Call for law to protect (female) abuse victims who hit back

A piece in today’s Times largely about the monstrous Harriet Wistrich, Jule Bindel’s partner:

Women who hit back against abusive partners or commit crimes on their behalf such as handling stolen goods or hiding weapons should be allowed to rely on a new defence of coercion, according to campaigners.

The Centre for Women’s Justice (CWJ) is calling for the change to recognise the “devastating impact” that controlling relationships can have and the lack of legal protection for domestic abuse victims who are driven to offend.

Harriet Wistrich, the solicitor who founded the centre, won a landmark coercive control appeal in 2019 in which her client Sally Challen’s conviction for murdering her abusive husband was quashed. The legal team argued that Challen had been controlled by her husband for more than 30 years before she battered him to death with a hammer.

Now Wistrich is calling on the government to amend its Domestic Abuse Bill, which reaches its report stage in the House of Lords today, to extend coercion as a defence for a range of crimes.

These would include assault against an abusive partner or ex-partner, possession of a controlled substance belonging to an abusive partner, carrying a knife on their behalf, theft offences to pay for drugs and alcohol used by them, and taking drugs into prison for an abusive partner.

Campaigners say that coercive control creates “invisible chains and a sense of fear that pervades all elements of a victim’s life”. While victims can rely on the common law defence of duress, it is harder to prove and they need to be under threat of violence. The CWJ says the law needs to take into account that long histories of abuse can result in violence or other crimes.

Domestic abuse-related offences recorded by police forces in England and Wales rose by 10 per cent to more than 842,000 in the year ending last September, despite overall crime falling in the pandemic.

The government is facing various amendments to its bill to reflect such abuse. A second change, also supported by the CWJ, would give domestic abuse victims the same rights that homeowners have when confronting dangerous burglars. It would allow them to use disproportionate force in self-defence.

Claire Waxman, the victims’ commissioner for London, also wants changes to stop perpetrators using the family courts to continue abusing and controlling their victims. She has called for mandatory annual training for judges and legal staff working in the family courts so they can detect when perpetrators are using legal mechanisms to inflict psychological abuse.

Barristers have revealed that children who have given evidence against an abusive parent are being forced to continue seeing that parent against their wishes.

In one instance a judge ordered parent contact agreements to take place while the victim was at a domestic abuse refuge, revealing its location. The perpetrator was able to stalk their victim and abduct the child abroad.

You can subscribe to The Times here.


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Bettina Arndt and Lauren Southern on feminism, promiscuity, and other big issues

Enjoy (video, 40:27).


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Bettina Arndt’s revised newsletter: The sinister push for rape star chambers

The sinister push for rape star chambers

The partisan Australian media has disgraced itself last week with a shameful feeding frenzy trying to take out our Attorney General Christian Porter, after he acknowledged he was the alleged perpetrator in a historical rape allegation.

But what has become clear in recent days is that this is simply the latest round in an ongoing campaign to discredit our justice system and establish an alternate system designed to find more accused men guilty in sexual assault cases.

For years now, activists have been working hard to undermine the authority of our justice system by alleging rape victims don’t receive fair treatment, that rape is rarely reported, and wrongly asserting that convictions are rare in such cases. They prepared the ground and now have decided it’s time to declare their hand.

“The gloves are coming off,” proudly announced Michael Bradley from Marque lawyers this week, declaring an end to the victimisation and silencing of women.

Bradley’s greasy paws are all over this campaign. Bradley was the lawyer who supported the alleged victim in Christian Porter’s case when she was preparing to go to the police. He popped up again representing Brittany Higgins, the alleged victim in another rape case,  following Defence Minister Linda Reynold’s intemperate remark dismissing Higgins as a “lying cow,” when speaking to her clearly less-than-loyal staff.

Michael Bradley and his feminist crew at Marque Lawyers provided legal support for End Rape on Campus activist Nina Funnell’s Let her Speak campaign, which gave rape ‘survivor’ Grace Tame the platform that led her to become Australian of the Year. And for years now Bradley has played a critical role in trying to silence me, including sending defamation threats to media outlets where I defended myself during Funnell’s attempts to cancel me.

This is the lawyer who has provided pro bono advice to the activists who have succeeded in setting up our campus kangaroo courts. He was the main legal player behind the establishment of this quasi-judicial system which has usurped criminal law, a system of secretive independent investigations making decisions behind closed doors, disrupting the education and ruining the lives of accused male students across the country.

What a surprise to find Bradley now out there declaring that the police and the criminal courts can’t offer justice to rape victims and calling for an independent inquiry into the Christian Porter case. Just listen to him here – as he spells out the advantage of this new system. What he proposes is an independent system, taking evidence far from public scrutiny and messy due process rules. And its crowning glory? It would use a lower standard of proof, just like the campus kangaroo courts – the “balance of probabilities”. Much easier to nail the guy that way.

Independent inquiries suddenly all the rage

That’s been the overarching theme right from the start of this latest episode in the Year of the Rape Victim. The protagonists must have been disappointed at the short run of the Higgins affair which fizzled out remarkably quickly, despite the best efforts of feminist commentators to maintain the rage.

So, our ABC, leapt into action leaking news of the upcoming 4 Corners Program based on comments from friends of a deceased alleged victim of a historical rape by a Cabinet Minister. Then came Samantha Maiden, political editor of news.com.au, whose tweet framed the debate that would follow, claiming the friends sought an urgent investigation “like High Courts on Dyson Heydon.” (Of course, this actually means a one-sided investigation where the accused never gave evidence.)

That’s it – the game plan was exposed. No matter that the police then announced the case was closed since there was not enough admissible evidence. And that the alleged victim had withdrawn her initial complaint before she tragically suicided. And that her poor parents had not wanted her to proceed with the complaint, warning their daughter suffered mental illness and expressing concern she might have “confected or embellished” the allegations. And that her accusations against Porter emerged after recovered memory therapy, including hypnotic techniques subject to evidentiary restrictions in Australian courts because of their potential to affect memory.

The politicians and media who took up the charge had no interest in any of that, downplaying these inconvenient facts in their media barrage against Porter and anyone who supported him.

They stuck to the script, calling for a better way of dealing with these cases – an independent inquiry. How frightening to see Kristine Kenneally, the Shadow Minister for Home Affairs responsible for the Federal Police, suggesting we need an inquiry to determine whether Porter was a “fit and proper person to be at the Cabinet table”.  And Pauline Wright, past President of the Law Council of Australia,  arguing an independent inquiry would give Christian Porter the opportunity to clear his name. And look at this hogwash from a law professor.

What great timing that Grace Tame happened to be speaking to the Press Club on the same day as the media attack on Porter. Even commentators prepared to speak the truth about the Porter mob attack were able to virtue-signal by praising her bravery and showing their support for rape victims.

We saw Paul Murray on Sky News waxing lyrical with praise for Tame as a “really special lady” prior to presenting this excellent summary of the mob attack on Porter. But there was one glaring note in his analysis – this appalling comment about men convicted of sexual assault. “If you are someone who commits sexual assault, you deserve to go to goal and I hope when they slam the door they break your arm on the way through.”

Really, Paul? But what if that rapist was an 18 year-old boy? The son of one of your friends, a relative, perhaps. Falsely accused of assault after a drunken encounter with a girl who made up a rape accusation after being caught out cheating on her boyfriend?

That’s exactly what happened to a Queensland woman’s son who is featured on the new Mothers of Sons website. She uses the name “Erin” to protect her son who is still shattered years after being acquitted of rape charges after his accuser was found to have DNA from two other men inside her vagina on the night in question, but none from Erin’s son.

This mother is irate that police refused to charge the accuser with perjury, telling her they are under orders not to act on false allegations because it might deter genuine rape victims coming forward. That’s why Bradley and his mob can boast about the low incidence of false rape accusations. It is police policy to keep those numbers down.

 The shameful truth about independent inquiries. 

 It is maddening watching this campaign succeeding in convincing our community that the courts are still biased against rape victims while knowing the struggle families of accused young men now have to receive fair treatment. Believe-the-victim justice already has an incredible grip on our justice system, with even the most dubious cases being pushed through to court – which luckily still sometimes get tossed out since sensible juries won’t send young men to prison when the evidence just doesn’t stack up.

Like the case I’ve been following where a policewoman commented that it didn’t look good that the accused was changing her story so many times. There’ve been other cases where witnesses are not interviewed, and evidence suppressed that could have helped the accused young men. There have been young women too drunk to know what they are doing who cry rape when caught out by friends in embarrassing situations. One such student told friends their activities had been consensual when caught half-naked with another student but after pressure from a feminist ‘rape survivor’ she suddenly changed her story and charged him with sexual assault.

With my group of lawyers, I am dealing with a steady stream of these cases where accused male students are receiving appalling treatment from “independent inquiries” – which suspend their degrees, throwing them out of colleges, preventing them from finishing their courses and derailing their careers. A Sydney University official told one of the accused students she’s dealing with dozens of these cases every year.

So, take note, everybody. Look at our universities. That’s the future for all men accused of rape in Australia, unless we all stand up now.

Get your heads out of the sand and get active

As Peta Credlin says, this is not just a fight for the likes of Christian Porter. It is our fight too.

 What to do? Well for a start we need to support the Prime Minister and everyone else who is standing up against the mob and resisting calls for this proposed dangerous new tier of our justice system.

Credlin suggests Labor believes this campaign will win women’s votes but rightly points out that most ordinary people have men in their lives they care about and don’t want them accused in a system which denies them proper protection.

The Mothers of Sons group has responded by posting draft letters on their website that people can use to write offering support to the PM and Christian Porter, and to MPs voicing concern about the current push. Anyone can use these letters, also as drafts to key media commentors, editors, anyone joining this dangerous campaign.

And please write to support school principals who are being pounded for making sensible suggestions about consent and risk-taking behaviours including the impact of alcohol.

That’s only the beginning. We need to bring together powerful voices to take on this attempt at mob rule. There must be hundreds of retired lawyers and judges out there who shudder at where all this is heading. Please contact me and let’s see how we can derail this juggernaut. We owe it to the generations of young men who will face an even tougher world if we let this happen.

Hope you are still with me after this huge screed!

Until next time, Tina.


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Woman doesn’t give way at junction then crashes and starts swearing

Our thanks to Tom for this (video, 1:28).


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If everyone who read this gave us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. £5.00 monthly would entitle you to Bronze party membership, details here. Benefits include a dedicated and signed book by Mike Buchanan. Click below to make a difference. Thanks.

Women’s health: Female patients to be asked about ‘gender health gap’

The NHS discriminates against men in so many ways, and privileges women, but apparently women aren’t privileged enough. Our thanks to Nigel for pointing us to a ridiculous piece on the BBC website. Some of the gems:

Ministers say there is “strong evidence” services for female patients need improving… [J4MB: There is, presumably, “strong evidence” services for male patients don’t need improving, because penis…]

Campaigners say they are “delighted” steps are “finally” being taken to close the so-called “gender health gap”.

While women in the UK have a longer life expectancy than men, the Department for Health and Social Care says they are spending less of their life in good health…

Studies suggest gender biases in clinical trials are a contributing factor.

Less is also said to be known about many female-specific conditions and how to treat them…

Campaigners have welcomed the idea but say it’s vital women are properly listened to and appropriate action taken…

Mika Simmons, co-chair of the Ginsburg Women’s Health Board, filmmaker, and host of The Happy Vagina podcast, said: “Every single woman I speak to, myself included, [J4MB: She speaks to herself?] has experienced either misunderstanding or loss as a direct result of slow or inaccurate diagnosis of their health concerns.


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Our YouTube channel is here, our Facebook channel here, our Twitter channel here.

If everyone who read this gave us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. £5.00 monthly would entitle you to Bronze party membership, details here. Benefits include a dedicated and signed book by Mike Buchanan. Click below to make a difference. Thanks.

Film review: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Regarding Men)

Enjoy (49:06).


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Emma-Jayne Magson guilty of murdering boyfriend

Our thanks to Carl for this.


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Deborah Powney: Male Victims of Coercive Control

Excellent (video, 10:03). The video description:

Domestic Abuse and Coercive Control are not gendered issues. Despite a huge body of scientific evidence showing that men are victimised at similar, or slightly higher rates, as women, male victims have been dismissed and ignored for decades. Taken from two large international surveys, here are the voices of men from the UK that have been subjected to domestic abuse and coercive control from their female partner.

Special thanks to all the men that took part in the survey, that contributed to the video and to GMG Productions for making an incredible film.


Our last general election manifesto is here.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Facebook channel here, our Twitter channel here.

If everyone who read this gave us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. £5.00 monthly would entitle you to Bronze party membership, details here. Benefits include a dedicated and signed book by Mike Buchanan. Click below to make a difference. Thanks.

Citing Wikipedia’s capture by the left, site’s co-founder (Larry Sanger) launching free-speech-friendly competitor: Encyclosphere

Interesting. The anti-male bias of Wikipedia is outrageous, feminist editors dictate almost everything gender-related. I’m told that anything added on MGM and many other issues is routinely removed in seconds.


Our last general election manifesto is here.

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If everyone who read this gave us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. £5.00 monthly would entitle you to Bronze party membership, details here. Benefits include a dedicated and signed book by Mike Buchanan. Click below to make a difference. Thanks.

Free Speech Union’s weekly newsletter

Dear Mike Buchanan,

Welcome to the Free Speech Union’s weekly newsletter. This newsletter is a brief round-up of the free speech news of the week.

ECHR

Professor Andrew Tettenborn, member of the FSU’s legal advisory council, writes of a little-publicised but worrying decision that was made recently in the European Court of Human Rights with serious implications for free speech in the UK. Volen Siderov, leader of the Bulgarian political party Ataka, has been publicly critical of the Roma people in his speeches and writings throughout his career, which prompted an assembly of liberal and pro-Roma groups to undertake legal proceedings against him under Bulgarian anti-discrimination law. A Bulgarian court found that “Siderov, if intemperate, was not calling for discrimination against Roma people”, but the litigants appealed to the ECHR which upheld their appeal.

However abhorrent one finds Siderov’s views, this decision is concerning for a number of reasons, which Prof Tettenborn explores, including a reference to a new right to be weighed against the right to free speech, which the Court described as “a full human right to have someone else’s speech abridged”. Tettenborn continues: “The judges saw it as entirely unacceptable that Bulgarian courts had given ‘considerable weight to Mr Siderov’s right to freedom of expression’, and ‘play[ed] down the effect of those statements on the applicants as ethnic Roma living in Bulgaria’. Wow. Any free-speech traditionalist, who believes that the remedy for bad speech is more speech, should see this as a warning: as far as human-rights lawyers are concerned, you are on the wrong side of history.”

Why free speech matters

Accompanying the release of his new book Free Speech and Why it Matters, Andrew Doyle made the case for free speech in a piece for Spiked, in which he echoed John Milton’s contention in Areopagitica that “the freedom ‘to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience’ is the ultimate liberty”. Doyle’s launch event with Alastair Donald of the Academy of Ideas took place earlier this week and can be viewed on YouTube. His book can be purchased here.

Why it’s OK to Speak Your Mind, a new book by Hrishikesh Joshi, an assistant professor at Bowling Green State University, will be released on the 9th of March. Drawing on Aristotle, John Stuart Mill, Friedrich Nietzsche, Bertrand Russell and others, Joshi argues that “by bringing our unique perspectives to bear upon public discourse, we enhance our collective ability to reach the truth”.

Scottish Hate Crime Bill

According to an analysis by Free to Disagree, a Scottish free speech organisation, almost 85 per cent of published responses to a consultation by the Justice Committee of the Scottish Parliament supported stronger free speech protections in the Scottish Hate Crime Bill. Jamie Gillies, of Free to Disagree, said: “It’s vital that strong, clear and specific free speech protections are written into the bill.”

Prospect magazine has published a comprehensive analysis of the background to Scotland’s Hate Crime Bill and its free speech implications. Chaminda Jayanetti looks at the origins of hate crime law in the Public Order Act 1986 and addresses questions surrounding the stirring up of hatred, the likelihood that hatred will be stirred up, the proposed extension of protected characteristics in the Bill, as well as the expansion of hate speech law into private dwellings and the theatre. “Scotland’s Hate Crime Bill was meant to be a tidying up exercise that consolidated existing laws,” Jayanetti writes, but “despite the stated intentions, the Scottish government actually is extending the law’s reach.”

Policy analysis group Murray Blackburn Mackenzie have warned that the proposed legislation would make it criminal for individuals to assert that sex is binary. One of the group’s members, Lucy Hunter Blackburn, claims that the “government has frozen out the people most concerned about chilling effects in relation to sex and gender identity, consulting only with stakeholders that it heavily funds”, such as the Scottish Trans Alliance.

National Director of charity Care for Scotland Scott Weir examines the consequences of abandoning the dwelling defence, which protects speech in private homes. “We stand at the brink,” he says. “The Scottish Parliament dangles over the cliff edge freedom of thought and freedom of speech, to supplant it with a crushing law that will hem Scotland in.”

Universities

The FSU has written to the Vice Chancellor of the University of Law, Andrea Nollent, to express its concern about a section that was recently added to the University’s disciplinary policy which “will have the effect of encouraging, what is commonly called ‘sousveillance’ – the practice of one student informing on other students”. This is at odds with recent guidance issued by the Department for Education which stipulated that universities “should not encourage students to inform upon other students for lawful free speech”.

Writing in UnHerd, FSU Director Douglas Murray comments on the University of Glasgow’s cancellation of a seminar by Professor Gregory Clark of the University of California, Davis, in part because over 100 academics at the University objected to its title: “For Whom the Bell Curve Tolls: A Lineage of 400,000 Individuals 1750-2020 Shows Genetics Determines Most Social Outcomes.” According to Douglas, one of the familiar aspects of no-platforming is that the speaker’s critics claim “to know not only the content of his undelivered talk but also his intentions”. Douglas goes on to identify the “prevailing ethos” common to cancel culture: “It goes something like this: human beings are born with equal abilities, and any sub-optimal outcomes in their lives are caused by societal factors beyond their control but which can be adapted with enough collective effort.” Those who believe in this credo don’t stop to ask whether it’s true, but take it for granted that anyone challenging it must be a Social Darwinist or a eugenicist. Douglas thinks academics ought to be able to challenge that credo without being cancelled.

According to a recently established “anonymous testimonials website” called GC Academia Network – where GC stands for “gender critical” – some academics in UK universities “are self-censoring for fear of reprisals”, while others report being censured or investigated for transphobia merely for failing to announce gender pronouns or for liking or sharing tweets. Set up several weeks ago by two academics concerned about “a ‘no debate’ culture in academia”, the online forum has already received 120 submissions from academics who hold “gender critical” views.

Michelle Donelan, the universities minister, has asked the Office for Students to investigate a new policy at Durham University requiring the students union to vet all external speakers deemed “high risk” (a euphemism for speakers with conservative or gender critical views). She said: “If it has been accurately reported in the press, the decision by Durham University is gravely disappointing and not in line with our high expectations for universities in this area. To give a student union this power over external speakers is wholly inappropriate: no university should ever grant a student union any authority or role in vetting, limiting or otherwise overseeing which external speakers may be invited to speak on campus, or under what circumstances they may do so.”

A new online newspaper has been founded at the University of Chicago by students Audrey Unverferth and Evita Duffy. The Chicago Thinker will bring some balance to what the two students see as a one-sided political culture at the University by presenting views from a conservative or libertarian perspective. Unverferth said: “We deserve a voice and it is really important that we do partake in the battle of ideas on campus.” The newspaper’s mission is to challenge “the mob’s crusade against free speech”.

Pregnant persons are mothers

“Pregnant persons” will now be referred to as “mothers” in a bill making its way through the House of Lords. The change was urged by Lord Lucas, who submitted 15 amendments, commenting: “The use of the word ‘person’ in the Bill as it is now erases the reality that, overwhelmingly, maternity is undertaken by women and not by men. To leave ‘person’ in place would be a step backwards in women’s equality.”

Iceland

After his sacking from Iceland for what were intended to be humorous comments about Wales and the Welsh language, former Director of Corporate Affairs Keith Hann has responded with an article entitled “How trying to be funny cost me my job” in which he argues that the “cancel culture that is sadly becoming the norm in the UK is plain wrong”. Along with the complaints made to Iceland that led to his sacking, he has received abusive messages and death threats for offences such as calling the Welsh language “incomprehensible” and referring to it as “a dead language that sounds uncannily like someone with bad catarrh clearing his throat”.

Next generation of writers

In response to a question about authors dropped by their publishers for wrongthink, writer and Nobel laureate Sir Kazuo Ishiguro said he was concerned for the next generation of writers who self-censor for fear that an “anonymous lynch mob will turn up online and make their lives a misery”. He added: “Novelists should feel free to write from whichever viewpoint they wish, or represent all kinds of views.”

Taboo to boo

FSU Deputy Research Director Emma Webb appeared on Talk Radio to defend the right of football fans to boo players taking the knee. She said: “Our argument is that if the footballers are allowed to take the knee and to express themselves in that way then the fans should also be allowed to express themselves – it has to be one or the other – and that the football association needs to issue guidance before fans come back into the stadiums to avoid people’s free speech being limited.” You can read our letter to the Football Association about this here.

Woke bar

The Bar Standards Board does not defend the freedom of barristers to criticise woke culture because it would be “likely to diminish the trust and confidence which the public places in… the profession”, writes Jon Holbrook in The Critic. The barrister was recently expelled from his Chambers for tweeting: “The Equality Act undermines school discipline by empowering the stroppy teenager of colour.” He explains that “the reference to the pupil as being ‘of colour’ was unobjectionable and central to my criticism of the EHRC tweet. Moreover, a teenager who was sent home repeatedly for defying a school uniform policy that merely required her hair to be ‘of reasonable size and length’ can hardly grumble at being described as ‘stroppy’”. Holbrook argues that the leadership of the bar has revealed itself to be “infused with a wokeness that cannot tolerate its outspoken critics”.

Cancellations

The BBC is intending to air episodes of Fawlty Towers in next week’s Festival of Funny, but  the racist lines of the character known as “the Major” will be edited out. When the BBC removed an episode from BBC iPlayer for the same reason last year, John Cleese commented: “The Major was an old fossil left over from decades before. We were not supporting his views, we were making fun of them. If they can’t see that, if people are too stupid to see that, what can one say?”

Channel 4 has dropped Ant Middleton, host of SAS: Who Dares Wins, for a tweet from last June that read: “The extreme left against the extreme right. When did two wrongs make a right … BLM and EDL are not welcome on our streets, absolute scum.” The ex-soldier subsequently deleted the tweet and apologised, but that wasn’t good enough for Channel 4.  The broadcaster issued a statement saying it had “become clear that our views and values are not aligned”.

President Biden removed some of the books of Theodore Seuss Geisel, the children’s author better known as Dr Seuss, from the recommended list for Read Across America Day, which falls on Geisel’s birthday, the 2nd of March, because of their allegedly racist content. According to some critics, Horton Hears a Who! “reinforces themes of White supremacy, Orientalism, and White saviorism”.

Encyclosphere

Citing Wikipedia’s left-wing bias, a former co-founder of the website, Larry Sanger, is planning to launch a free speech-friendly alternative called “Encyclosphere”, which he describes as “an old-fashioned, leaderless, ownerless network, like the blogosphere”. At first, Wikipedia was “truly committed to neutrality” but has now become “propaganda” according to Sanger, whose goal is “to create a protocol that very loosely ties all the encyclopaedias online together”.

Sharing the newsletter

We’ve received several requests to make it possible to share these newsletters on social media, so we’ve added the option to post them on several platforms, including Twitter and Facebook. Just click on the buttons below.

If someone has shared this newsletter with you and you’d like to join the FSU, you can find our website here.

Kind regards,

Andrew Mahon


Our last general election manifesto is here.

Our YouTube channel is here, our Facebook channel here, our Twitter channel here.

If everyone who read this gave us £5.00 – or even better, £5.00 or more, monthly – we could change the world. £5.00 monthly would entitle you to Bronze party membership, details here. Benefits include a dedicated and signed book by Mike Buchanan. Click below to make a difference. Thanks.