Free Speech Union: Weekly News Round-Up

Dear Mike Buchanan,

Welcome to the Free Speech Union’s weekly newsletter, our round-up of the free speech news of the week. Like all of our work this newsletter depends on the support of our members and donors, so if you’re not already a paying member please sign-up today or encourage a friend to join and help us turn the tide against cancel culture.

A reminder that if you’re a working academic and haven’t yet joined the Free Speech Union, or if you know somebody who should, we’ve put a special offer in place whereby if you join you can claim a £10 rebate. To be eligible, you have to join for the full annual amount of £49.95 and select ‘Academic’ in the drop-down menu asking what profession you’re in. Offer ends on 20th December.

Forthcoming comedy night

Free Speech Union members are welcome to join us in London on Wednesday 10th November, when the line-up will include Nick Dixon, Tania Edwards, Tony Law, Phileo Huff and Darius Davies. You can purchase tickets here. Standard tickets cost £15, but those of you who wish to support the FSU’s work can purchase tickets for £25, which includes a £10 donation to the FSU. There will be a large contingent of FSU employees there, so come and say hello. If you’re interested in coming, buy a ticket now because they’ll sell out quickly.

Parliament debates “Non-Crime Hate Incidents”

This week, the House of Lords debated an amendment to the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill that would challenge the practice of police recording “Non-Crime Hate Incidents” (NCHIs) against individuals who have not committed a criminal offence, leaving them with a police record that shows up when an employer does an enhanced DBS check. Lord Macdonald QC, the former Director of Public Prosecutions and a sponsor of the amendment, wrote in the Times ahead of the debate about the consequences of having one of these records held against you: “NCHIs have consequences. They are not anonymised. They sit forever against the names of the alleged perpetrators without any real investigation or right of appeal.”

120,000 NCHIs were recorded by police between 2014 and 2019.

Baroness Claire Fox of our Advisory Council paid tribute to our efforts in campaigning against NCHIs in her speech during the debate. Lord Moylan argued powerfully for political oversight of NCHIs, which have been instituted without political debate by police forces, and applied unevenly throughout the country.

The amendment received cross-party support and the hope is it will push the Government to act.

Plans to outlaw online speech that causes “psychological harm” will turbo-charge cancel culture

The Times reported that the Government has accepted the Law Commission’s recommendations that speech that is “likely” to cause “psychological harm” should be punishable by two years’ imprisonment. The new offences will reportedly include Twitter “pile-ones” and trolling, and will be included in the Online Safety Bill. Sending a “knowingly false communications” will also be criminalised. You can read our response to the Law Commission’s proposals here.

Matthew Lesh of the Adam Smith Institute – who co-authored a report for us on the dangers of the Online Safety Bill – wrote in the Telegraph that seeking to protect individuals or groups from “emotionally distressing speech comes straight from ‘cancel culture’ at universities”. He argued that the legislation will create a “heckler’s veto” and encourage “people to claim distress to censor their critics”. The legislation is a “recipe for disaster”, said Noah Carl in UnHerd. Sam Ashworth-Hayes wrote in the Spectator that the law would be a disaster for conservatives:

Consider, briefly, the ecosystem of activists, charities, politicians, and lawyers that form the cultural left, and the role within this space played by narratives of ‘harm’. Drawing an equivalence between words and violence – legitimising the use of the latter in the suppression of the former – is at this point so common as to be almost unremarked upon. Describing disagreement on the genuinely contentious issues of gender, race, sexuality, or economics as ‘harm’ is a standard tactic for short-circuiting arguments. Scarcely a day goes by without some institution apologising for the harm caused by a perfectly polite email that failed to pick up on the latest trend in activism.

Into this world, one where conservatives’ political opponents are culturally ascendant, where the judiciary is deeply sympathetic to their opponents’ ideals, and has shown itself to be quite willing to build out interesting interpretations of the law in promoting them – into this world, the Conservative party intend to put a law threatening people with jail for causing ‘psychological harm’ or ‘serious distress’.

Mark Dolan of GB News said the Online Safety Bill will dramatically worsen the free speech crisis. He wrote: “The censorship of the population has been a growing cancer for years now, with woke institutions and corporations clamping down on free speech. But now control of what you think and say will be at the discretion of her Majesty’s government, and a meat headed cop in a control room deciding whether your tweet is a joke, fair comment or hate.”

Ofcom chief Dame Melanie Dawes said the legislation broadly gave the regulator the power “to act and act quickly when we need to” but called for yet more powers, to mirror EU proposals.

White privilege taught in schools as fact

Our founder Toby Young spoke to talkRADIO about the failure of schools to uphold political impartiality, and the spread of partisan teaching. Our warning to the Department for Education about the widespread teaching of white privilege as fact in UK schools, as reported in the Telegraph, was reported by talkRADIO in a segment with our Advisory Council member Julia Hartley-Brewer. Our expose was also reported in France and in the MailOnline here.

Charlotte Gill bemoaned the spread of woke PSHE-speak across society, citing the decision of Girlguiding to promote Aceweek, “a time to raise awareness and understanding of the asexual community”. She says the charity’s twitter feed is “littered with posts about ‘microaggressions’ and diversity and inclusion”.

The teaching of critical race theory in schools was a central issue in the Virginia gubernatorial election this week, which ended in an unexpected victory for Republican Glenn Youngkin who promised to ban CRT in schools. Defeated Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe said in a debate, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach”, turning the election on its head. Fraser Myers said the victory showed that parents “have had enough of woke education”.

Terry Gilliam cancellation is the return of blacklisting

The Old Vic has cancelled a forthcoming production of Sondheim’s Into The Woods directed aby Terry Gilliam after “staff unease” about his views on trans issues and the Me Too movement. Tom Slater said the episode showed that cultural institutions were being run by “massive whinging babies”. Ben Lawrence argued in the Telegraph that it was yet another example of managers capitulating to woke young employees. Brendan O’Neill compared the cancellation to the return of blacklisting in the McCarthy era. Alexander Larman said the decision to axe the show was the theatre’s loss.

We approached a theatre producer to see if we could help get the production staged at a different venue, but were told that Sondheim musicals always lose money and that, in all likelihood, the reason the Old Vic had pulled the plug was because it feared a huge financial loss. Gilliam’s history of un-PC comments was just a convenient excuse.

Kathleen Stock speaks out after resignation from Sussex

Professor Kathleen Stock was interviewed on Woman’s Hour about the campaign which targeted her at Sussex University. She compared the start of the campaign to an “anxiety dream”.

“Instead of endlessly pandering to the students, universities need to make it very, very clear in the inductions, in Freshers’ Week, that the institution exists to uphold academic freedom. And if they are unhappy about that, they need to leave,” said Professor Michael Biggs to the Telegraph.

Melanie McDonagh wrote in the Telegraph: “Cancel culture is a new inquisition, except that the actual Inquisition had a proper legal process. Now, academics can be driven from their jobs because someone, some identity group somewhere, has asserted they’ve been disrespected.”

Trevor Phillips called for people to buy Kathleen Stock’s book (which you can do here). Jane O’Grady said there had been no reasoned argument against Stock and people should see what she actually believes.

Equality Minister Kemi Badenoch said she was “appalled” by the campaign against Stock.

Professor Eric Kaufmann of our Advisory Council wrote in UnHerd: “Censorship in the West now stems from the kind of bottom-up forces that keep birds from straying from a flock, or fish from their school.” In a separate article he wrote:

New free speech universities will be important in creating space for the conservative and classical liberal ideas that have been driven off campus by the tenured radicals who increasingly shape the climate of higher education. But the only lasting solution is for governments to regulate universities with proactive free speech offices like the UK’s new Director of Academic Freedom that can protect staff and students from cancel culture, political discrimination and activist administrators.

Sarah Ditum said that, despite Professor Stock being forced out, trans activists were in retreat and their power was waning. Students at Leeds University overreached by demanding that senior university managers state their gender pronouns when introducing themselves by email or in meetings.

Lord Wharton of the Office for Students said Vice-Chancellors must defend freedom of speech and academic freedom in a welcome intervention.

Donors are deserting Edinburgh University over various “woke” controversies. Allison Pearson said if you want to fight back against the woke takeover of institutions you should cancel your direct debit. If you know of anyone who’s cancelled their direct debit to an institution like the National Trust and is looking for a new home, please steer them our way.

BBC rejects claim that article on lesbians pressured into sex was “transphobic”

The BBC has rejected complaints from trans rights activists that an article on lesbians who have been pressured into have sex with biologically male trans women was “transphobic”. A senior BBC manager said there was a culture of fear in the BBC about reporting on trans issues. The corporation is to analyse all of its TV output to ensure it is impartial.

Justin Welby apologises for COP26 Holocaust comment

The Archbishop of Canterbury has apologised for comparing climate change to the Holocaust. He said world leaders would be “cursed” if they failed to act. Odd, given that climate change activists have been accusing their opponents of being “deniers” – a reference to Holocaust deniers – for decades without ever having to apologise.

Will woke last?

Sean Thomas wonders if woke is here to stay, perhaps for thousands of years.

Trans

The Equality and Human Rights Commission has been accused of trying to pressure Scottish civil servants into dropping questions on biological sex from official data surveys. Susan Dalgety has said debate on trans issues in Scotland must be free.

The Department of Health has withdrawn from Stonewall’s “Champions” scheme.

Sarah Ditum writes in the New European on the witch-hunt against JK Rowling. Graham Linehan wrote that Margaret Atwood has trashed her legacy with her intervention in the trans debate.

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If you know of someone who’s been penalised for exercising their lawful right to free speech, or been discouraged from doing so by a school, university or employer, please get in touch with our case team here.

Best wishes,

Benjamin Jones

@BenBarryJones

Case Officer


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Claudia Webbe: MP handed suspended sentence after threatening partner’s female friend with acid

Our thanks to Steve for this. Quelle surprise. Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring clearly fancies himself as a comedian:

Her actions were described as “callous and intimidatory” by the chief magistrate, who added that she would have been jailed immediately were it not for her previous good character.

J4MB translation into plain English:

Her actions were described as “callous and intimidatory” by the chief magistrate, who added that she would have been jailed immediately were it not for her being a woman.


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

Primary school asks boys (and teachers) to wear skirts to class to ‘promote equality’

Child abuse.


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.

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Ricardo Champayne, father of six, university worker who was forced out of his job after objecting to female boss’s demands to exclude white middle aged men from opening a new campus building, wins only £1,000 compensation

A piece published today on Mail Online. The key figures in the matter which ended with the father-of-six being awarded just £1,048 compensation:

  • Ellen Rudge, senior manager at the University of Leicester’s Students’ Union
  • Samantha Creese, HR and fiance manager
  • Rachel Broughton, employment judge

A fine example of women conspiring to deny a man due process.


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

The sorry tale of “shared parenting” being written into legislation in the UK

Our thanks to Nigel for this:

https://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/politics/8092306.tory-backing-for-family-law-change/

https://www.theguardian.com/law/2012/feb/09/family-courts-shared-parenting-orders

https://www.familylawweek.co.uk/site.aspx?i=ed127361

The sorry tale of the watering down and eventually getting rid of the presumption of “shared care” . As with many such lobbying groups the title of the group “The Shared Parenting Consortium” was in fact the opposite of their aims. Supported by Butler Sloss in the Lords the eventual 2014 Family Law Act had in fact simply made no legal change to the supposed paramount needs of the child (as we know usually defined by the mother). In the debates and lobbying much was made of pretty flimsy “evidence” from Australia that in a few cases  the legal presumption in their statute  might have put a child in danger.

In fact the Cameron Government had never promised more than the legislation would follow the recommendations of the family law review which simply wanted to state that children should have the right to contact with both parents to try to address the widespread flouting of contact orders. It never said “equal” and also always said there may be exceptions due to risk. However even the idea that there was a statement that might make parents believe they had some right and responsibility to cooperate in sharing care for the welfare of the child/ren was too much for the usual suspects lobby.

Given that there was in fact little actual legislative change, just a statement of the intention to achieve a shared result between parents. The huge battle to change this made little sense except to scupper even the idea. Indeed Lady Butler Sloss, ironically in an interview for FNF, explicitly said she opposed it because lower courts might be more likely to make shared care orders if they believed this was parliament’s intention! Which of course was precisely the point!

The general debate at the time in the press was positive and I have no doubt that “the public” had no idea that legislation did not get passed as was planned. As you say the general public and those families dealing with the pitfalls of the family courts, specially the inability to prevent flouting of court mandated contact orders will know only too well examples of the courts unfairness and impotence even when flouted by mothers. Of course the related issue is “parental alienation” battled so hard to be excluded from the Domestic Abuse Act.

Working as I do in an industry full of women “of a certain age” I’m pretty familiar with conversations about the “games” played by ex daughters in law /partners on their sons and grandchildren.

The story of “shared parenting” is very much about the way a political elite cleverly intervenes to scupper things the man and woman in the street think is fair. In this case under the guise of actually being a “Shared Parenting Consortuim” . I’m sure many of the Conservative and other MPs who actually supported the idea didn’t really grasp that the consortium was doing the reverse of its title.


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Morrissey performs in LA wearing “F*** The Guardian” T-shirt

Our thanks to Elizabeth for this, from October 2019, in The Guardian (pleasingly).


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

Dr. Anthony Levatino describes four abortion procedures, covering the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimesters of pregnancy

My thanks to Christian Hacking, Parliamentary Liaison Officer for the Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform, for pointing me to this (video, 11:31). The video shows the procedures in a diagrammatic form, there is no actual footage of unborn children.


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.

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‘Supply chain issues,’ explains man who didn’t get girlfriend any birthday presents

An interesting tip.


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Agustina Gandolfo sparks sexism row over Italian menus for women with no prices

A hilarious piece in today’s Times, for subscribers. You can subscribe to the paper here.


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.

UK ratificaction of the Istanbul Convention – progress

Our thanks to Douglas for this:

The fifth ministerial statement has been made on the United Kingdom’s progress toward the ratification of the Council of Europe Convention on Combating Violence Against Women and Domestic Violence (more simply known as the Istanbul Convention).

The minister talks of what the UK has done since our country stupidly signed up to it in 2012. What she does not mention is that two of the signatories have had constitutional challenges over it, Turkey—the first signatory—has since denounced it, and nine other national signatories have still not ratified it.

The Istanbul Convention smashes a saucepan in the face of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights—signed by almost every country in the world—and directly contravenes many nations’ legal efforts toward equality of the sexes. In some details, it even disagrees with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), adopted in 1979 by the United Nations General Assembly. William Collins has an excellent write up on some of the issues the Istanbul Convention on his website.


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.

Nobody connected with J4MB has ever drawn any personal income from the party’s income streams. If you’d like to support Mike Buchanan financially, you can do so via his Patreon account or through Bitcoin, his account address is 1EfWxqDAtgJDCR3tVpvVj4fXSuUu4S9WJf . Thank you.