Global Gov Corruption - UK Edition

stgislander

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
The UK will be happy to have all those military-age Muslim males to send to Ukraine for "peace keeping."
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
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GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member

The British State Loves Islam​












Glazing and Slobbering the Muslim Knob

Britain will be a Caliphate in the next 10 years
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member



Half of the Islamic terrorist organisations banned/proscribed in the United Arab Emirates are headquartered in the UK.

The UK is becoming a hotbed of Islamic terrorism. A scourge on the world.

We have a duty and an obligation to clean house.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
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Orwell’s Britain: How the UK Is Criminalizing Criticism of Islam




The specter of an Orwellian Britain is no longer a thought experiment confined to the pages of dystopian fiction. It is, instead, manifesting in real time under the guise of expanded hate speech legislation, exemplified most alarmingly by the UK government’s latest initiative to define and criminalize “Islamophobia.” Vice President JD Vance’s recent warning about the United Kingdom’s descent into anti-democratic overreach now appears less like political rhetoric and more like a sober assessment of a government rapidly consolidating its control over speech, thought, and civic discourse.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner’s push for a formal definition of Islamophobia may seem, at first glance, a well-intentioned effort to combat discrimination. However, upon closer inspection, this effort bears all the hallmarks of a modern-day blasphemy law—one that, in the name of tolerance, effectively revives Britain’s abolished blasphemy statutes under a new secular pretext. Britain’s original blasphemy laws, which criminalized offenses against Christianity, were repealed in 2008 after being deemed incompatible with modern notions of free expression. At the time, their abolition was hailed as a triumph for free speech, removing outdated restrictions on religious criticism. Yet, this new initiative threatens to undo that progress, reintroducing punitive measures against those who challenge or critique religious ideologies—only this time, under the banner of protecting a specific faith from offense. This is not about preventing incitement to violence or ensuring fair treatment under the law; those mechanisms already exist. Rather, it is about defining Islamophobia in a manner that will inevitably criminalize criticism of Islamic beliefs and practices. The UK is on the precipice of a fundamental shift—one in which the state determines which viewpoints are permitted and which are deemed criminal.

The UK’s aggressive expansion of hate speech laws has been steadily encroaching on free expression for years. Individuals have been arrested and even convicted for offenses as trivial as tweeting provocative remarks about soldiers, wearing politically incorrect t-shirts, or making ill-advised jokes in public. The cases of a man jailed for calling his ex-girlfriend’s Irish boyfriend a “leprechaun” or another for singing ‘Kung Fu Fighting’ in the presence of a bystander who deemed it offensive illustrate the absurd extremes to which the British government has gone in policing speech. More troublingly, citizens have been arrested for expressing opinions on immigration and the Pakistani grooming gang scandals. Tommy Robinson, a well-known activist, was jailed for contempt of court while reporting on a high-profile grooming gang case, an arrest many saw as politically motivated censorship. Others, including journalist Darren Grimes, have faced police investigation for interviewing guests who expressed controversial views on these topics. A British army veteran was even arrested at his home for sharing a meme criticizing Islam on social media. These cases demonstrate a clear trend: the state is increasingly using hate speech laws as a tool to suppress politically inconvenient discussions. But the proposed Islamophobia definition threatens to take this even further, raising the specter of an ideological enforcement mechanism that outstrips previous crackdowns.

The 2018 All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) report on Islamophobia already laid the groundwork for conflating criticism of Islam with racial prejudice, defining Islamophobia as “a type of racism that targets expressions of Muslimness or perceived Muslimness.” This wording, deeply problematic in its implications, suggests that any critique of Islamic doctrines, practices, or political movements associated with Islam could be categorized as a hate crime. Under such a broad and subjective framework, even legitimate academic discussion or journalistic inquiry into controversial aspects of Islamic ideology might fall under legal scrutiny. This move mirrors the strictures of Sharia law, which explicitly forbids criticism of Islam, the Prophet Muhammad, or its teachings. In Islamic theocracies, blasphemy laws have been wielded as tools of oppression, silencing dissent and solidifying religious control over state affairs. By making Muslims and their beliefs legally off-limits for criticism, the UK risks inadvertently granting Islamist groups greater influence over British society. Shielded from scrutiny, radical elements within the Muslim community can push their agenda unchecked, using legal threats to suppress opposition. This legal protection of Islam from critique aligns with a broader pattern seen in other societies where Sharia influence has expanded—first through cultural pressure, then through legal mechanisms, and ultimately through political dominance. In allowing Islam to become an unassailable ideology, Britain opens the door for its gradual transformation into a society where Islamic interests dictate the boundaries of permissible discourse, undermining the nation’s democratic foundations.

There is precedent for such draconian interpretations. British authorities have already demonstrated a willingness to criminalize thought itself. Last year, Nicholas Brock was convicted in Maidenhead not for an act of violence or incitement, but for merely possessing what the court deemed “toxic ideology.” Judge Peter Lodder QC, in an unsettling echo of Orwell’s concept of thoughtcrime, stated: “I do not sentence you for your political views, but the extremity of those views informs the assessment of dangerousness.” This rationale exposes the underlying trajectory of Britain’s legal philosophy—punishment not for deeds, but for mere dissenting thoughts deemed unacceptable by the state.

The implications of an expanded Islamophobia law are not difficult to predict. The fundamental distinction between protecting individuals from harm and shielding an ideology from critique will be erased. Those who question Islamic tenets—whether it be in the context of gender rights, freedom of conscience, or political Islam’s influence in the West—may find themselves accused of propagating “Islamophobic hate.” Given the UK’s existing track record of zealous hate speech enforcement, this law is likely to lead to further arrests, censorship, and the curtailment of debate.

To understand the gravity of this moment, one must consider what has already been criminalized in the UK. A teenager was arrested for standing outside a Scientology center with a sign calling it a cult. Individuals have been taken into custody for offensive jokes, ill-advised tweets, and casual remarks overheard in public. The introduction of an Islamophobia definition will further embolden a legal and bureaucratic apparatus that thrives on ideological enforcement. More troublingly, it will establish a precedent for other protected belief systems to demand similar protections from scrutiny. If criticism of Islam can be legally equated to racial hatred, what prevents similar laws shielding political ideologies, corporate entities, or government policies from critique? The slope is not merely slippery—it is precipitous.

Proponents of the law argue that it is necessary to protect British Muslims from discrimination and hostility. This justification, however, is disingenuous. British law already criminalizes harassment, incitement to violence, and hate crimes. Muslims, like all citizens, are afforded protection under these existing statutes. The additional push to define and criminalize Islamophobia is therefore not about ensuring safety but about solidifying ideological hegemony.

This legislative overreach coincides with a broader pattern of British authorities punishing those whose views deviate from state-sanctioned narratives. Free speech advocates have raised the alarm that the British state is not merely protecting citizens but is instead determining what they are allowed to believe and express. The boundaries of acceptable discourse are shrinking, and the enforcement mechanisms are growing more punitive.

Britain has long prided itself on being a bastion of free thought, a nation that stood against totalitarian impulses in the 20th century. Today, however, it is lurching toward a model in which speech is regulated, dissent is policed, and citizens live under the ever-present threat of ideological reprisal. If this trajectory continues, the UK will not merely resemble Orwell’s dystopia in spirit; it will become indistinguishable from it in practice.

The question is no longer whether Britain is becoming an Orwellian state—it is whether there remains enough resistance to prevent its full transformation into one.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member



WAR: The British people want no part in the ground war in Ukraine, as a result the UK is considering forced conscription of civilians. Will the Islamists fight for England or will they return home?
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member




In my first contribution to @TheFP, I went with @DrDominicGreen
to the tiny village of Wethersfield in Essex, England. A location population of around 700 suddenly nearly doubled with the arrival of migrants.

The camp's "security" tried to stop me from photographing the vehicles coming in to drop off the next batch of migrants, who are all men.
 
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