Brexit: Lottery as Politics

“Brexit has failed!” This is what Nigel Farage, the politician who was the cheerleader for Britain leaving the European Union, said in a television interview in May.

This month, it was the turn of former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the man who railroaded Brexit through the parliament, to echo Farage. In his newspaper column, he wrote, “we are still being held in the gravitational pull of the EU.”

For a brief moment, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak seemed to amplify that echo with a tweet that implied the UK was still part of the EU. (Needless to say the tweet was hastily corrected.)

Well, has Brexit failed?

It depends on what we mean by Brexit, a catch-all shibboleth that, like other shibboleths, could be interpreted any which way. If we go by its simplest meaning, that is to say ceasing to be a member of the European Union, Brexit has succeeded. The UK is no longer a member of a club to which it had belonged for more than four decades and played a leading role in shaping and reshaping it.

However, if we go by the numerous promises, not say fantasies, that Brexit was loaded with, it has been, to put it mildly, not a great success.

The first promise was to “take control of our borders”, something which already existed. No one could enter the UK without having his passport checked.

Under the Lisbon Treaty, European Union citizens were allowed to enter the UK without a visa and stay for three months, at the end of which they could remain only if they had a job or were bona fide students. Citizens of some EU member states such as Romania and Bulgaria, however, were exempted and still required to apply for residency after the three-month deadline.

The Labour Party government under Tony Blair chose to ignore all those caveats, helping the UK benefit from a large source of young and inexpensive workers that contributed to a high growth rate in a service-based economy.

The second big promise offered by Farage and Johnson, among other Brexiteers, was “bringing immigration under control.”

Everyone knew that the code-word “immigration” wasn’t really targeted at Europeans but at Africans and Asians. But to have openly identified the target would have courted opprobrium and the charge of racism.

At any rate, that promise hasn’t been fulfilled.

The latest statistics show that the number of immigrants to the UK has increased by between 15 and 20 percent, according to different estimates. The difference is that the number of white EU arrivals has fallen, while the number of “visible minorities” has grown, to the chagrin of those who felt threatened by “dark-skinned” cashiers at supermarkets in Sunderland.

Leaving aside control of borders and curbing immigration, Brexit became a vehicle for all sorts of fantasies. The UK was to regain its imperial role as leader of the Commonwealth, albeit in the service of world peace and prosperity. Creative trade agreements were to be signed with the United States, China, Japan and any other nation that recognized the advantages of having the UK as partner.

Needless to say, that hasn’t happened.

The only major trade agreement the UK has signed has been with the same old, disliked, EU — and largely on Brussels’ terms. To rub it all in, the Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland “provides that aspects of EU law continue to apply in Northern Ireland despite it having left the EU with the rest of the UK.”

Even under the original agreement, the UK adopted a large number of EU laws and regulations as its own domestic laws, often with “mostly technical adjustments.” Some adopted EU laws have a sunset clause, meaning they would be terminated at a fixed date, mostly between the end of 2023 and 2027 unless the UK Parliament decides to prolong their applicability.

Another promise was to end the authority of the European Court of Human Rights, a body initially promoted by the UK. That hasn’t happened because the UK, remaining a member of the Council of Europe, is still bound by the court’s rulings on a number of issues.

Brexit has also ended UK’s membership of the Erasmus program, under which EU members exchange university students.

That has deprived UK universities of billions of dollars in foreign student fees, not to mention the benefits of cultural contact at academic level. At the same time, UK students are kept out of European universities and the benefits that cross-cultural contact offers. In 2019, over 50,000 UK students participated in Erasmus exchanges.

To correct that, a number of UK and EU universities have decided to revive the scheme with bilateral accords. For example, the Universities of Birmingham, in the UK, and Grenoble in France, operating their own exchange scheme.

Despite Brexit, the UK has not withdrawn from the European Space Agency, thus maintaining access to a raft of cutting-edge technology.

Brexit has also kept the UK out of joint banking ventures with EU in many domains. But a recent joint venture with the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development to help Moldova shows that case-by-case cooperation isn’t ruled out.

Needless to say that Brexit hasn’t delivered the economic advantages that its advocates promised. The UK’s inflation rate is higher than any EU country and its economic growth rate is lower. Part of that, of course, could be blamed on the pandemic and the global recession that started almost at the same time as the UK left the EU.

One, perhaps unintended, consequence of Brexit is the de-emphasizing of UK’s European identity. Latest statistics show that the number of UK children and youths wishing to learn European languages has fallen by 25 percent, with the biggest drops concerning French and German.

Instead, the number of young Britons learning Mandarin has almost tripled. The numbers learning Punjabi, Arabic and Turkish have also increased.

This is no surprise and perhaps would have happened even without Brexit. In the UK today, more than 25 percent of children have foreign mothers. (In London it is 52 percent). Of every ten British children, one is a Muslim-born citizen. In a decade or two, “little Englanders” may even be a minority as a new globalized society takes shape.

Talleyrand would have described Brexit as “an unnecessary move” which, in his opinion, is worse than making a mistake.

Brexit was an exercise in applying the principle of lottery to politics; you draw a lot, not knowing what fate has allotted you.

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/19908/brexit-politics

Why Do We Let Government Officials Like Biden Use Fake Names? We don’t let government officials use fake IDs, why do we let them use fake emails?

We’ve known about the Biden ‘Robert L. Peters’ and other pseudos for some time now. The real question is why the practice of top government officials utilizing fake government email accounts wasn’t stamped out after the EPA scandal under Obama?

China’s recent hack of the State Dept shows that such measures clearly aren’t keeping foreign adversaries out instead they seem calculated to mislead and obstruct investigations.

We don’t let government officials use fake IDs, why do we let them use fake emails?

The latest development: House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) is demanding unredacted access from the National Archives to emails Biden sent as veep using any of his three known pseudonyms: Robert L. Peters, Robin Ware and JRB Ware. (The prez got a little lazy on #3, it seems.)

Comer outlines the clear possibility that these aliases were an attempt by the then-vice president to deflect scrutiny from his dealings with son Hunter — citing a May 2016 email in which Biden’s schedule for the day was sent to Hunter (the only other real person copied on the email) and the “Peters” alias.

Shares of Richard Windsor.

The EPA inspector general wants some answers about Lisa Jackson’s EPA email account in the name of “Richard Windsor.”

The Environmental Protection Agency administrator’s email nom de plume is now officially the subject of an audit by the agency’s inspector general, which received a congressional request to probe EPA’s management of its electronic records.

The practice of assigning a secondary email account to the administrator at EPA is not new to this administration. The intent, the agency says, is for the administrator to have a manageable email account in addition to the one that is openly available to the public.

Letting government officials have a secondary account under an alias makes no sense. Congress mandated that the EPA investigate Jackson, which it did, and responded with a shrug.

Years after that investigation and knowing that Congress had ordered one, Biden was using an alias email account.

Was he also using an alias bank account?

https://www.frontpagemag.com/why-do-we-let-government-officials-like-biden-use-fake-names/

Ex-Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz Charged for Lying to Parliament, Faces Three Years in Prison

Пресс-служба Президента России, CC-BY-4.0

Former Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was charged on Friday with giving false statements to parliament, the penalty for which is up to three years in prison.

Sebastian Kurz, who became the youngest ever Chancellor of Austria in 2017 at the age of 30, was once dubbed as a political ‘Wunderkind’ before being forced to resign in 2021 amid a series of corruption scandals.

On Friday, the Economic and Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (WKStA) released a 108-page criminal complaint against the former chancellor, alleging that he had given false statements before a parliamentary into an alleged corruption scandal that collapsed his first government in 2019.

Besides Kurz, his former chief of staff Bernhard Bonelli and a third person were indicted at the state court in Vienna. The trial, which is set to commence by October, will focus on whether Kurz lied to the parliament over his involvement in the appointment of former general secretary of the finance ministry to the state holding company Öbag, the Kurier reports.

The ex-chancellor had claimed that while he knew of the appointment of his close political ally to the position, he had no role in the decision. Yet the public prosecutor’s office claims otherwise, citing seised chat messages indicating Kurz’s involvement.

According to Austrian criminal law expert Robert Kert, it was not illegal for the chancellor to have been involved in the decision to appoint Schmid to the board of Öbag, which manages several large companies in the country including telecom and energy giants.

It would be illegal for Kurz to have lied to the parliament about his involvement in the decision, however. Kert also said that the case will not hinge on whether Kurz intentionally lied, but merely on whether he “seriously thought it possible” that he was misleading the parliament.

Schmid has also reportedly told prosecutors that Kurz was aware of public funds being misappropriated between 2016 and 2018 to allegedly bribe news media organisations in Austria in exchange for favourable coverage of his liberal-conservative Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP) including manipulation of public polls to create the perception that Kurz’ government was more popular than it was in reality.

Kurz is facing a second trial for the media scandal, however, he has yet to be charged in connection with any criminality. According to prosecutors, the former chancellor was not directly involved in orchestrating the payoffs to the media, however, they claim that he instigated the acts and was the beneficiary of it.

Responding to the charges levied on Friday, Kurz, who has since gone on to take a Silicon Valley gig with Peter Thiel, said on social media that it was “not surprising” that prosecutors “decided to file a criminal complaint despite 30 exculpatory testimonies.”

“The accusations are false and we look forward to the truth finally coming to light and the accusations proving to be unfounded in court,” he continued.

“It is remarkable, however, that the media are once again informed about the status of the proceedings before those affected, and this is not entirely uncritical in terms of the rule of law,” Kurz concluded.

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2023/08/19/ex-austrian-chancellor-charged-for-lying-to-parliament-faces-three-years-in-prison/

Germany: Syrian ex-husband stabs mother of four badly

Liebigstrasse in Iserlohn, https://www.google.de/maps

Three of the children ( aged 11, 11, 3) were in the apartment when the husband (37) stabbed the mother (35) with a knife early Friday morning. Now mom is in mortal danger!

Cruel act in Iserlohn (Märkischer Kreis)!

It is the inconceivable end of a marriage: Actually, the Syrian Ali A. was not allowed to enter the joint apartment until Saturday. He had a police ban on entering the apartment. But on Friday morning he was standing in front of the door on the seventh floor of the high-rise building in Iserlohn-Nußberg – the fourth child (13) was already on the way to school.

A neighbor told the newspaper BILD: “Around 7:20 a.m., all I heard were loud screams and cries for help – I was scared, it’s never been this bad before.”

Suddenly there was silence; the neighbor went to the door.

Ebtesam A. dragged herself to the door, covered in blood. The knife was still stuck in her abdomen. She also reportedly had stab wounds to her back and hand. She was taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries. Doctors are engaged to save her life.

Ali A. flees together with three children. “The mother says Ali threatened to take the children abroad, he is surely on his way to the airport,” says the neighbor. Immediately, the police launched a manhunt! But only a few hours later, the Syrian showed up at the police station: Arrest! Ali A. has not yet made any statements about the crime.

A homicide squad of the Hagen police has taken up the investigation. Why the dispute between the couple escalated is still unclear. “The children are unharmed,” the prosecutor told BILD. The youth welfare office has taken them into custody.

Ali A. will be brought before the magistrate on Saturday.

Iserlohn: Ehemann sticht auf Vierfach-Mutter ein – Festnahme | Regional | BILD.de

Official gender change only lawful after surgery, Czech court rules

Supreme administrative court of the Czech Republic, Millenium187, CC-BY-SA-3.0

The Czech Supreme Administrative Court (NSS) has rejected an appeal from a pre-op transgender person who claimed that the requirement for them to undergo surgery to change from a woman to a man before they can officially change their gender was unconstitutional.

The appellant was born as a woman but now identifies as a man. They wanted official recognition of their amended gender status but the Czech registry office refused to comply with the request for an official change of gender, including the entry of a male name and a male version of the birth number, because the appellant had not undergone a surgical procedure associated with the disabling of reproductive function, as required by law.

The decision, in which the NSS emphasized the importance of protecting the basic natural attributes of family and parenthood, is temporarily binding on the official board. The Constitutional Court recently decided on a similar case with the same result. According to the NSS, the applicant’s hope that the new composition of the Constitutional Court will rule in his favor was curious.

The applicant, whom the court refers to as male according to his wishes, claimed that the conditionality of gender change by carrying out a surgical intervention consisting of the transformation of the genitals and the disabling of reproductive function is unconstitutional. He claimed the law is contrary to the fundamental right to preserve human dignity and respect for private and family life, and it is also contrary to the prohibition of torture.

The NSS submitted that the requirement of the Civil Code is clear and that the registry authorities could not decide otherwise than to reject the applicant’s request to register a change of gender from female to male. “We are aware that the legal requirement to change gender has serious consequences. It is a mutilation procedure, usually irreversible, which, like other medical procedures, is not without risk. There is also the risk of a tragic mistake, which can happen even with the consecration of professional medical authorities,” said Senate President Tomáš Langášek. The term mutilation refers to the deformation or disfigurement of the body.

However, the NSS also refused to suspend the proceedings and submit a proposal to the Constitutional Court (ÚS) to annul the provisions of the Civil Code. The ÚS recently dealt with a similar proposal and rejected it. According to the NSS, the complainant did not reveal anything new that should lead to reopening the question. “Not even a change in the staffing of the ÚS can be such a reason, because even the ÚS itself, in any personnel composition, is bound by its finding,” the court stated.

The NSS also emphasized that in so-called status issues, which include gender changes, the courts should exercise restraint and leave the solution to the democratically elected legislature. He also pointed to the protection of the basic natural attributes of family and parenthood: a child has a father – a man and a mother – the woman who gave birth to them. Czech family law stipulates that the parents of the child are a man and a woman. If a person born female could become legally male without being disabled from reproductive function, she could then give birth to a child as a male and yet not legally become the child’s mother.

“At the same time, these are not imaginary situations. In countries where gender can be changed only on the basis of a declaration, they have to solve unprecedented and delicate legal problems,” said Langášek. He pointed to the judgments concerning the German legal environment. In the first of these, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) considered a case of refusal to register a person who was originally a biological man as the second mother in the child’s birth certificate. Her sperm was used to produce the child after she was reassigned to a female, and despite her new female gender, she was listed as the father on the birth certificate.

In the second case, the ECHR assessed the mirror-reversed situation, when the German authorities refused the request to register a person who was originally biologically female as the father in the birth certificate of the child he fathered after changing his gender to a male and after artificial insemination with the donor’s sperm. Despite his new male gender, he was listed as a mother on the birth certificate. In both cases, the European Court rejected the complaint.

The NSS emphasized that if the ÚS canceled the provisions of the Civil Code on the ground plan of the current case, and then the NSS decided on the matter again, it would have to uphold the cassation complaint, or the complainant’s lawsuit, despite the fact that he did not present any evidence in the proceedings that he really is a transgender person. The consequence would thus be judicial enforcement of an exclusively subjective concept of gender change based only on the request of the given person. At the same time, this is a solution that, according to the NSS, does not fundamentally belong to the courts.

“Such a solution could only be accepted from the decision of the legislator, with the simultaneous comprehensive resolution of a number of related issues across the entire legal system, not only in family law, but also the justification for the continued existence or conditions of protection of women and mothers in labor and social law, issues of discrimination between women and men in the regime of restriction of personal freedom (detention, personal search, enforcement of detention and prison sentence), and discrimination based on gender in the regime of conscription, in sports and elsewhere,” the NSS said in its judgment.

https://rmx.news/czech-republic/official-gender-change-only-lawful-after-surgery-czech-court-rules/

Algerian to be deported for Swiss mosque attack

The mosque was closed after a police raid shortly after the attack, screen grab youtube

Winterthur district court has sentenced a 50-year-old Algerian man for attacking two worshippers in the An’Nur mosque. The man received a suspended prison sentence of 12 months and a seven-year ban from Switzerland.

The man, who was involved in an attack on allegedly disloyal worshippers in Winterthur’s An’Nur mosque in 2016, was convicted of forced confinement, complicity in threats and complicity in coercion.

Because the prison sentence was conditional, the court released the man from prison immediately. He will now be handed over to the migration office for deportation so that he can be returned to France. He had gone into hiding there because of the investigations against several An’Nur visitors.

According to his statements, he works as a gardener in Strasbourg and is married for the second time. His first wife and adult son are still in Winterthur. He lived in Switzerland from 1998 until he disappeared. In May of this year he was arrested in France and has since been held in preventive detention.

During the brief interrogation, he admitted to having taken part in the attack on two Muslims because they had allegedly spoken to a journalist about radical preaching in the mosque and about Islamist worshippers. “I made a mistake and I ask for your forgiveness,” he said in court on Thursday.

The attackers, including the accused, locked the two victims in a room of the mosque, assaulted them, forced the PIN code for their mobile phone and threatened one of them with death. They forced the other to eat a ten-franc note because he was supposed to have received money in exchange for information.

Nine other people have already been tried for this case. In October 2021, the top court in canton Zurich handed down suspended prison sentences of between 12 and 19 months and fines of between CHF160 ($180) and CHF2,000 on appeal against six defendants for coercion, false imprisonment and threats.

The imam and the president of the mosque were acquitted. They received compensation of CHF500 and CHF18,000 for the time spent in detention. Another defendant was acquitted and received compensation of CHF34,000. Proceedings are still pending before the Federal Court.

The mosque was closed after a police raid shortly after the attack.

In another trial, an imam who had preached at the An’Nur mosque was given an 18-month suspended prison sentence in 2018 for calling for violence. He was expelled from Switzerland.

https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/algerian-to-be-deported-for-swiss-mosque-attack/48742086

India: Muslim mob pelts stones on Hindu boy’s house & abuses police after he reacted to Muslim classmate’s offensive post against Hinduism

(Images via AmarUjala)

Communal tensions flared up in the Bareilly district of Uttar Pradesh on Friday, August 18, after a Hindu student commented in response to his Muslim classmate’s offensive post against Hindu Dharma. The matter pertains to the Sheeshgarh police station precinct where a Muslim mob comprising thousands gheraoed the police station on Friday at around 9 pm after a Class 9th Hindu student wrote allegedly offensive comments in response to his Muslim classmate’s insulting remarks about Hinduism.

The agitated mob that first laid siege outside the police station seeking the Hindu youth’s arrest later gathered outside the Hindu youth’s house and pelted stones. Subsequently, the police intervened.

The mob staged a sit-in at the Ramlila grounds and refused to leave until the arrest was made after the police chased the crowd away from the Hindu boy’s residence. Senior police officers and district administrators made attempts to persuade the Muslim mob to put an end to the uproar, however, they failed to do so.

While there is little information about what exactly was written by the accused Muslim and Hindu student, the Hindu student’s father alleged that the Muslim student first made the offensive comment on Instagram, and his son only reacted to it. The Hindu student’s father said that if his son has made a mistake, the police should look into it adding that the Muslim mob is trying to terrify his family.

Taking note of the seriousness of the matter, Inspector General of Police (IG) Rakesh Singh, Commissioner Saumya Agarwal, Bareilly SSP Ghule Sushil Chandrabhan arrived at the scene. After a high-voltage drama, the Hindu student was arrested at midnight while the Muslim student was arrested an hour later.

Meanwhile, IG Rakesh Singh informed that both the minor students have been arrested and PAC and additional force have been deployed in the area to maintain peace.

“We have arrested both minors in this connection. Adequate police and Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) have been deployed in the area to ensure peace,” IG Singh said.

Informing about the action taken by the police so far, Bareilly SSP Chandrabhan said that those involved in the violent ‘protests’ are being identified saying that the entire area has been videographed and CCTV footage is also being examined. SSP Chandrabhan further assured that action will be taken against those involved in disturbing the communal peace in the area.

Taking to X, Bareilly police informed that over a dozen people who were involved in violence have been taken into custody, and following the identification they will be sent to jail. Meanwhile, a case has also been registered against both the accused students.

https://www.opindia.com/2023/08/up-communal-tension-grips-bareilly-over-an-offensive-social-media-post-on-hinduism-by-a-muslim-student/

UK: Woke university sacks lecturer for refusing to ‘indoctrinate students’ with trans policy

A law lecturer claims she was sacked from her position after refusing to follow her employer’s requests to “indoctrinate students in gender identity theory”.

Dr Almut Gadow, 43, was forced out of her job at the Open University in November after being sacked for gross misconduct.

She says the institution accused her of “serious bullying and harassment” and of breaching their transgender staff policy after a number of posts in an online university forum which risked creasing “an environment in the forum that isn’t inclusive, trans-friendly, or respectful”.

Gadow said that the university’s policy had included introducing diverse gender identities into the curriculum and also teaching students that an offenders’ preferred pronouns should be used when referring to them.

The lecturer warned that the policy was incompatible with the role of a criminal lawyer, saying that “sex is a relevant fact for offences involving perpetrators’ and/or victims’ bodies”.

Speaking to The Telegraph, Gadow added: “No offender should be allowed to dictate the language of his case in a way which masks relevant facts.”

She is now launching a legal claim against the university, crowdfunding for her case.

The lecturer claims she was harassed, discriminated against, and unfairly dismissed.

She also highlighted that not holding a gender identity belief was a protected characteristic under the Equality Act 2010.

“Establishing this in law could protect many other academics whose careers are threatened by the rising tide of intolerance on UK campuses,” Gadow said.

“Generally, this academia being taken over by a political movement, is not a question of Left or Right.

“It is a question of totalitarianism.

“We have seen it under both regimes.

“I didn’t think it would happen like that in England, to be quite honest.”

The Open University has vowed to “vigorously defend” itself against Gadow’s charges.

It added: “Given these ongoing legal proceedings, we do not intend to comment further at this time, save to say that we strongly dispute the account which we understand Almut Gadow to have given to the media about the circumstances of, and reasons for, her dismissal; the university’s criminal law curriculum and modules; and its equality, diversity and inclusion policies.”

https://www.gbnews.com/news/woke-news-open-university-sack-almut-gadow-transgender-policy