Today’s news angered me today after reading how young people are terrorising shop owners.
I no longer recognise the country I grew up in.
Not because it’s changed in subtle ways, but because it now seems governed by a creeping hostility towards protest, towards dissent, and increasingly, towards truth itself. A country that once celebrated free speech and the right to demonstrate is now criminalising both. And every day, it gets harder to watch.
Today was no different.
First came this report.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0q751vlxw1o

Then a statement from the Irish hip-hop group Kneecap, whose politically-charged lyrics and open support for Palestinian rights have made them a target of the British establishment.
“The Metropolitan Police in London have just invoked a Section 14 for our supporters tomorrow, led by the London Irish Brigade.
They previously, and needlessly, did this before the last court date, but this time have pushed our supporters far away from the court entrance. It’s petty in the extreme. This is a distraction from the war crimes the British state continues to support in Gaza.It’s designed to portray support for Kneecap as somehow dangerous and disruptive, despite both our last hearings being entirely peaceful.
The most disruptive attendees weren’t our supporters, but the right-wing media and the police, who arrested a man for simply holding a sign and then released him without charge.”
Their advice to fans? Comply with all instructions, even when unjust. Because, in their words, this is about optics. But the optics are already damning for the government, not for the artists or activists.
A Misuse of Power and Police
This is what policing looks like now:
Hundreds of officers deployed not to tackle violent crime, but to monitor and arrest peaceful protestors, including veterans, the disabled, and Palestine Action supporters. Why? Because Palestine Action speaks out against what is widely seen as a genocide. The group has been labelled a “terrorist organisation.” But many see them as a direct action group, using nonviolent civil disobedience to demand accountability. Whether you agree with their tactics or not, they are not terrorists.
Ironically, the state’s heavy-handedness has had the opposite effect. Thanks to Starmer’s crackdown, Palestine Action and Kneecap are now better known than ever. He’s given them the kind of reach that artists and activists can only dream of.
Selective Outrage
Meanwhile, real violence continues to go unaddressed.
Young gangs are vandalising shops, assaulting civilians, and terrorising communities, yet the police are reluctant to intervene because the perpetrators are “children.” But let’s be honest: by 14, you know what’s right and wrong. That excuse doesn’t hold. Compare that to the response toward peaceful demonstrations where no one is terrorised.
At a United Kingdom March (a far right protest), eight people were arrested and several officers were injured, yet no mass arrests, no terror designations, no sweeping legislation to ban them.
And then there’s Tommy Robinson, who continues to spout hate speech, cause damage, and rally extremists. His movement creates real danger. Yet, again, the state does little.
Hypocrisy at the Top
Keir Starmer has said he recognises the state of Palestine. But at the same time, he supports actions that aid in its destruction. He backs a government that arms Israel, even as civilians are bombed, starved, and displaced.
That isn’t diplomacy, it’s blatant hypocrisy.And if Starmer’s personal ties, such as his marriage to a Jewish woman influence his stance on Gaza, then we’re looking at a potential conflict of interest. Any leader with such a conflict should be honest about it or step aside.
This isn’t about religion. It’s about policy, and about whether our leaders are acting in the national interest, or in service of something else.
The Real Question: Who Are the Criminals?
Are the criminals the veterans in wheelchairs holding placards, or the young activists chaining themselves to arms factories?
Or are they the ones who support bombing hospitals, targeting civilians, and levelling entire neighbourhoods?
This government seems more interested in punishing those who speak out against genocide than those who carry it out—or profit from it.
The Erosion of Free Speech
This isn’t just about Palestine. It’s about what kind of country we want to live in. One that values truth, justice, and human rights? Or one that polices thought, speech, and protest in the name of “order”? The right to protest is not a nuisance. It’s a pillar of democracy.
The moment we criminalise peaceful dissent, we lose something vital. And we are losing it—fast.
So no, it’s not just you. Something is deeply, structurally wrong.
And unless more of us speak out, protest, and push back—this won’t stop. It will only get worse.















I woke up today to discover we had no water. I’ve already used up our loo flushes. If lockdown wasn’t enough.
























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