Women’s health ambassador appointment to improve care

Our thanks to Nigel for this. He writes:

It’s fascinating, isn’t it? Women are to get a “women’s health ambassador” for Christmas. Yet on any measure of health outcomes from mental health to Covid-19 or sex specific disease to cancers the “gender health gap” is actually to the detriment of men!

As usual it was decided that there was such a “gap” in health services, then there was a survey of how women “feel” about this. With the result that a new role will be created to ensure that the NHS and “employers” take extra care of the very people who benefit most from the NHS and concessions from employers. All based on “feelings” not facts.

An example of the the gynocentric society where far from “fighting” for women’s “rights”(privileges) feminists push gently at ever open doors. Imagine the unlikely event of a survey of men and how they “feel” their health needs are catered for. We know the results, any “gaps” would be put down to risky behaviour and the like and men told to “man up” and sort themselves out.


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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.

Free Speech Union Press Release

Dear Mike Buchanan,

20 December 2021

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Free Speech Union welcomes today’s landmark judgement from the Court of Appeal that the recording of non-crime hate incidents is an unlawful interference with freedom of expression. As the Court says, the knowledge that such matters are being recorded and stored in a police database is likely to have had a serious “chilling effect” on public debate.

Not only does the recording of non-crime hate incidents violate Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, as the Court said, but it is a huge waste of the police’s time.

Between 2014 and 2019, 34 police forces in England and Wales recorded a total of 119,134 non-crime hate incidents, an average of 65 a day. What possible justification can there be for the investigation and recording of ‘non-crimes’ when so many actual crimes go unsolved? Between 2015 and 2021, 964,197 domestic burglary investigations ended without a suspect being identified.

Toby Young, the Free Speech Union’s General Secretary, said: “The Free Speech Union is proud to have played a part in winning this landmark victory, but the lion’s share of the credit must go to Harry Miller. Thanks to his courage and tenacity, we can all rest a little easier in our beds tonight, knowing the police are not about to knock on our doors because we’ve made an inappropriate joke on Twitter. They should be policing our streets, not our tweets.”


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.

Male prisoners’ free family phone calls are scrapped – but women’s aren’t under MoJ decision

Our thanks to Tom Caulfield, our Technical Director and the man behind all the 400+ conference videos since 2016 (having filmed and/or edited them) for this from today’s Mail on Sunday. The full article:

– Free family calls for male prisoners have been scrapped – but women will keep the perk
– Jail bosses introduced the system after lockdown restrictions meant visits were banned
– But the Ministry of Justice decided in October that men could do without their £5 phone credit, though women still needed the freebie

Free family calls for male prisoners have been scrapped – but women will keep the perk.

Jail bosses introduced the system after lockdown restrictions meant visits were banned.

But the Ministry of Justice decided in October that men could do without their £5 phone credit, though women still needed the freebie.

A spokesman cited a higher rate of self-harm among female prisoners: a rise of two per cent in women’s prisons compared to a 16 per cent fall in male jails in the year to June 2021. [J4MB: Even if these statistics are true – which I very much doubt – this is a scandalous and disingenuous justification for this further brutalisation of male prisoners. Because men are so much more likely than women to be sent to prison for the same offences, the ratio of male to female prisoners is 20:1 and increasing as women’s prisons are being closed and more men’s prisons opened. MANY more male prisoners are self-harming – including committing suicide – than female prisoners.]

But charities expressed concern that inmates are still having Covid-related mental health issues.


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.

Woman claims she was virtually ‘groped’ in Meta’s VR metaverse

You couldn’t make this s*** up.


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.

Sargon of Akkad (Carl Benjamin)

I am pleased to announce that Carl Benjamin will be joining us tomorrow as our last guest, with a live Q&A with Philipp Tanzer and myself at 1pm GMT.


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.

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.

Mixed bag in new report on Online Safety Bill

The cross-party Joint Committee on the Online Safety Bill has published its report on the legislation. We’ve welcomed proposals for new free speech protections, the committee’s defence of online anonymity, and its call for a stricter definition of the “psychological harm” that the Bill is seeking to prohibit. But we are strongly opposed to the incorporation of the Law Commission’s recommendations concerning ‘stirring up’ offences and the proposed extension of the scope of the Equality Act.

Toby wrote about the Committee’s findings in the Spectator:

Conspicuous by its absence in this report is any sense that social media can be a huge amount of fun, providing people with hours of harmless entertainment. Rather, it’s the Wild West as envisaged by Sam Peckinpah – a perilous landscape in which malevolent outlaws lurk round ever corner. Perhaps if the authors spent a little more time on Twitter and Facebook, and less time being lobbied by people claiming to be speaking on behalf of victim groups, they might place a higher value on the free exchange of opinions and ideas.

An online petition entitled Do not restrict our right to freedom of expression online is “calling on the Government to remove provisions within the Bill that specifically target lawful expression”. If you agree that “the Government has a duty under human rights law to protect free speech” we encourage you to sign the petition.

Spate of legal challenges fighting back against imposition of trans doctrine

The fundraiser for Rosie Kay, the choreographer and FSU member forced out of her own dance company after questioning trans ideology at a dinner party, raised nearly £30,000 in a week. You can still donate to help her fight her legal battles. Julie Bindel said Rosie was “the latest in a long line of women being harassed, hounded and psychologically tortured for standing up to misogynists and their handmaidens”. Her case was also noted by Raquel Rosario Sanchez in Spiked.

Justin Welby said last week in the House of Lords that he was very disturbed by the abuse of gender-critical feminists such as JK Rowling. The author appeared only in minute small print this week in the trailer for the new Fantastic Beasts film she helped to write. But the author is uncancellable, said Suzanne Moore in the Telegraph; and according to Joan Smith in UnHerd, Rowling remains a formidable adversary of the radical demand for “self-ID” being pushed by trans activists and the Scottish Government. Sarah Vine said that JK Rowling was her woman of the year.

Comedian, GB News presenter and FSU Advisory Council member Andrew Doyle spoke to Professor Jo Phoenix following her resignation from the Open University. She is taking her former employer to an employment tribunal.

A ban on “conversion therapy” is not as simple as it appears, wrote Kathleen Stock, as an overly broad ban could criminalise the referral of children who present as trans or non-binary to psychotherapists, even if they have a history of mental illness. James Esses was summarily expelled from his training course for making that point. You can help him fight his legal battle here. Meanwhile, the terms “men” and “women” have been removed from the sex education curriculum in Wales.

Lisa Keogh is continuing to fundraise for her lawsuit against Abertay University. Lisa is the FSU member whose case became a cause célèbre earlier this year after she was subjected to an investigation during the last months of her law degree for challenging trans dogma.

Durham academics “whipping up mob” against Professor Luckhurst

Durham students have threatened a rent strike unless Professor Tim Luckhurst is ousted for having invited Rod Liddle to speak earlier this month. They’ve said “nothing is off the table” in terms of their tactics. One strategy demonstrators have mooted is to submit mass requests to transfer out of South College unless Luckhurst, who is the Principal, is fired. One student said: “Students aren’t giving up this fight because they are yet to feel safe again in South College. We won’t rest until we feel safe in our homes.” Spiked editor Tom Slater said the student revolt was, “in a word, pathetic”.

The Mail on Sunday reported that at least 13 of Durham University’s college principals had issued statements expressing sympathy with the student protestors. One principal told students she stood in “solidarity with all those targeted in Rod Liddle’s speech”. The paper reported that four departments have backed student demonstrators. Our founder Toby Young was quoted in the report:

The fact that senior members of the University are whipping up a mob of censorious student activists against a colleague is shocking. They appear not to have read Durham’s freedom of expression policy. Not only should the College Principals be upholding these values, they also have a legal duty to secure freedom of speech within the law on campus. Something has gone very wrong at Durham.

Lord Wharton of the Office for Students has said about this incident that a “robust and tolerant” exchange of views is essential to the purpose of higher education. We wrote to the OfS urging the university regulator to monitor the situation at Durham closely.

An entire generation seems puzzled by the concept of free speech, wrote Peter Hitchens in connection with this episode, but Andrew Doyle said: “We’re not hearing from those students who think it’s a great idea to hear alternative views, even and especially if they disagree with them. As ever, it’s the noisiest ones we hear.” He also warned of the danger of “safetyism”. Celia Walden interviewed students pushing back against the censorious climate on UK campuses.

Meanwhile, Rod Liddle thanked us for our support in an article in the Sun: “less than two years ago [Toby] set up the Free Speech Union. It has been a huge success, fighting the cancel culture. And sticking up for people persecuted by the woke brigade.”

Jordan Peterson spoke to the Telegraph about his experience of cancellation at the hands of the University of Cambridge. He said: “If you can’t say what you think, soon you won’t be able to think, because mostly we think in words.”

The Daily Express reported that 15 universities carry out “social media listening”. One student who organised a rent strike found that his university had 190 pages of records about his social media activity and his whereabouts on campus.

A “Palestinian liberation” meeting at Goldsmiths banned Jewish and white students from attending. The meeting was limited to students from “African, Arab, Asian, Caribbean and other black communities”.

Government says Human Rights Act reform will strengthen free speech

Dominic Raab has unveiled proposals to reform the Human Rights Act, with a consultation to be launched next week. The proposals will place free speech above the right to privacy, making it harder for wealthy celebrities to gag the press, reported the Times and Mail+.

The proposals were welcomed by the Telegraph, for whom the Attorney-General Suella Braverman wrote: “Our reforms would therefore strengthen the right to freedom of expression, preserving space for wide and vigorous democratic debate. We should make clear the utmost importance attached to this right.”

Nicola Sturgeon greatest foe of free speech in FSU members’ poll

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was named the greatest menace to free speech in the UK by Free Speech Union members at our Christmas Review last week.

Our Director of Case Management Fraser Hudghton said: “I [nominated] Nicola Sturgeon for the Hate Crime Act, which has yet to be put into practice because it’s so unworkable… If it is ever activated it will mean there’s less free speech permitted in Scotland than anywhere else in Europe.”

Cancel culture can be beaten

If you haven’t already, do pick up a copy of Nick Buckley’s new book Lessons in Courage: How I Fought Back Against Cancel Culture and Won. You can buy it here.

Terry Gilliam’s show, cancelled by the Old Vic over his supposedly problematic comments, will now be hosted at the Theatre Royal Bath. He revealed the “unspeakable crime” that ultimately led to his cancellation: recommending his Facebook followers watch a Dave Chapelle show. Jim Murray spoke to the Daily Mail about his experience of being cancelled, and his new war on woke.

Twitter to ban true claims about COVID vaccines under “misinformation” policy

Twitter has revealed new measures under its COVID “misleading information” policy. Users will now have a strike against them if they say “the vaccines will cause you to be sick, spread the virus, or would be more harmful than getting COVID-19” or spread “false or misleading claims that people who have received the vaccine can spread or shed the virus (or symptoms or immunity) to unvaccinated people”. The fact that that latter claim is true will be no defence.

A Dutch MP has been told by a court to delete social media posts comparing the treatment of people who haven’t been vaccinated to the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany. According to the BBC, the court judge ruled against him for “pointlessly offending Holocaust victims and their relatives”. Thierry Baudet MP called the ruling “incomprehensible” and “crazy”.

Woke watch

The armed forces are to get a new “inclusive language” guide produced by the MoD’s Diversity and Inclusion Directorate. The Telegraph reported that it recommended avoiding phrases such as “deaf to our pleas” in case they cause offence.

Is wokeness almost over, asked Scott McConnell in The American Conservative. Ed West mentioned McConnell’s article in his own piece asking whether the tide really has begun to turn. (He doesn’t think so.) Greg Lukianoff said we are now in the “second great age of political correctness”, and that to get out we must first grasp the “true depths of the problem”. Joel Kotkin said the “woke assault on Western civilisation” was tantamount to a new Dark Age.

The Oxford University Press has advised parents to centre children’s bedtime reading around “current and future societal issues” such as “diversity, homelessness and the need to care for the environment”, the Times reported.

The National Trust has appointed a new chairman, who is neither woke nor anti-woke. He is widely seen as a “safe pair of hands” and a non-political choice, the Telegraph reported.

A Louisiana judge has been placed on unplaced leave after video emerged of her using what the BBC called a “racial slur” while describing a burglar outside her house.

New Zealand FSU back academic probed for wanting science lessons to focus on science

The Mail Online reported on the case of Professor Garth Cooper and his colleagues, who signed an open letter opposing the introduction of Māori mythology into science lessons. He is being supported by our New Zealand affiliate. Rod Liddle said the case heralded a De-Enlightenment, while John Ross asked in an article for Times Higher Education if it was “legitimate for some leading scholars to criticize plans to add Māori knowledge to the school curriculum”. The Vice-Chancellor of Auckland University who initially said the letter had caused “caused considerable hurt and dismay among our staff, students and alumni” has now spoken up for free speech. You can read her latest announcement here.

Sharing the newsletter

As with all 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.

You can share our newsletters on social media with the buttons below to help us spread the word. If someone has shared this newsletter with you and you’d like to join the FSU, you can find our website here.

A final reminder: 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 need to join for the full annual amount of £49.95 and select “Academic” in the dropdown menu asking what profession you’re in. Offer ends on 20 December.

Best wishes,

Benjamin Jones

@BenBarryJones

Case Officer


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.

Live Q&A sessions from the ongoing conference

We’re about halfway through the conference (13-19 December) and it couldn’t be going any better. The feedback has been amazing.

With immediate effect we’ll start posting the recorded videos of the 70+ live Q&As at the ongoing conference in the conference playlist on our YouTube channel, here.

We should be grateful if you could buy a ticket (£20.00) and urge friends, family, and feminists (the three “Fs”) to do likewise, here. We currently expect ticket sales to end on 1 January, so you (and they) have only two weeks left to order tickets. Buyers will find on the conference website all 70+ presentations and interviews, and by buying a ticket you (and they) will help ensure the continuation of this remarkable conference series, which started in Detroit in 2014.

The interview and presentation videos will be available on the conference platform until at least 13 June, 2022, maybe a little longer.


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.

Promo video for ICMI21

Just published (video, 2:21). The conference starts tomorrow, order your ticket now if you haven’t already. All the materials (including the videos of the live Q&A sessions) will remain on the conference website until 19 June, 2022. Tickets will remain on sale until 23:59 on 1 January, 2022.


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.

New Guest of Honour – Robin Aitken

I’m pleased to announce a new Guest of Honour, Robin Aitken. Rick Bradford (aka William Collins) and I interviewed him yesterday, and he’ll be joining us for a live Q&A. His short biography:

Robin Aitken was a BBC reporter for 25 years ending up on the Today Programme under editor Rod Liddle. His experience at the BBC turned him into one of the Corporation’s best-informed critics. Since leaving the BBC he has published a series of books about the Corporation; the first , in 2007, was ‘Can We Trust the BBC? and the most recent, in 2020, The Noble Liar – how and why the BBC distorts the news to promote a liberal agenda.

He now works as a freelance and writes regularly for the Daily Telegraph and other newspapers and magazines. In 2016 Robin was awarded an MBE for his part in setting up The Oxford Food Bank – a food recovery charity. He is married with two daughters and lives in Oxford.


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.

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.

Rosie Kay forced out of her own company for lawful views expressed in her own home

We’re supporting Free Speech Union member Rosie Kay, a choreographer who has been forced out of the dance company she founded because she said – while at a dinner party in her own home – that biological sex is binary and immutable.

Incredibly, several of her guests lodged a formal complaint of “transphobia” with the trustees of the company she had set up and Rosie was placed under investigation for four months.

She was interviewed by Janice Turner in the Times about the ordeal yesterday. We are now helping Rosie raise funds to fight a legal battle and we urge you to donate to her fundraiser here. Every little helps.

Liberal professor under investigation for calling student walkout over Rod Liddle speech “pathetic”

Professor Tim Luckhurst, Principal of South College at the University of Durham, is being subjected to an investigation by university authorities about events surrounding a speech given by Spectator columnist Rod Liddle on the theme of tolerating other people’s points of view. A small number of students walked-out of the event, at which point Professor Luckhurst called the walk-out “pathetic”. He was not directing his comments at individual students, just expressing his view that walking out rather than staying to listen to opinions you find disagreeable – and forgoing an opportunity to debate with the speaker – was “pathetic”.

A chorus of student complaints about how “hurt” they were by Rod’s words – even though they hadn’t stayed to hear them – prompted the university to launch a formal investigation into Professor Luckhurst and bar him from engaging with students, including a planned talk in favour of free speech at the Durham Union on Monday. He is a member of the Free Speech Union and we are supporting him in full. Our full statement on events in Durham was printed in the Daily Mail:

The vilification and abuse of Professor Luckhurst for inviting Rod Liddle to give an after-dinner speech is an absolute disgrace.

If students cannot cope with hearing opinions they find disagreeable they shouldn’t be at university.

Durham says it believes in upholding academic free speech, but if so why has it placed Professor Luckhurst under investigation for describing the decision of students to walk out of the speech as “pathetic”?

In expressing that perfectly lawful view, Professor Luckhurst was exercising his right to free speech and penalising him for doing so could well be a breach of the law that requires universities to uphold free speech on campus.

The Durham UCU branch called for the University “to consider the full range of appropriate disciplinary action”. Its statement also said Professor Luckhurst had not “addressed the behaviour of his wife”, who was filmed remonstrating with students after Liddle’s speech, one of whom had called her a “bitch”.

In the furore following the talk, the presidents of Durham student associations called for “content warnings” ahead of future guest lectures and hundreds of students protested and gave speeches demanding Luckhurst’s resignation. The Times said that Durham should not “indulge the sensitivities of student protesters”.

But Imogen Marchant, a current Durham student, wrote in the Spectator:

As a Durham finalist, I’m fed up. The university has released more communication about Rod-gate in the last three days than I have received all term about what is going to happen with my exams. My college, my department and the university governing body have all sent me emails telling me about the appropriate welfare resources to turn to if I have been unduly affected by hearing about comments that I might disagree with. The university has been quick to affirm that it “categorically does not agree with views expressed by the external speaker at this occasion”. This is precisely my worry: since when has inviting someone to speak been a sign that you agree with everything they’ve ever said? After all, by giving someone a microphone, it should be clear that you are not irrevocably aligning your institution with them. Who would think otherwise?

Rod Liddle has called for the University to make a “grovelling apology” for its treatment of Luckhurst. He accused Durham of scapegoating Luckhurst and “hanging him out to dry”.

Michael Deacon said if students can’t handle Rod Liddle’s jokes they aren’t ready for the real world.

The behaviour of the UCU, a trade union which is supposed to stand up for the rights of university employees against their employers, is yet more evidence that it won’t support academics who express unorthodox views. If you fall into that category, please consider joining the FSU instead. We currently have a special offer whereby academics can get a £10 discount on their first year’s membership. More details below.

Cambridge students launch witch-hunt to find source of woke “training” leak

The Wolfson College Student Association (WCSA) has launched a witch-hunt after several students leaked images of compulsory “anti-racism” training to the Telegraph. The mandatory training included the usual woke gobbledegook – Britain is a cesspit of ‘white supremacy’, ‘microaggressions’ should be reported to the university authorities, heteronormative students need to do ‘the work’ to become ‘allies’ of trans students, etc., etc. The Telegraph has more. The president of the WCSA said the leakers wanted “to sow division, uncertainty, and distrust amongst their peers” and that it was “frankly cowardly” to defy the Association.

Our founder Toby Young was quoted on the search for heretics in Wolfson: “The college authorities should be embarrassed. They’ve relinquished their leadership role and the result is that a student mob is now in charge. Why would anyone want to go to Wolfson if the college is now run by a group of Maoist thugs in short trousers?”

The recent appearance of Jordan Peterson at Cambridge is one promising sign that academic freedom can be restored.

Meanwhile, Professor Jo Phoenix has resigned from the Open University after being “harassed and vilified” by her colleagues over her gender critical views. She said: “The University has allowed things to escalate to a point beyond repair. My trust and heart have been broken.”

Law Commission proposals on hate crime

The Law Commission has proposed that England and Wales needs its own Hate Crime Bill, much like the one that free speech groups campaigned against in Scotland. Some of the proposals from the Commission were welcomed, but we think they’d be an unprecedented assault on free speech. Toby wrote in the Spectator:

At present, in order to be prosecuted for stirring up hatred against a ‘protected’ group, the Crown needs to prove you intended to do so, with the exception of stirring up racial hatred, where the threshold is lower. The Commission not only proposes to enlarge the number of ‘protected’ groups to include ‘sex and gender’, ‘disability’ and ‘trans-gender and gender identity’, but wants the lower prosecution threshold to be extended to all stirring-up offences.

Consequently, you could be sent to jail for using threatening or abusive words that are ‘likely to’ stir up hatred against women and minorities — look out Roy Chubby Brown — even if you didn’t intend to do so. All the Crown would need to show is that you ‘ought to have known’. The Scottish government initially intended to make the same change, but was forced to climb down. The fact that the Law Commission wants to venture into territory where even Nicola Sturgeon fears to tread is alarming.

The Commission recommended the criminalisation of “public sexual harassment” like cat-calling or lewd comments, the Telegraph reported, while rejecting calls for misogyny to be made a hate crime.

The Economist called Scotland’s new Hate Crime Act, which the Law Commission wants to replicate in England and Wales and which we campaigned against, the “latest example of growing authoritarianism”.

The Muslim Council of Britain has issued a report on “Islamophobia” calling for greater restrictions on the reporting of Islamist terrorism. It singles out for criticism a report in the Daily Mail which quoted a Yazidi survivor of ISIS who said: “They called it Islamic law. They raped women, even young girls.” The Muslim Council of Britain said that report risked “perpetuating falsehoods about Islam”. Brendan O’Neill said the report was a “chilling attempt to crush public criticism of Islam”.

Ceri Black is being prosecuted in Northern Ireland for Twitter threads she wrote about child sexual abuse after a complaint from David Paisley, the actor and “LGBTQAI+ activist”. She accused him of “boundary blurring interventions” in the debate about the Wii Spa incident, where, as Black explained, “A male, who turned out to have a history of sex offences, went into the women’s changing room and exposed his penis to women and girls. A woman complained about him; she was subsequently vilified on social media, called a transphobe and a bigot.”

Mia Ashton, a British feminist living in Canada, said in the Critic that a proposed amendment to the country’s Human Rights Code will have disastrous consequences on the free speech of gender critical feminists.

Sceptic doctor triumphs in High Court case

Dr Sam White has won his case at the High Court against a social media ban imposed on him by the General Medical Council after he’d posted videos doubting the efficacy of vaccines and arguing that mask-wearing was not effective.

Ban on conversion therapy could criminalise counsellors of trans children

The Government has extended the consultation on the criminalisation of ‘conversion therapy’, which many have warned will make it illegal to refer children who present as gender dysphoric to a psychiatrist. Both Janice Turner in the Times and Nikki Da Costa in the Telegraph warned against rushing out legislation in this complicated area. Tom Chivers, writing for UnHerd, argued that stifling conversations around gender identity and counselling for children who self-identify as trans will only cause harm. Many parents fear that they could be prosecuted for discussing their own child’s desire to change sex. Church leaders have warned that an overly-broad ban on conversion therapy would risk criminalising Christian teaching.

Trans ideology continues to dominate public sector

Hundreds of nurses have called on the Nursing and Midwifery Council to withdraw from Stonewall’s ailing Diversity Champions scheme. One nurse said: “I feel I am unable to protect my female/women patients, and advocate for them without fear of recrimination.”

James Kirkup accused the BBC of failing to recognise the contentiousness of trans ideology after the corporation included two trans women on its annual 100 Women list. Raquel Rosario Sanchez said the BBC’s recent Womanhood documentary presented “trans dogmas as truth and biology as lies”.

Meanwhile civil servants are being made to sit through training courses described as “unscientific nonsense”. One course featured a “genderbread person” that described biological sex as a “spectrum”.

MPs could be banned from making “unreasonable” attacks

Professor Andrew Tettenborn of our Legal Advisory Council has warned about the House of Commons’ Committee on Standards’ proposals for banning MPs from mounting any “unreasonable and excessive personal attack” and obliging them to promote “anti-racism”. These proposals are currently being consulted about and if you would like to respond you can do so here. We will be responding shortly.

Judge-written privacy law will encroach on free speech

Geoffrey Robertson QC has warned in the Mail on Sunday that Meghan Markle’s recent Court of Appeals victory risks judge-made privacy law that shields the rich and powerful from criticism. The Times warned of the same in an editorial.

Headteacher: young people care about social justice but hate cancel culture

Vicky Bingham of South Hampstead High School has said most young people hate cancel culture and see it as “performative, virtue-signalling and frightening” and would rather concentrate on “meaningful action than on grand sweeping statements or policy of language”.

Hugo Rifkind wrote that cancel culture was out of control, and argued that it comes from the right as well as the left. (Well done Hugo. The penny finally dropped.)

The Colston school in Bristol has renamed itself in the wake of the toppling of Edward Colston’s statue last year.

Mispronouncing a name isn’t a “microaggression”

Patrick West wrote in the Spectator about the minefield of mispronouncing foreign names, a difficulty he said is ubiquitous across cultures and far from malicious.

Broadcasters drop “BAME”

The BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5 are to “move away” from the term BAME. A diversity report found that many people considered it insulting and that white journalists were “nervous” about what language to use.

EU condemned for attempt to police language

The Pope and President Macron have both condemned the European Union’s attempt to police language, including advising people to avoid saying “Christmas”.

Surviving the trans publishing purges

“While JK Rowling might be too famous to cancel, those with heterodox views in the foothills of literary fame have two choices: keep quiet or leave,” wrote Josephine Bartosch on the “trans publishing purges”. Writer Rose Tremain told the Times that writing now “is like walking through a forest with mantraps”. Meanwhile, woke children’s books have colonised book shops.

Shakespeare has survived worse than the trigger warnings which bedevil modern productions, wrote Jane Shilling in the Telegraph.

Forthcoming comedy night

Following the success of our first comedy night of 2021, we are offering members priority booking for our second, taking place on Wednesday 15 December – perfect timing for a pre-Christmas celebration of free-thinking comedy. And fear not – the new Covid restrictions announced on Wednesday won’t affect this event.

Our MC for the evening will be FSU favourite Dominic Frisby, and he’ll be joined by comedians Leo Kearse, Mark Dolan and Joe Jacobs. Bringing some additional seasonal glamour, we have a special performance by Vanity von Glow.

The Free Speech Union team will also be there, so do come and say hello. Round up your friends and family and buy your tickets now!

If you’re feeling especially full of Christmas cheer, please consider selecting the option of a ticket plus a £10 donation to the FSU.

Sharing the newsletter

As with all 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.

You can share our newsletters on social media with the buttons below to help us spread the word. If someone has shared this newsletter with you and you’d like to join the FSU, you can find our website here.

A reminder: 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 need to join for the full annual amount of £49.95 and select “Academic” in the dropdown menu asking what profession you’re in. Offer ends on 20 December.

Best wishes,

Benjamin Jones

@BenBarryJones

Case Officer


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