Home » And as the sun sets on British freedom of speech

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And as the sun sets on British freedom of speech — 15 Comments

  1. Re: Father Ted

    Nonapod:

    Hear, hear!

    An Irish couple turned me on to Father Ted. Hilarious. It manages to be acid-tongued, yet surprisingly kind. The greatest Irish sitcom.

    My favorite episode contains a parody of Sinead O’Connor. Reportedly O’Connor loved it.
    ________________________________

    Big men in frocks telling us what to do
    They can’t get pregnant like I do
    You give us all your rules
    But that’s not the way it was
    Women ruled the land of Tír na nÓg

    –“Rock a Hula Ted” (S02E07 1996)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zjpx_Jwu6Mo

    ________________________________

    Father Ted was in many respects brutal to the Catholic Church. It’s a reflection of the Church’s decline in Ireland that Ted made it to television.

    Anyway Father Ted, as Nonapod points out, is Why Graham Lineham Matters.

  2. We watched “Father Ted”, also “Blacks Books” and I think my daughter watched “The IT Crowd.” “Father Ted” was hilarious, and so was “Blacks Books.” And yes, indeed – Graham Lineham does matter, and so does every other Brit being harassed, arrested and imprisoned for voicing an opinion or baldly stating a fact which the Ruling Class doesn’t want to hear.
    Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free, indeed.

  3. So far King Charles’ is turning a deaf ear to calls to exercise his monarchial power. He can disband this Parliament of globalists intent upon Britain’s cultural murder and call for new elections. That may be the last chance for a peaceful resolution.
    To paraphrase John F Kennedy; ‘Those who make peaceful reform impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.’

  4. Looks, comparing head to shoulders, as if the guy is not very big. But they needed five fully-kitted cops in case a small Scottish girl was nearby,

  5. So the irish version of john cleese who helped tear down old england

    In a similar vein was dave allen who was popular in the 80s section

  6. King Charles, like his estimable mother, is a figurehead with no real power. Do not expect him to do anything. Further, he seems to be unduly sympathetic to Islam.

  7. One is reminded of syme the perfectly conformist colleague of winston smith till he was tripped up by thought crime

    Iit seems like the village in the prisoner was not a cautionary tale but an aspiration

  8. The Conservative Party had fourteen years to repeal the legislation which is used as an excuse for these abuses. They accomplished nothing, just as they failed to stanch the inflow of foreigners.

  9. The Brits were once able to forge an empire on which the sun never set. In my early days in the Navy, I saw Hong Kong, one of the pearls of the Empire. Big Gurkha cops, an RAF base, wonderful tailor shops, and very well run. We met some of the RAF blokes and they were very devil-mat-care hot shots. They were up to the job. It was 1957.

    I met some Brits who were still living in Kenya in 1998. They were melancholy that the Empire was a memory and were sad about the loss of the British can do attitude. But I don’t think they had any idea what the next 27 years would bring to the island that once was an empire builder. It’s a cautionary tale.

  10. The Babylon Bee

    “English Bobbies Race Past Stabbings TO Tackle Offensive Social Media Poster.”

  11. “Britain never had an especially robust tradition of free speech”…the deposed Kaiser Wilhelm II said in his memoirs that the British government had far more control over their press than he had ever had over his when he was reigning in Germany.

  12. Great comment, David. You used the word “reign” correctly. Or possibly not, come to think of it …

  13. I find that Linehan is an Irish citizen. Is that correct? If so, the Brits think they can arrest a citizen of country A who said something they don’t like while he was in country B and is going to or passing through the UK.
    Might put a good many Americans at risk, should the Brits decide to take more of the plod off rape-prevention patrols and put them watching social media from the US. Presuming the former isn’t already staffed down to zero, I mean.

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