
ReplyDeleteThis is an excellent article and an eye opener. It raises the question, should there even be a 'crime' of contempt of court, at least if it's used to silence a defendant?
ReplyDeleteFascinating stuff Tony, on which you will soon be able to add further chapters. Good luck.
ReplyDeleteTony, I agree with virtually everything you've said above, apart from "the United States’s proxy war in Ukraine". You mentioned above, something about the Labour Party's 'confusion'. I'm afraid that there is a section of the 'left' who suffer from that confusion.
ReplyDeleteBecause there is, rightly in many cases, a revulsion and distrust of American political motives, often to expand their arms industry, sections of the left fail to accept that the war in Ukraine lies solely and squarely at the feet of Putin. They say things like he was provoked, or intimidated by NATO. This is nonsense, Putin is not by any stretch of the imagination a Socialist or a democrat, he is an imperialist and probably a psychopath who has never needed excuses such as a fear of NATO to further his imperialist obsession.
I don't doubt at all that the USA is watching the 'war' with interest to gauge Russia's strengths and weaknesses, but to muddy the waters by saying America bears some responsibility or that Putin was provoked or that he had justifiable fears for his all out war of aggression against Ukraine, is going against all Socialist principles, and it's doing the People of Ukraine no favours whatsoever.
Hope the show trial against you continues to go in your favour, as it appears to be doing so far, despite apparent attempts by the judge to make it otherwise.