Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Religious hate-speech in the UK or fearless speaker of truth?

123468

Comments

  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    In the world of social media, its more important to be liked than to be right.

    Seems to be very much the game that Tommy Robinson / Yaxley Lennon is playing. Why deal with all the awkward complexities of truth when you can tell the simple lies that your audience wants to hear? Kind of ironic in an atheist forum if you think about it :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,479 ✭✭✭AllForIt


    https://news.sky.com/story/sajid-javid-people-offended-by-asian-paedophile-comment-oversensitive-11547909


    Sajid Javid on being the first minister to publicly acknowledging the existence of Pakistani rape gangs:
    "When I made that comment I was stating the facts, and the sad truth is that if you look at recent high-profile convictions of gang-based child sexual exploitation there is a majority of people that come from Pakistani heritage backgrounds - that's plain for everyone to see".

    And not only that but finally admits that it was precisely their ethnicity that assisted them in getting away with it:
    "part of the problem" was that police and social workers "didn't take this issue seriously enough because they didn't want to be accused of racism and that's wrong".

    You see, that is why ppl are so angry. It's not about racism, it's about the do-gooders who think they are protecting a race but are in fact just adding to the problems and in fact making them much worse. They are the ppl I'm gunning for, not the Pakistanis.

    His Labour shadow, Diane Abbott, was among those to criticise the post, saying that "attempts by… the government to attribute these crimes to one ethnic group does nothing to support these vulnerable women".

    And there is an example of one of these deluded do-gooders. A very easy target to go after is ole Diane Abbot but useful for my post.
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6437385/Police-hit-Diane-Abbott-criticises-ramming-moped-gangs.html

    Ms Abbott tweeted: 'Knocking people off bikes is potentially very dangerous. It shouldn't be legal for anyone. Police are not above the law.'

    And here she is again in the same mode doing everything she can to distract from the race of the underclass who are involved in moped and knife crime, the majority of which happen to be black.

    In Diana Abbots mind anything that could be interpreted as targeting any racial group is a no no. People like her and there are many like her, are a huge problem in an increasingly multicultural western European society.

    I can hand on heart say I don't hate any race but I can unashamedly say I despise Diane Abbot and ppl like her with a passion because their stance, their rhetoric, is directly responsible for taking the heat of criminal factions in racial minorities - which for me is directly responsible for the increase in knife crime in London.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    AllForIt wrote: »
    You see, that is why ppl are so angry. It's not about racism, it's about the do-gooders who think they are protecting a race but are in fact just adding to the problems and in fact making them much worse. They are the ppl I'm gunning for, not the Pakistanis.

    The big hole in your argument is that on the one hand you're saying that the police are afraid of prosecuting Pakistanis for fear of being labelled racists and the other hand Pakistanis being over represented numerically in terms of convicted sex criminals. How about just going after criminals based on the crimes they've committed regardless of their race or religious inclination?


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    smacl wrote: »
    The big hole in your argument is that on the one hand you're saying that the police are afraid of prosecuting Pakistanis for fear of being labelled racists and the other hand Pakistanis being over represented numerically in terms of convicted sex criminals. How about just going after criminals based on the crimes they've committed regardless of their race or religious inclination?




    That wouldn't be quite what the donor ordered, by the looks of things



    "The British far-right activist Tommy Robinson is receiving financial, political and moral support from a broad array of non-British groups and individuals, including US thinktanks, rightwing Australians and Russian trolls, a Guardian investigation has discovered.
    Robinson, an anti-Islam campaigner who is leading a “Brexit betrayal” march in London on Sunday, has received funding from a US tech billionaire and a thinktank based in Philadelphia.
    Two other US thinktanks, part-funded by some of the biggest names in rightwing funding, have published a succession of articles in support of Robinson, who has become a cause célèbre among the American far right since he was jailed in May for two months."



    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/dec/07/tommy-robinson-global-support-brexit-march


    Gatestone

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatestone_Institute


    "Freedom center"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Horowitz_Freedom_Center


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    smacl wrote: »
    Seems to be very much the game that Tommy Robinson / Yaxley Lennon is playing. Why deal with all the awkward complexities of truth when you can tell the simple lies that your audience wants to hear?
    Has anyone else even tried to look into the complexities?
    For example, maybe you noticed that the Syrian kid Jamal had a broken arm and wondered why?
    All is revealed by TR's investigative journalism.




  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    recedite wrote: »
    Has anyone else even tried to look into the complexities?
    For example, maybe you noticed that the Syrian kid Jamal had a broken arm and wondered why?
    All is revealed by TR's investigative journalism.



    TR's sponsored Islamophobia, surely.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,172 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    recedite wrote: »
    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.
    What does that mean?
    smacl wrote: »
    The big hole in your argument is that on the one hand you're saying that the police are afraid of prosecuting Pakistanis for fear of being labelled racists and the other hand Pakistanis being over represented numerically in terms of convicted sex criminals. How about just going after criminals based on the crimes they've committed regardless of their race or religious inclination?
    It either means that there is no bias and they are over represented, or there is bias and they are being targeted. Of course this is where other posters fall down as it means the racist conspiracy is flawed or simply untrue, the latter also doesn't fit in as they would be doing what TR wants. The truth is there are a range of factors that contribute to this, none of this means that people from certain regions of Asia or descended are default groomers. There were grooming rings of white men in the UK, there were grooming rings of white men and women in the posh parts of South Dublin, and the examples go on, but that in no way means that white people and Catholicism lead to grooming or sexual abuse. People and a range of factors lead to it, none of these factors are excuses but they do provide areas that public policy can target to remove.
    recedite wrote: »
    Has anyone else even tried to look into the complexities?
    For example, maybe you noticed that the Syrian kid Jamal had a broken arm and wondered why?
    All is revealed by TR's investigative journalism.
    I am not sure if you have met parents of kids who are brats etc. I hear that story all the time, parents all over time ream off that BS to teachers because they cannot comprehend their kid is a sh1t. They also cover for their kids when they do, do something wrong. I listened to that and thought, your kids /kids mate broke his arm and followed through with the pinning and waterboarding, or its all BS. Its not impossible but what he is saying is that quite diminutive child had someone in a headlock, after getting away with racist abuse, repeatedly, and their hero son broke his arm by accident pushing him off. Nothing in the video suggests this was retaliatory, it suggests thuggery and mob mentality. Why where none of the claims investigated? How did the breaking of a childs arm not raise alarm bells if it was caused dring an assault. Truth is, the more you look at it, the more it stinks of BS.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,513 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    No one is saying it's about ethnicity, rather attitudes in the Islamic world toward womem and in particular western women - this is a cornerstone of the over representation - something you "liberals" ( :D ) constantly overlook.

    You seem to have a beef against one religion in particular, you must be in the wrong place.

    We have a beef against ALL religions.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,636 ✭✭✭feargale


    I'm not interested in the racial or religious profile of these people, but to sentence someone to life and then say he must serve a minimum of 18 years is utter bull****. That is not life, but more like saying maximum 18 years. The trick for a person convicted in those circumstances is to profess remorse every hour of the day until the prison authorities are deafened. Then after 7 to 10 years, when everybody has forgotten that the judge said 18 years, he goes before the review board, and hey presto.
    Life my arse! As a guard said to me once, they're all sorry when they are caught.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    robindch wrote: »
    Have people who self-describe as white supremacists and/or the alt-right generally used the term "master race"?

    Don't know about master race but the white supremacists are still out there, from today's RTE headlines
    RTE wrote:
    White supremacist found guilty of murder of woman during Charlottesville rally

    In the US, a white supremacist who drove his car into a counter demonstrator at a rally in Charlotsville in the state of Virginia has been found guilty of murder.

    James Alex Fields Jr was found guilty of five counts of aggravated malicious wounding, three of malicious wounding, and one hit-and-run count.

    From what I gather he does identify as a white supremacist, from another NBC article
    A taped phone call from jail between Fields and his mother was also played for the court. In it, Fields is heard lashing out at Heyer's mother, Susan Bro, calling her a "communist" and "anti-white supremacist" who was trying to slander him, according to the NBC 29.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,184 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    Revealed: the hidden global network behind Tommy Robinson
    Guardian investigation shows how cash, legal support and millions of tweets underpin anti-Islam activist - but Facebook removes his ‘donate’ button

    The British far-right activist Tommy Robinson is receiving financial, political and moral support from a broad array of non-British groups and individuals, including US thinktanks, rightwing Australians and Russian trolls, a Guardian investigation has discovered.

    Robinson, an anti-Islam campaigner who is leading a “Brexit betrayal” march in London on Sunday, has received funding from a US tech billionaire and a thinktank based in Philadelphia.
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/dec/07/tommy-robinson-global-support-brexit-march


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    What is your point here? Do you think there is some problem with people crowdfunding him?
    If it wasn't for the funding he would still be languishing in HM Prison system.
    It costs a lot of money to appeal an unlawful imprisonment all the way to the UK Supreme Court.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,107 ✭✭✭thegreengoblin


    recedite wrote: »
    What is your point here? Do you think there is some problem with people crowdfunding him?
    If it wasn't for the funding he would still be languishing in HM Prison system.
    It costs a lot of money to appeal an unlawful imprisonment all the way to the UK Supreme Court.

    If you read the whole piece you'll see that poor little Tommy was trying to be a clever cookie in raising money for his cause but he got rumbled because, you know, he's not a charity.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    CramCycle wrote: »
    What does that mean?
    It means if mainstream media did not shirk away from investigating the issues that TR investigates, then he would have a bit more competition. There is no point complaining at his mediocre standard of journalism when he is the only one investigating and reporting the other side of the argument.


    CramCycle wrote: »
    It either means that there is no bias and they are over represented, or there is bias and they are being targeted. Of course this is where other posters fall down as it means the racist conspiracy is flawed or simply untrue..
    A third option is that (compared to the general population) the Pakistani/Muslim gangs are way over represented in rape gang crimes, and only slightly over-represented in convictions.

    CramCycle wrote: »
    I am not sure if you have met parents of kids who are brats etc. I hear that story all the time, parents all over time ream off that BS to teachers because they cannot comprehend their kid is a sh1t. They also cover for their kids when they do, do something wrong. I listened to that and thought, your kids /kids mate broke his arm and followed through with the pinning and waterboarding, or its all BS. Its not impossible but what he is saying is that quite diminutive child had someone in a headlock, after getting away with racist abuse, repeatedly, and their hero son broke his arm by accident pushing him off. Nothing in the video suggests this was retaliatory, it suggests thuggery and mob mentality. Why where none of the claims investigated? How did the breaking of a childs arm not raise alarm bells if it was caused dring an assault. Truth is, the more you look at it, the more it stinks of BS.
    The kid who squirted the water bottle at Jamal was not the same kid who was in the scuffle when his arm got broken. So according to the interview, he has been in numerous fights, including one in which a girl was beaten up.
    On the one hand you ask why nobody investigates these things, but on the other hand you complain about TR for his investigative reporting. Which has been referred to in this thread as $hit stirring.


    I would assume that the school investigated and dealt with all these issues at the time. However what has happened since is that mainstream and social media has intervened. Jamal has been hailed as a blameless victim of racism, and his family have received £150,000 in crowdfunding. One of the other guys has been hounded out of the town with death threats and his whole family are now homeless.

    Its only at this point that TR "the "journalist" arrives to bring some balance to the story.
    Previously you gave an account of your own school days in which you were sorely tempted to teach some "little $hit" a lesson, but instead you let him walk away. Well, that was a mistake IMO.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    If you read the whole piece you'll see that poor little Tommy was trying to be a clever cookie in raising money for his cause but he got rumbled because, you know, he's not a charity.
    Facebook removed their donate button, but that aspect is only a tiny part of that article. Its not even significant to TR's fundraisng and charitable operations. Paypal also stopped processing payments for him a while back, yet he was still able to raise enough money to buy that little girl's wheelchair.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 50,184 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    recedite wrote: »
    What is your point here?
    it was posted without comment. but posted because it's topical.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    recedite wrote: »
    What is your point here? Do you think there is some problem with people crowdfunding him?
    If it wasn't for the funding he would still be languishing in HM Prison system.
    It costs a lot of money to appeal an unlawful imprisonment all the way to the UK Supreme Court.


    His point is the same as mine
    https://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=108825741&postcount=255


    He's being sponsored by anti-muslim groups from the US.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,172 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    recedite wrote: »
    It means if mainstream media did not shirk away from investigating the issues that TR investigates, then he would have a bit more competition. There is no point complaining at his mediocre standard of journalism when he is the only one investigating and reporting the other side of the argument.
    Or maybe they are investigating and not finding the minimum standard to print as a journalist, there are several papers who would happily print anti muslim rhetoric so long as it passed muster they could defend in court. Alas TR has no such need to reach such a level. And once it passed these minmum standards, I could not complain.
    A third option is that (compared to the general population) the Pakistani/Muslim gangs are way over represented in rape gang crimes, and only slightly over-represented in convictions.
    These would require more than just a blind eye by the powers that be but a blind eye by the general populace. Not impossible but so far out there, hard to credit without proof.

    The kid who squirted the water bottle at Jamal was not the same kid who was in the scuffle when his arm got broken. So according to the interview, he has been in numerous fights, including one in which a girl was beaten up.
    On the one hand you ask why nobody investigates these things, but on the other hand you complain about TR for his investigative reporting. Which has been referred to in this thread as $hit stirring.
    The interview with no verification, a randomer claiming he was a parent of a child who was assaulted. I am sorry but if you cannot see how that interview fails to meet the bare minimum required to report. No reasonable journalist would run with that interview, you need back up and verification. You need at least three independent sources or fact verification via another means, He has one randomer parent who claims their kid broke the other kids arm. That's it. Can you really not see why this interview proves or shows nothing? I could make the same video myself in the morning with a paid actor or simply someone who believes the ends justifies the mean.
    I would assume that the school investigated and dealt with all these issues at the time. However what has happened since is that mainstream and social media has intervened. Jamal has been hailed as a blameless victim of racism, and his family have received £150,000 in crowdfunding. One of the other guys has been hounded out of the town with death threats and his whole family are now homeless.
    Do you have links?
    Its only at this point that TR "the "journalist" arrives to bring some balance to the story.
    What balance?
    Previously you gave an account of your own school days in which you were sorely tempted to teach some "little $hit" a lesson, but instead you let him walk away. Well, that was a mistake IMO.
    In your opinon, which your entitled too. I don't think its appropriate to beat the **** out of someone I am more than capable of doing so. There has been and continues to be no element of defence in this story that makes sense, it wasn't an immediate retaliation, it wasn't as Jamal attacked the other person. All we have is a group, where a singular individual, harasses, then physically abuses, followed by mentally abuses a person far physically smaller.

    You bring up the crowdfunding thing, what has that got to do with any of it. It does not excuse the behaviour.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    CramCycle wrote: »
    The interview with no verification, a randomer claiming he was a parent of a child who was assaulted. I am sorry but if you cannot see how that interview fails to meet the bare minimum required to report. No reasonable journalist would run with that interview, you need back up and verification. You need at least three independent sources or fact verification via another means, He has one randomer parent who claims their kid broke the other kids arm. That's it. Can you really not see why this interview proves or shows nothing? I could make the same video myself in the morning with a paid actor or simply someone who believes the ends justifies the mean.
    OK so you just watched the interview with the actual kid who squirted the water bottle saying a different kid was involved when Jamal's arm got broken. Then you watched the interview of the actual parent of that other kid. And you dismiss these people as "randomers", no better than "actors". It seems you are really going out of your way to discredit TR's journalism, even to the point of dismissing primary source material as being irrelevant.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    OK so you just watched the interview with the actual kid who squirted the water bottle saying a different kid was involved when Jamal's arm got broken. Then you watched the interview of the actual parent of that other kid. And you dismiss these people as "randomers", no better than "actors". It seems you are really going out of your way to discredit TR's journalism, even to the point of dismissing primary source material as being irrelevant.

    What, this actual parent? Seems like we need to trust TR on this one that this is who he claims it is, and frankly I wouldn't trust TR as far as I could throw him. Primary evidence needs to be open to objective testing, this falls at the first hurdle.

    467819.JPG


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    People have been hounded out of their homes.
    Lets face it, if this was a BBC or an RTE interview concerning a sensitive topic and the person's face was pixelated out with the voice distorted, you wouldn't bat an eyelid.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    People have been hounded out of their homes.
    Lets face it, if this was a BBC or an RTE interview concerning a sensitive topic and the person's face was pixelated out with the voice distorted, you wouldn't bat an eyelid.

    True, but Tommy Robinson wouldn't be considered a credible journalist outside of his immediate fan base, whereas professional journalists from the BBC or RTE would. Tommy Robinson is considered by many to be professional shít stirrer, has convictions for fraud, and is an anti-Islamic far right activist. He's not exactly unbiased, now is he?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,228 ✭✭✭BBFAN


    recedite wrote: »
    People have been hounded out of their homes.
    Lets face it, if this was a BBC or an RTE interview concerning a sensitive topic and the person's face was pixelated out with the voice distorted, you wouldn't bat an eyelid.

    You seem to be on your own here recedite in defending this low life pond scum.

    Have you ever heard of the phrase if you meet assholes all day it's probably you who's the asshole?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    BBFAN wrote: »
    You seem to be on your own here recedite in defending this low life pond scum.

    Have you ever heard of the phrase if you meet assholes all day it's probably you who's the asshole?
    Hello, and welcome to the forum. Please read the rules.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,513 ✭✭✭✭ohnonotgmail


    recedite wrote: »
    Hello, and welcome to the forum. Please read the rules.

    The irony


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,172 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    recedite wrote: »
    OK so you just watched the interview with the actual kid who squirted the water bottle saying a different kid was involved when Jamal's arm got broken. Then you watched the interview of the actual parent of that other kid. And you dismiss these people as "randomers", no better than "actors". It seems you are really going out of your way to discredit TR's journalism, even to the point of dismissing primary source material as being irrelevant.

    I seen the interview where, even if it is who it is claimed to be, they were not there and are relating a story their kid told them. Can you not see the huge bias? Can you not here the multiple ways in which this seems to falls apart when you look at it for plausibility.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    smacl wrote: »
    True, but Tommy Robinson wouldn't be considered a credible journalist outside of his immediate fan base, whereas professional journalists from the BBC or RTE would. Tommy Robinson is considered by many to be professional shstirrer...
    So we are back to this dilemma again; mainstream reporters won't do the reporting, but when Tommy fills the gap he gets labelled "a $hit stirrer."
    That's why I say In the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king.
    He doesn't need to be an excellent investigative reporter when he's the only reporter on the scene.


    But there I go making assumptions again, I assumed he really did go up to 'Uddersfield and interview the people.

    Maybe you're right, and maybe he employed actors and a rented a film studio instead. Maybe he went to Hollywood and used the same studio they used for the fake moon landings (if you like CTs, you may as well dream big :pac:).


    Anyway, moving on, here's an interesting opinion piece.
    It isn’t ‘too much freedom of speech’, or being ‘given a platform’, to use the modern parlance, that has energised the Tommy Robinson phenomenon, as censorious leftists would have us believe. Rather, it is their censorship that did that. It is the stymying of open debate that nurtures the space for the rise of self-styled and often quite eccentric ‘truth-speakers’
    We end up with a darkly symbiotic relationship: the left needs Tommy Robinson, in order to prove that its ridiculous thesis about the return of fascism is correct, and Tommy Robinson needs the left because it is the left’s fear, loathing and pursuit of him that furnishes him with political importance and substance.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    recedite wrote: »
    So we are back to this dilemma again; mainstream reporters won't do the reporting, but when Tommy fills the gap he gets labelled "a $hit stirrer."
    .............




    ...which is what he's paid to be. More specifically a spreader of anti-muslim propaganda.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    So we are back to this dilemma again; mainstream reporters won't do the reporting, but when Tommy fills the gap he gets labelled "a $hit stirrer."

    If mainstream reporters, including the entirety of the tabloid press, won't report on a story, there either isn't a story (my guess) or you're heading into the realms of gargantuan conspiracy theory. So yeah, i think he's making this stuff up, which as has already been pointed out, is what he's being paid to do.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,420 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    BBFAN wrote: »
    You seem to be on your own here recedite in defending this low life pond scum. Have you ever heard of the phrase if you meet assholes all day it's probably you who's the asshole?
    No need for that kind of language hereabouts.
    recedite wrote: »
    Hello, and welcome to the forum. Please read the rules.
    No need for that kind of back-seat modding hereabouts.

    Thanking youze.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,420 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    Afternoon all!
    King Mob wrote: »
    Who has been pulling which strings and why?
    recedite wrote: »
    I don't know. Its probably a mixture. Some people in influential positions like this guy.
    recedite wrote: »
    From the link..That's it. He knew that in advance of any prosecutions. And he's in a position where he gets to say who gets prosecuted and who does not. Just think about that for a second. And there are loads more just like him in control of local councils, boroughs, police, social services etc.
    recedite wrote: »
    There is an allegiance there, that goes beyond the allegiance to the state and/or the wider society.
    In line with the recent update to the forum rules, King Mob has requested adjudication on a general claim which recedite has made.

    The links above show a small number of the relevant posts, but the essence of recedite's claim is that, in the UK, people who self-describe as islamic are engaged in a range of actions in support of other people who also self-describe as islamic - such actions including attempting to delay or pervert the course of justice.

    To date, recedite has provided no evidence to support this claim.

    @recedite - can you please supply evidence which backs up your claim so that the mod team can assess it?

    Thanks.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    King mob is confusing two different issues.
    The "pulling of strings" which he has taken offence to referred to Paypal making it more difficult for TR to crowdfund, and as I mentioned a guy who has been unlawfully imprisoned should have every right and opportunity to raise necessary funds to achieve his freedom. If an appeal is successful, as this one was, then the appellant is considered vindicated.
    Here is my original post on that.
    recedite wrote: »
    Somebody has been pulling strings again. But are you not at all concerned that private companies such as these have the power to censor and control public political debate and activity?
    As the crowdfunding donations were used primarily to launch a very expensive Supreme Court appeal to get Tommy out of jail during his unlawful imprisonment, it seems that the pursuit of justice is now contrary to paypal's "acceptable use policy".
    When King mob demanded to know who was pulling these strings I replied..
    recedite wrote: »
    I don't know. Its probably a mixture. Some people in influential positions like this guy. Others like yourself, people who feel some sense of self-satisfaction when they feel they are "punching a nazi". Paypal will easily cave in to such people because "corporate values" as always, are really only to make money and to get more subscribers.
    The original conviction is considered wrongful. Can you not accept that fundamental fact?


    King Mobs second ambition is to trick me into coming up with a racist conspiracy theory, so that he can nail me. Again I replied in a way that did not give him satisfaction. Even so, he has gone ahead with this allegation against me.


    Its true I laughed at some of the things Nazir Afzal said (in the link quoted by the mod above) ...
    victims were not targeted because they were white but because they were vulnerable and their vulnerability caused them to seek out “warmth, love, transport, mind-numbing substances, drugs, alcohol and food”. “Who offers those things? In certain parts of the country, the place they go is the night-time economy,” he says. “Where you have Pakistani men, Asian men, disproportionately employed in the night-time economy, they are going to be more involved in this kind of activity than perhaps white men are. We keep hearing people talk about a problem in the north and the Midlands, and that’s where you have lots of minicab drivers, lots of people employed in takeaways, from that kind of background. If you have a preponderance of Asians working in those fields, some of that number, a very small number of those people, will take advantage of the girls who have moved into their sphere of influence. It’s tragic.
    And I asked where are all the Chinese rape gangs, after all they work nights more than anybody.
    There is no religious basis for this. These men were not religious. Islam says that alcohol, drugs, rape and abuse are all forbidden, yet these men were surrounded by all of these things. So how can anyone say that these men were driven by their religion to do this kind of thing?
    Nor do I accept that a misogynous religion founded by a prophet who "married" a child has nothing to do with these crimes which went unpunished in the various northern towns for so long.


    If a lack of respect for Islam is my crime, then I plead guilty.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,228 ✭✭✭BBFAN


    Has his conviction been overturned?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    If a lack of respect for Islam is my crime, then I plead guilty.

    I don't have much respect for Islam, Christianity, Hindu, or any of the other major religions, and I doubt anyone would classify that as a crime. However I personally believe that suggesting that a follower of any of these religions is somehow guilty of the crimes of any or all other member of the same religion, simply for sharing the same belief system, is bigoted in the extreme unless supported by very strong evidence to the contrary. Where such suggestions come from those who also have a broad anti-immigrant agenda, my belief if that those suggestions are both biased and bigoted.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    smacl wrote: »
    However I personally believe that suggesting that a follower of any of these religions is somehow guilty of the crimes of any or all other member of the same religion, simply for sharing the same belief system, is bigoted in the extreme.
    Can you quote the post where this claim was made, please?
    Otherwise strawmanning must be assumed on your part.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,172 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    recedite wrote: »
    Can you quote the post where this claim was made, please?
    Otherwise strawmanning must be assumed on your part.

    The last paragraph of post 283 is the closest one to hand.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,228 ✭✭✭BBFAN


    BBFAN wrote: »
    Has his conviction been overturned?

    No answer to this then?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    CramCycle wrote: »
    The last paragraph of post 283 is the closest one to hand.
    Do you mean this?....
    Nor do I accept that a misogynous religion founded by a prophet who "married" a child has nothing to do with these crimes which went unpunished in the various northern towns for so long.

    If a lack of respect for Islam is my crime, then I plead guilty.


    I was going to say you could find better examples on the very first page of this thread, but when I went back a saw the words "not" and "nor" in there.
    Any guesses of what the mugshots of the similar Telfod & Ofxord gangs might be like?

    ljm23JY.png & zjDewN3.png

    Since 2011, groups of men have been prosecuted for organised sexgrooming crimes against 'hundreds of girls' in Rochdale, Rotherham, Oxford, Telford, Leeds, Birmingham, Norwich, Burnley, High Wycombe, Leicester, Dewsbury, Middlesbrough, Peterborough, Bristol, Halifax and Newcastle...

    In only two of those cases were the men 'were not' of South Asian heritage.
    Of all the victims, only three 'were not' white teenage girls.

    Still of course, let's not pin this on a cultural nor any religious aspects.


    So yeah, I guess my post is the closest here to blaming all muslims for rape crimes.
    Still nowhere near close enough though, to justify your insinuation.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    BBFAN wrote: »
    No answer to this then?
    I've no time for somebody who jumps in near the end of a thread with insults directed at me, but at the same time is too lazy to read the same thread where the answers they seek are clearly laid out.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,228 ✭✭✭BBFAN


    recedite wrote: »
    I've no time for somebody who jumps in near the end of a thread with insults directed at me, but at the same time is too lazy to read the same thread where the answers they seek are clearly laid out.

    I've read the whole thread. I'm simply asking a question that has a yes or no answer?


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 25,172 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    recedite wrote: »
    Do you mean this?....



    I was going to say you could find better examples on the very first page of this thread, but when I went back a saw the words "not" and "nor" in there.




    So yeah, I guess my post is the closest here to blaming all muslims for rape crimes.
    Still nowhere near close enough though, to justify your insinuation.
    It's not an insinuation. You said that you refuse to believe that their religion had nothing to do with the crimes they commited. This means you are saying their religion is to blame or at least a significant factor. Plenty of pedophilic people in other religions, including rings. Do you also believe that Catholicism, and others are also one of the main factors with these people? Or could it just be the people?
    recedite wrote: »
    I've no time for somebody who jumps in near the end of a thread with insults directed at me, but at the same time is too lazy to read the same thread where the answers they seek are clearly laid out.
    It looked like he was defending you?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    Can you quote the post where this claim was made, please?
    Otherwise strawmanning must be assumed on your part.

    Your opening post on the thread relates to Muslim rape gangs and you go on to laud Tommy Robinson / Yaxley Lennon throughout this thread.
    recedite wrote: »
    Yet another muslim* rape gang (this one operating 2004-2011 in Huddersfield, England)finally brought to justiceActivist Tommy Robinson was snatched off the street and imprisoned for talking about this.

    One of Robinson / Yaxley Lennon's better know quotes;
    “Every single Muslim watching this video on YouTube, on 7/7 you got away with killing and maiming British citizens... you had better understand that we have built a network from one end of the country to the other end... and the Islamic community will feel the full force of the English Defense League if we see any of our British citizens killed, maimed, or hurt on British soil ever again"

    Another of your own posts which generalise crime by religion and ethnicity;
    recedite wrote: »
    There's two motives here. One is that Prof Dowling "failed the student" and the other is that he insulted Islam.
    Now given that loads of students fail their exams, and it's normally the students own fault, the first is not a great motive.
    And given that Pakistanis are known to get very upset about blasphemers and regularly kill them, the second motive would appear to be more significant.
    In reality the guy would have mixed the two motives together in his head. He would have used the blasphemy thing to justify the morality of the murder, in his own mind.

    But as usual, SMACL seeks to deflect and to justify. He will do anything to excuse the despicable behaviour that stems from Islamic ideologies, and instead he prefers to continue lambasting the "racists" and the "Islamophobes".

    For context, read the thread, from this post onwards.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    CramCycle wrote: »
    It looked like he was defending you?
    The guy arrived on this thread and immediately called me an asshole, which personal insult has still not been withdrawn.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    smacl wrote: »
    Another of your own posts which generalise crime by religion and ethnicity;
    For context, read the thread, from this post onwards.
    I asked you to back up a specific claim you made about this thread, and now you quote from a completely different thread.
    If you want to discuss why that guy's throat was cut, or why this guy's throat was cut, or why Christmas Market attacks have become an annual event in Europe, please do so on the appropriate thread.


    I take it then that you cannot provide a quote from this thread to back up your claim?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    I take it then that you cannot provide a quote from this thread to back up your claim?

    Which bit of “Every single Muslim watching this video on YouTube, on 7/7 you got away with killing and maiming British citizens... you had better understand that we have built a network from one end of the country to the other end... and the Islamic community will feel the full force of the English Defense League if we see any of our British citizens killed, maimed, or hurt on British soil ever again" does not exactly back up my claim?

    The thread in case you hadn't noticed is on religious hate speech, where my conjecture and that of many others is that Tommy Robinson is a hateful bigot. You seem to be his biggest fan boy around these parts and seem to have a problem accepting this fact.

    That said, I wouldn't want to let this distract you by the questions asked by the mod, so please do feel free to answer those first and come back to me when you're done.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    smacl wrote: »
    Which bit of “Every single Muslim watching this video on YouTube, on 7/7 you got away with killing and maiming British citizens... you had better understand that we have built a network from one end of the country to the other end... and the Islamic community will feel the full force of the English Defense League if we see any of our British citizens killed, maimed, or hurt on British soil ever again" does not exactly back up my claim?
    Why did you quote me then, and not Tommy Robinson, when you made the claim? You didn't mention his name at the time.


    Now that we have established you were referring to TR, the context of the quote needs to be considered.
    This was an intemperate remark made by a very upset Londoner many years ago, in the immediate aftermath of the gruesome murder of drummer Lee Rigby, whose throat was cut and head was halfway hacked off. People needed to vent their anger. But did TR then go about attacking all Muslims? No, he calmed down and put his arm around one.
    In the midst of all this came the brutal killing of drummer Lee Rigby. The morning after, I joined the media junket in Woolwich. I felt we needed to not only condemn the attack but to promote unity among communities, to call for tolerance and to ask for people to search out peace. A few days later I met Tommy again, in the back streets of Newcastle, where an EDL rally was being held.
    We got into a heated debate almost immediately. I challenged him, claiming he was going to stoke fear and increase tensions. He was pumped. He wasn't listening. A sizeable crowd gathered quickly at the end of the road and our debate ended up being little more than a platform for Tommy to vent. And then it happened again. We both looked at each other, sighed, laughed and before I knew it, he had put his arm around me. A little taken aback, the anti-fascist in me despised it, but the person of faith accepted it. I had to laugh. How can we begin to build a bridge if I cannot accept a gesture, however cynical?
    It was only when I arrived in Bristol the next morning that Nicky Campbell showed me we had been "papped" and the picture was in the Sunday Mirror. The furore about the image spread around the world, particularly the Muslim world. It was the first and only time that I doubted the process and my conviction that dialogue was the way forward. But in the end, there was an overwhelming consensus that to accept Tommy's gesture (however cynical) was in line with the prophetic traditions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,324 ✭✭✭✭King Mob


    recedite wrote: »
    King mob is confusing two different issues.
    The "pulling of strings" which he has taken offence to referred to Paypal making it more difficult for TR to crowdfund

    When King mob demanded to know who was pulling these strings I replied..
    Then you can see my confusion with the issue when you claimed that person you linked to was "evidence" fro what I asked for:
    recedite wrote: »
    The example was actually a link.


    Recedite, The All-Pervading One

    And you can see why I subsequently asked you to provide any evidence that the person you linked to had ever unduly used his influence to do anything.

    You can also see my confusion when you continued with statements such as:
    recedite wrote: »
    He's not evil, but he is most definitely a follower of Islam. And he receives a nice salary from the UK taxpayer.

    From the link..That's it. He knew that in advance of any prosecutions. And he's in a position where he gets to say who gets prosecuted and who does not. Just think about that for a second.
    And there are loads more just like him in control of local councils, boroughs, police, social services etc..


    Recedite, The Wise One

    I then asked you to clarify what you mean by "loads more just like him". You dodged the question entirely.

    Further, imagine my confusion when you state things like:
    recedite wrote: »
    Part of the same "community" as they would call it themselves.
    recedite wrote: »
    You should know that multi-culturalism leads to multi-tribalism, and in England nowadays they have many different "communities".

    ...

    The one thing you can be sure of is that when the chips are down, members of a specific community will tend to have each other's backs.

    There is an allegiance there, that goes beyond the allegiance to the state and/or the wider society.

    So I again, ask you to clarify what you mean and what evidence you had that the person you originally pointed to had done anything undue with his power at all.
    No response.

    When I chased you down on this point after you ignored it, you posted:
    recedite wrote: »
    You misconstrued my earlier comments which were about the natural tendency of divided communities to be biased towards their own community. Added to the undeniable fact that British Asians/Muslims/Pakistanis have, through their own hard work (and quite a few "diversity placings") managed to get themselves into a large number of influential public office positions in recent years.

    Again, which leaves me confused.

    I again ask you for evidence for this, which shockingly leads you to ignore me.

    You then later appear to outline what you think the effect of the above is:
    recedite wrote: »
    A third option is that (compared to the general population) the Pakistani/Muslim gangs are way over represented in rape gang crimes, and only slightly over-represented in convictions.

    So you see how people might be confused that you are making the claim that Muslim/Asian judges and other officials are unduly using their power to shield fellow Muslims.

    Just to clarify now, you don't agree that Muslim/Asian judges and other officials are unduly using their power to shield fellow Muslims.
    Is that correct?
    recedite wrote: »
    King Mobs second ambition is to trick me into coming up with a racist conspiracy theory, so that he can nail me.
    I'm not tricking you into saying anything racist.
    I'm just pointing out that what you appear to have said is a racist conspiracy theory.
    You now, despite the posts quoted above and the judgment of the mods who reviewed the post, are saying that you don't buy into any conspiracy like Muslim/asian judges and other officals are unduly using their power to shield fellow Muslims..


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,420 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    recedite wrote: »
    King mob is confusing two different issues.
    Your friendly mod team is discussing just one issue.

    In the links provided in the mod post above, you implied that people who self-describe as islamic are engaged in a range of actions in support of other people who also self-describe as islamic - such actions including attempting to delay or pervert the course of justice.

    Can you please provide evidence to back up your claim so that the mod team can assess whether the claim can be substantiated?

    Thank you.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,420 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    King Mob wrote: »
    [...]
    While recedite is out looking for evidence to support his claim or considering whether to retract it or leave it lapse owing to lack of supporting evidence, it's probably best that the person requesting the adjudication steps back from the discussion until the mod team has made a decision.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,778 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    recedite wrote: »
    Why did you quote me then, and not Tommy Robinson, when you made the claim? You didn't mention his name at the time.

    Nor did I mention your name. That said, you seem to be his biggest fanboy and the bulk of your posts in this thread are pushing his extremely dubious and highly bigoted worldview.


Advertisement