Tommy Robinson Free

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
The founder of the English Defence League, "Tommy Robinson", has had his conviction for contempt of court quashed as the Court of Appeal orders a new trial.
The far-right activist, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was released from prison on bail after three judges ruled that he was jailed earlier this year following a series of procedural “flaws”.


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...r-tommy-robinson-freed-judges-quash-contempt/
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,647
1,865
113
Tommy Robinson Freed – For Now

By James Fite | Aug 2, 2018 | Free Speech, Narrated News | 0 |
LibertyNation

After being arrested and sentenced to 13 months in prison for, essentially, ignoring a media gag order and reporting on a Muslim rape gang trial, British activist and citizen journalist Tommy Robinson has been released.



Lord Chief Justice Ian Burnett and two other judges overturned the conviction after finding that the original judge rushed the initial trial, preventing Robinson from adequately defending himself. The trio of judges ostensibly felt that Robinson was treated unfairly due to the muddled nature of the hearing – though the Free Tommy Rally and other various protests around the world quite likely didn’t hurt.

So the calls to free Tommy Robinson have been heeded – for now. He was released on bail. His only condition of bail is that he attend his new hearing.

Who Is Tommy Robinson?

As Liberty Nation’s Mark Angelides explained, Tommy Robinson – born Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – began and organized the English Defence League (EDL) after two shocking experiences. First, he discovered that young men from his hometown of Luton were recruited to fight for the Taliban. Later, he saw Islamists protest a British Army homecoming parade, during which they were allowed to spit at and abuse the soldiers and their families – all in the name of keeping the peace.

After his split from the EDL, Tommy continued to protest the Islamization of Britain – a quest which has seen him imprisoned more than once.

A Political Prisoner

While the May 2018 arrest and same-day conviction and sentencing was ostensibly for contempt of court regarding a previously suspended sentence, the real reason is censorship. Not so sure? Well, his initial suspended sentence was for violating a media gag order and reporting on a trial for men accused of being part of a Muslim rape gang, as it allegedly had the potential to “derail a fair trial.” His most recent violation? Once again reporting outside a court during a similar trial.



Not-So-Free Speech in the UK


There is no real freedom of speech in the U.K. As Leesa K. Donner wrote in “Media Suppression and Tyrannical Governments,” the British government often issues gag orders, called Defence and Security Media Advisory Notices (DSMA-Notices), prohibiting the press from reporting on certain issues. These are quite common for trials – especially ones that showcase the rape epidemic that has resulted from uncontrolled Islamic immigration without any hint of assimilation.

US Intervention?

The villainy and absurdity of imprisoning a man – in solitary confinement, no less – for exposing and fighting the massive culture rot of this rape epidemic hasn’t just caused protests at home and abroad. It has led some Americans to question whether we should step in on Mr. Robinson’s behalf.

U.S. Representative Paul Gosar (R-AZ) took the matter to his fellow Congressmen:

U.S. Representative Paul Gosar


“Mr. Robinson, a British Activist and journalist, was arrested and jailed for simply filming outside a public courtroom, and was sentenced to 13 months for this “crime.” His real crime is his refusal to agree to the government’s efforts to cover up crimes by Muslim gangs who are raping British girls.”
He also tweeted directly at the president that the U.K. seemed more concerned with covering up rape than seeking truth.

Thankfully, such interference doesn’t seem necessary – for now. Though Tommy has been released, it’s entirely possible he could be resentenced at his hearing later this year – possibly as early as September, according to The Sun.

Robinson Family Reunited

After his release, Robinson refused to comment to reporters, saying that “all the British media do is lie. I have a lot to say but nothing to you.” In a video uploaded to his YouTube channel, Tommy explains that he was subject to all manner of hit pieces by the mainstream British media. He read a heart-breaking letter from his wife and called the solitary confinement mental torture.

But he refuses to be bitter. As he stood in his home, awaiting the arrival of his unsuspecting children, Robinson said that if he’s bitter and angry, then he accepts his own victimhood. “I’m their target; I’m not their victim,” he declared.


Tommy Robinson


He spent over half the five-minute video thanking people for their support – for the protests, the rallies, and the letters and emails. When he gets back from his vacation, he plans to watch everything that has happened since his arrest – and he wants everyone who has supported him along the way to join him.

Regardless of what may happen later this year, Mr. Robinson is jubilant, if not a bit flabbergasted, to be home and able to spend time with his family. He may well end up right back in jail after the new hearing – but not if the myriad Tommy Robinson supporters around the world have anything to say about it.


https://www.libertynation.com/tommy-robinson-freed-for-now/
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Does the term, 'Get on with it.' have any meaning in the land you come from? When that comes from a 'hay farmer' you know things are moving pretty slow.


Your land also has a tendency to milk every bit of PR from something that shouldn't even make the back pages. Had he been left in prison his name would have been forgotten before Saddam was no longer mentioned in any posts.
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
2,198
113
Well halifreakin'lulia!

That was expensive free speech.

procedural “flaws”...
...after finding that the original judge rushed the initial trial, preventing Robinson from adequately defending himself.

Somewhat like the fisa warrant fiasco in the trumphate case.

Standard CROOKED deepstate offence.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,647
1,865
113
Well halifreakin'lulia!

That was expensive free speech.



Somewhat like the fisa warrant fiasco in the trumphate case.

Standard CROOKED deepstate offence.

The MSM stated that Tommy pleaded guilty in court.

Turns out he did no such thing.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,647
1,865
113
How the left made Tommy Robinson

Brendan O’Neill
Editor

It was their censorship of ‘Islamophobia’ that made Robinson a star.

6 August 2018
Spiked
472 comments



With painful predictability, the release on bail of the anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson led to much media handwringing about the dangerousness of his ideas. He must not be afforded media platforms, worried leftists said. When Robinson supporter Raheem Kassam was given a few minutes on Today to big-up his mate, the chattering classes spluttered in their cornflakes. Reading their commentary you could be forgiven for thinking Goebbels himself had risen from the dust to elbow aside Sarah Sands and take command of Radio 4’s morning show.

The idea driving this demand of ‘No Platform for Robinson!’ is that the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product of too much freedom of speech. According to these people, Robinson looms large in the public imagination because the media have been too open to his ideas. He and his kind have enjoyed too much liberty in the realm of public discussion, and, in the neo-Victorian view of the Ban Tommy lobby, this has allowed him to poison the minds of large numbers of people and reduce them to a Muslim-hating mob. Monkey see, monkey do: the misanthropic motor of every demand for restrictions on speech.

This argument is about as wrong as it is possible to be. The truth is the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product not of too much liberty, but of too much censorship. It is the cultural elite’s cowardly instinct to chill open discussion about issues like Islam, multiculturalism, mass immigration and social tensions that created Tommy Robinson and his various movements, through allowing him to present himself as a seer in a time of silence. If Robinson really is the monster the left claim he is, they are his Dr Frankenstein.

Throughout his political career, from his leadership of the English Defence League to his current role as self-styled alt-media revealer of ‘The Truth’ about Britain’s Muslim grooming gangs and other problematic Islamic activities, Robinson’s appeal has continually been based on his willingness to say the unsayable.

He has benefited directly from a climate in which critical discussion of Islam and British values is demonised. And he has been successful because people aggrieved at the lack of openness around Britain’s cultural difficulties see in him someone who will speak on their behalf. He is censorship’s offspring.

Tommy Robinson, the political persona, is only possible in an era in which it is tantamount to thoughtcrime to be mean about Islam. In which criticism of Islamic values can be written off as ‘Islamophobia’. In which expressing heated concern in the wake of Islamist terror attacks can make you an object of suspicion. ‘Don’t look back in anger’ – that’s all you’re supposed to do when religious hysterics blow up 21 of your fellow citizens, including children.

He is only possible in a society in which officials refused for years to be open about the fact that largely Pakistani gangs were abusing mostly white working-class girls. In which a Labour politician, Sarah Champion, can be hounded out of her job for suggesting we be honest about such gangs. In which the liberal media continually tell us to panic about far-right extremism when the evidence of our eyes tells us Islamist extremism is a far greater threat: more than 450 Europeans have been slaughtered by Islamist terrorists in the past five years.

He is only possible in an era in which commentators mock people who raise concerns about cultural tensions in Sweden even as Jews are attacked in Malmo. An era in which even to say the word Islamist when talking about Islamist terrorism can win you hisses and boos. Witness the shutting down of then UKIP leader Paul Nuttall during a TV debate last year when he dared to put the word ‘Islamist’ before ‘terrorist’ when commenting on the barbarism in Manchester.

This chilling of discussion about Islam, about new cultural tensions, about the abandonment of the ideal of integration and its inevitable replacement by frayed communal relations, reveals how central censorship is to the ideology of multiculturalism.

If multiculturalism represents an official unwillingness to elevate any one value system over any other, to promote a specifically British way of life, then its attendant creed of ‘progressive censorship’ represents an official unwillingness to permit honest discussion about the consequences of multiculturalism’s divisive worldview. What we’ve learned in recent years – from the rise of hate-speech legislation to the refusal of politicians in Cologne to say women were being harassed by newly arrived Muslim migrants – is that censorship is the handmaiden of multiculturalism. Our ruling class divides and censors and rules. It splits societies into communal blocs, chills criticism of its multicultural ideology, and then rules with relative ease over the atomised social sphere that inevitably accrues from this anti-humanist politics.

And into this fray comes Tommy Robinson, and others, who say: ‘We’ll tell the truth.’ Every atom of their stardom comes from the fact that certain ideas are now off-limits in public life. The cowardice of the elites gives them life. In the absence of other, more progressive voices raising concerns about the divisive and censorious ideologies of the new ruling class, these right-wingers can clean up. They can claim the moral highground and present themselves as the daring utterers of things you aren’t meant to say. And here’s the thing: this isn’t entirely a pose; this really is the role they play, courtesy of our silencing elites.

It isn’t freedom of speech that is dangerous. It is censorship. Censorship is the midwife of extremism. It expels certain thoughts from the mainstream, which allows them to grow on the fringes, among those whose legitimate concerns can, in the secluded world of alt-worriers about the state of society, morph into something more unpleasant. ‘No Platform for Tommy Robinson’, people say, not realising that this very censoriousness has done more than anything to provide Robinson with a moral platform most activists could only dream of.

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked. Find him on Instagram: @burntoakboy

How the left made Tommy Robinson | Free speech | spiked
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
848
113
70
Saint John, N.B.
How the left made Tommy Robinson

Brendan O’Neill
Editor

It was their censorship of ‘Islamophobia’ that made Robinson a star.

6 August 2018
Spiked
472 comments



With painful predictability, the release on bail of the anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson led to much media handwringing about the dangerousness of his ideas. He must not be afforded media platforms, worried leftists said. When Robinson supporter Raheem Kassam was given a few minutes on Today to big-up his mate, the chattering classes spluttered in their cornflakes. Reading their commentary you could be forgiven for thinking Goebbels himself had risen from the dust to elbow aside Sarah Sands and take command of Radio 4’s morning show.

The idea driving this demand of ‘No Platform for Robinson!’ is that the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product of too much freedom of speech. According to these people, Robinson looms large in the public imagination because the media have been too open to his ideas. He and his kind have enjoyed too much liberty in the realm of public discussion, and, in the neo-Victorian view of the Ban Tommy lobby, this has allowed him to poison the minds of large numbers of people and reduce them to a Muslim-hating mob. Monkey see, monkey do: the misanthropic motor of every demand for restrictions on speech.

This argument is about as wrong as it is possible to be. The truth is the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product not of too much liberty, but of too much censorship. It is the cultural elite’s cowardly instinct to chill open discussion about issues like Islam, multiculturalism, mass immigration and social tensions that created Tommy Robinson and his various movements, through allowing him to present himself as a seer in a time of silence. If Robinson really is the monster the left claim he is, they are his Dr Frankenstein.

Throughout his political career, from his leadership of the English Defence League to his current role as self-styled alt-media revealer of ‘The Truth’ about Britain’s Muslim grooming gangs and other problematic Islamic activities, Robinson’s appeal has continually been based on his willingness to say the unsayable.

He has benefited directly from a climate in which critical discussion of Islam and British values is demonised. And he has been successful because people aggrieved at the lack of openness around Britain’s cultural difficulties see in him someone who will speak on their behalf. He is censorship’s offspring.

Tommy Robinson, the political persona, is only possible in an era in which it is tantamount to thoughtcrime to be mean about Islam. In which criticism of Islamic values can be written off as ‘Islamophobia’. In which expressing heated concern in the wake of Islamist terror attacks can make you an object of suspicion. ‘Don’t look back in anger’ – that’s all you’re supposed to do when religious hysterics blow up 21 of your fellow citizens, including children.

He is only possible in a society in which officials refused for years to be open about the fact that largely Pakistani gangs were abusing mostly white working-class girls. In which a Labour politician, Sarah Champion, can be hounded out of her job for suggesting we be honest about such gangs. In which the liberal media continually tell us to panic about far-right extremism when the evidence of our eyes tells us Islamist extremism is a far greater threat: more than 450 Europeans have been slaughtered by Islamist terrorists in the past five years.

He is only possible in an era in which commentators mock people who raise concerns about cultural tensions in Sweden even as Jews are attacked in Malmo. An era in which even to say the word Islamist when talking about Islamist terrorism can win you hisses and boos. Witness the shutting down of then UKIP leader Paul Nuttall during a TV debate last year when he dared to put the word ‘Islamist’ before ‘terrorist’ when commenting on the barbarism in Manchester.

This chilling of discussion about Islam, about new cultural tensions, about the abandonment of the ideal of integration and its inevitable replacement by frayed communal relations, reveals how central censorship is to the ideology of multiculturalism.

If multiculturalism represents an official unwillingness to elevate any one value system over any other, to promote a specifically British way of life, then its attendant creed of ‘progressive censorship’ represents an official unwillingness to permit honest discussion about the consequences of multiculturalism’s divisive worldview. What we’ve learned in recent years – from the rise of hate-speech legislation to the refusal of politicians in Cologne to say women were being harassed by newly arrived Muslim migrants – is that censorship is the handmaiden of multiculturalism. Our ruling class divides and censors and rules. It splits societies into communal blocs, chills criticism of its multicultural ideology, and then rules with relative ease over the atomised social sphere that inevitably accrues from this anti-humanist politics.

And into this fray comes Tommy Robinson, and others, who say: ‘We’ll tell the truth.’ Every atom of their stardom comes from the fact that certain ideas are now off-limits in public life. The cowardice of the elites gives them life. In the absence of other, more progressive voices raising concerns about the divisive and censorious ideologies of the new ruling class, these right-wingers can clean up. They can claim the moral highground and present themselves as the daring utterers of things you aren’t meant to say. And here’s the thing: this isn’t entirely a pose; this really is the role they play, courtesy of our silencing elites.

It isn’t freedom of speech that is dangerous. It is censorship. Censorship is the midwife of extremism. It expels certain thoughts from the mainstream, which allows them to grow on the fringes, among those whose legitimate concerns can, in the secluded world of alt-worriers about the state of society, morph into something more unpleasant. ‘No Platform for Tommy Robinson’, people say, not realising that this very censoriousness has done more than anything to provide Robinson with a moral platform most activists could only dream of.

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked. Find him on Instagram: @burntoakboy

How the left made Tommy Robinson | Free speech | spiked


Excellent, excellent piece.


Thank you Blackleaf.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
28,362
7,989
113
B.C.
How the left made Tommy Robinson

Brendan O’Neill
Editor

It was their censorship of ‘Islamophobia’ that made Robinson a star.

6 August 2018
Spiked
472 comments



With painful predictability, the release on bail of the anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson led to much media handwringing about the dangerousness of his ideas. He must not be afforded media platforms, worried leftists said. When Robinson supporter Raheem Kassam was given a few minutes on Today to big-up his mate, the chattering classes spluttered in their cornflakes. Reading their commentary you could be forgiven for thinking Goebbels himself had risen from the dust to elbow aside Sarah Sands and take command of Radio 4’s morning show.

The idea driving this demand of ‘No Platform for Robinson!’ is that the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product of too much freedom of speech. According to these people, Robinson looms large in the public imagination because the media have been too open to his ideas. He and his kind have enjoyed too much liberty in the realm of public discussion, and, in the neo-Victorian view of the Ban Tommy lobby, this has allowed him to poison the minds of large numbers of people and reduce them to a Muslim-hating mob. Monkey see, monkey do: the misanthropic motor of every demand for restrictions on speech.

This argument is about as wrong as it is possible to be. The truth is the Tommy Robinson phenomenon is a product not of too much liberty, but of too much censorship. It is the cultural elite’s cowardly instinct to chill open discussion about issues like Islam, multiculturalism, mass immigration and social tensions that created Tommy Robinson and his various movements, through allowing him to present himself as a seer in a time of silence. If Robinson really is the monster the left claim he is, they are his Dr Frankenstein.

Throughout his political career, from his leadership of the English Defence League to his current role as self-styled alt-media revealer of ‘The Truth’ about Britain’s Muslim grooming gangs and other problematic Islamic activities, Robinson’s appeal has continually been based on his willingness to say the unsayable.

He has benefited directly from a climate in which critical discussion of Islam and British values is demonised. And he has been successful because people aggrieved at the lack of openness around Britain’s cultural difficulties see in him someone who will speak on their behalf. He is censorship’s offspring.

Tommy Robinson, the political persona, is only possible in an era in which it is tantamount to thoughtcrime to be mean about Islam. In which criticism of Islamic values can be written off as ‘Islamophobia’. In which expressing heated concern in the wake of Islamist terror attacks can make you an object of suspicion. ‘Don’t look back in anger’ – that’s all you’re supposed to do when religious hysterics blow up 21 of your fellow citizens, including children.

He is only possible in a society in which officials refused for years to be open about the fact that largely Pakistani gangs were abusing mostly white working-class girls. In which a Labour politician, Sarah Champion, can be hounded out of her job for suggesting we be honest about such gangs. In which the liberal media continually tell us to panic about far-right extremism when the evidence of our eyes tells us Islamist extremism is a far greater threat: more than 450 Europeans have been slaughtered by Islamist terrorists in the past five years.

He is only possible in an era in which commentators mock people who raise concerns about cultural tensions in Sweden even as Jews are attacked in Malmo. An era in which even to say the word Islamist when talking about Islamist terrorism can win you hisses and boos. Witness the shutting down of then UKIP leader Paul Nuttall during a TV debate last year when he dared to put the word ‘Islamist’ before ‘terrorist’ when commenting on the barbarism in Manchester.

This chilling of discussion about Islam, about new cultural tensions, about the abandonment of the ideal of integration and its inevitable replacement by frayed communal relations, reveals how central censorship is to the ideology of multiculturalism.

If multiculturalism represents an official unwillingness to elevate any one value system over any other, to promote a specifically British way of life, then its attendant creed of ‘progressive censorship’ represents an official unwillingness to permit honest discussion about the consequences of multiculturalism’s divisive worldview. What we’ve learned in recent years – from the rise of hate-speech legislation to the refusal of politicians in Cologne to say women were being harassed by newly arrived Muslim migrants – is that censorship is the handmaiden of multiculturalism. Our ruling class divides and censors and rules. It splits societies into communal blocs, chills criticism of its multicultural ideology, and then rules with relative ease over the atomised social sphere that inevitably accrues from this anti-humanist politics.

And into this fray comes Tommy Robinson, and others, who say: ‘We’ll tell the truth.’ Every atom of their stardom comes from the fact that certain ideas are now off-limits in public life. The cowardice of the elites gives them life. In the absence of other, more progressive voices raising concerns about the divisive and censorious ideologies of the new ruling class, these right-wingers can clean up. They can claim the moral highground and present themselves as the daring utterers of things you aren’t meant to say. And here’s the thing: this isn’t entirely a pose; this really is the role they play, courtesy of our silencing elites.

It isn’t freedom of speech that is dangerous. It is censorship. Censorship is the midwife of extremism. It expels certain thoughts from the mainstream, which allows them to grow on the fringes, among those whose legitimate concerns can, in the secluded world of alt-worriers about the state of society, morph into something more unpleasant. ‘No Platform for Tommy Robinson’, people say, not realising that this very censoriousness has done more than anything to provide Robinson with a moral platform most activists could only dream of.

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked. Find him on Instagram: @burntoakboy

How the left made Tommy Robinson | Free speech | spiked
Similar circumstances led to the rise of Trump .