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Tempest's avatar

Clearly the level of 'proof' needed for a conviction for 'encouraging' a crime is far lower than for incitement of a crime, because as stated in the article, a crime has to actually have been committed for a charge of incitement to stick, whereas 'encouraging' a crime really only comes down to interpretation of the circumstances of the event. It is a lot like the weird concept of victimless crime which is so much a part of the state's war against its population.

I entirely agree that the state is erecting a control system to ready the public to live under a dictatorship. It is a metaphorical cage that is being constructed around people, one which appears to have moveable bars according to how much a person complies with the state's diktats where the space between the bars will be wide for those complying or narrow for those refusing to comply.

In the several filmed judgments of the court cases the judges all said a more lenient sentence was given where the accused pleaded guilty. In other words, comply and play the game the way we like and we'll give you less jail time. Only a tiny percentage of people chose to have their cases heard in a crown court and before a jury. It will be very interesting to see what the jury's verdict will be in these cases.

Henry Pietkiewicz's avatar

Thank you for a deeply considered and incisive analysis Iain, and for your novel interpretation of the collaborative and conspiratorial way (in the legal sense), in which the different arms of the Establishment are working together to create an environment in which increased coercion and control of Society is being fostered.

Sadly totalitarian censorship seems to be finding a natural home in the heart of one of the only successful democracies left without a written constitution, held together for a thousand years by the bonds of ‘Separation of Powers’, bonds which Government now wishes to break for its own ends.

In doing so they are sowing the seeds for a thousand years of chaos and misery.

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