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Content about Law

May 15, 2012

For anyone in doubt that it is the "lower classes" that should pay for the excesses of the last forty years, a new report authored by the National Institute for Economic & Social Research for the Resolution Foundation shows that it was the poor who drove the pre-crisis debt boom.

Yes indeed, the poor are to blame. We all knew it.

May 9, 2012

In the US last month, a judge ruled that Jury Nullification, a jurys ability to over-rule the law, was still lawful and very much in effect.

This follows a case in which 80 year old Julian Heicklin, was arrested by FBI agents for passing out pamphlets which informed jurors of their right to nullify a case if they thought the law being applied was unfit or unjust.

The prosecution had accused Mr Heicklyn, who was handing out the pamphlets for an organisation known as the 'Fully Informed Jury Association', of trying to influence jurors through written communication.

May 9, 2012

Today the Queen gave her speech to both houses of parliament, setting out the forthcoming plans of the Coalition for the year ahead. 

As expected, reform of the House of Lords was on the list.

This bill is being hailed as a 'power to the people' type of legislation, but nothing could be further from the truth, as this bill will allow the speakers of both houses to select a private committee that would "elect" part of the house of Lords.

April 20, 2012

In 1748, French political thinker, Montesquieu, identified in De l’esprit des lois the three branches of government between which power should be allocated and separated: the executive which takes action to implement the law, defend the nation, conduct foreign affairs and administer internal policies; the legislative which makes law, and the judiciary which applies the law to determine disputes and punish criminals. According to the doctrine the executive cannot make law. Neither can the legislative determine disputes or any of the branches exercise the power of the other.

April 20, 2012

Tier 1 - The Rule Of Law

The law is the supreme authority. It applies to all flesh and blood men and women equally – without exception. We are all equal under the law. The ‘law’ means our common law, also referred to as natural law or God’s law.

April 19, 2012

 

Philanthropist - the word is supposed to invoke the image of the so-called wealth creator giving freely to good causes for the benefit of his fellow man.

These days, though, it has become something quite different, as Agenda 21 and the Big Society instead invoke images of a (Leo) Straussian hell where laws are created not by accountable, representative, government for the benefit of society, but by corporatised charities and think tanks.

March 14, 2012

In the first decade of the 5th century AD, in the years before Alaric marched his Visigoth horde into Rome and sacked the city, Britannia was, albeit temporarily, at peace. In the four hundred years since the first Roman invasion, tyrannical military force had largely tamed the native Celtic population, bringing classical education, economic stability, and ultimately, even Christianity to the Islands, following its adoption as the official religion of the Empire in 313 AD. 

We normally think of history as one catastrophe after another, war followed by war, outrage by outrage – almost as if history were nothing more than all the narratives of human pain, assembled in sequence. And surely this is, often enough, an adequate description. But history is also the narratives of grace, the recounting of those blessed and inexplicable moments when someone did something for someone else, saved a life, bestowed a gift, gave something beyond what was required by circumstance ...

February 17, 2012

Robert received nine months for the alleged breach of the peace, and three months for breaking bail conditions.

Elish Angiolini & Edward Bowen
Elish Angiolini & Edward Bowen

The UK Column is appalled by the decision of Sheriff Principle Edward Bowen to jail Robert Green today in what can only be described as a huge miscarriage of justice.

February 15, 2012

The UK Supreme Court has upheld the refusal by the BBC to release information under the Freedom of Information Act, on the basis that it is exempt when that information is held for the purposes of "journalism, art or literature", even when the information is also used for other purposes.

The case was brought by a UK based solicitor, Steven Sugar, who had wanted the BBC to release the Balen Report, an internal report into the BBC's coverage of the Middle East. Mr Sugar had claimed that the BBC was biased against Israel.

February 1, 2012

I received an email this morning (how I ended up on their mailing list, I have no idea):

Rebecca is a thirteen-year-old Care2 member from England whose teenage brother Jamie was killed by a drunk driver in Otley, West Yorkshire on New Years' Eve in 2010. The driver, who was later convicted and is serving a four-year sentence, was allowed to go on driving for months before the trial commenced.

Rebecca thinks that this is terrible, and her local member of Parliament (Liberal Democrat Greg Mulholland) agrees.

January 31, 2012

Investigations into abuse, racism, pornographic videos, abuse of trust and neglect at Oxford and Cherwell Valley College have now restarted following exposure by the UK Column. But victims remain concerned that those who failed to protect them originally are again leading the investigation, and there will be a cover-up.

Photographed below holding a letter of support from his MP Andrew Smith, Daniel Arnold is just one brave victim who is now determined to help other victims and bring perpetrators to justice.

Daniel Arnold
Daniel Arnold

January 25, 2012

On Tuesday, 24th January in Stonehaven Court, Scotland, Robert Green was found guilty of Breach of the Peace, and breaking some of his bail conditions. Three other charges were dropped. 

Barely reported in the mainstream press, this man has been found guilty of ‘crimes’ for daring to expose the facts concerning the rape and abuse of Hollie Greig at the hands of senior members of the Scottish establishment. Even before the latest 6 day hearing, the Scottish ‘justice’ system had spent over £500,000 trying to shut Robert up.

January 24, 2012

Belfast judiciary, who swear a meaningless oath to their office and not to serve the Sovereign, block smoker's application to have questions of National Sovereignty and Treason from being heard in the Supreme Court.

Chris Carter

According to figures released by the Ministry of Justice

January 10, 2012

While we wrangle with our respective public or private employers about what pensions we might receive in the future, French pensioners are already having payments withheld.

At the end of December, almost 300,000 retired employees of SNCF, the French railway company, discovered that they had only been paid a third of their normal amount. The remainder was due to be paid yesterday.

The rather worrying reason for this, was that Credit Agricole, one of France's top three banks, which has responsibility for passing the necessary cash to the agency that distributes it, refused to do so.

January 6, 2012

On both sides of the Atlantic, there is a drive by traitorous "leaders" to dispose of our respective Bills of Rights.

On New Year's Day, Mike Adams, editor of NaturalNews.com, wrote:

December 2, 2011

Positive Money bills itself as “a simple solution to the debt crisis”. With a cursory glance, it might appear to be making some of the right noises. On closer inspection, however, there’s just nothing there.

Positive Money states that it wants three things:

1. Make banks ask our permission before they gamble with our money.

October 12, 2011

A constitution is a vital part of any country's system of government. It provdes the rules by which the people agree to be governed. It is a contract, the terms and conditions under which those elected must govern, be they a monarch, president or parliament.

The people as a collective are the ultimate supremacy. Once accomplished, a constitution cannot be changed without the express will of the people for to do so would be a violation of contract and would render the authority of those in breech null and void.

September 21, 2011

Within four days of learning that a paedophile's park ban had been lifted because of his Human Right to 'keep fit' we learned that a Nigerian rapist had escaped deportation after European judges ruled that he had a right to 'private life' in Britain.

Within four days of learning that a paedophile's park ban had been lifted because of his Human Right to 'keep fit' we learned that a Nigerian rapist had escaped deportation after European judges ruled that he had a right to 'private life' in Britain.

September 6, 2011

22nd October 2011 - Kings Hall Stoke On Trent
5th November 2011 - Friends House, London

A constitution is a vital part of any country's system of government. It provides the rules by which the people agree to be governed. It is a contract, the terms and conditions under which those elected must govern, be they a monarch, president or parliament.

The people as a collective are the ultimate supremacy. Once accomplished, a constitution cannot be changed without the express will of the people  -for to do so would be a violation of contract and would negate the authority of those in breech.

Britain Has A Constitution

Britain has a constitution of considerable standing, the foundations of which were established almost 800 years ago with the signing of Magna Carta in 1215, and reasserted 322 years go with the Declaration of Right and Bill of Rights in 1688.

August 14, 2011

But the real plan is this - Cameron cynically understands that the British public is not yet ready, and in many places, very wary of European Police Officers coming on to British Streets.

Dear All

I would like to alert the UK public to dangerous moves by Cameron to establish 'private armies' and foreign police on our streets. The story begins with Cameron pressing for the American 'super-cop' Bill Bratton to become a senior police officer. Cameron is thrusting his US mate forward, knowing that Bratton has been collaborating with British police over many years, and thus knows the system. 

August 10, 2011

What is happening on the streets of London and other major cities? Are we to believe that a few angry youths, armed with Blackberry phones are orchestrating a wave of looting, arson and violence in areas of London and across UK? Unlikely. Something just does not seem right?

What is happening on the streets of London and other major cities? Are we to believe that a few angry youths, armed with Blackberry phones are orchestrating a wave of looting, arson and violence in areas of London and across UK? Unlikely. Something just does not seem right? 

July 11, 2011

This four part video is a condensed version of a presentation made by Australian farmer and Constitutional researcher Brian Shaw. He tells his Australian audience what the Australian Government don't want them to know.

In his presentation he explains how the 'Australian Government is bypassing the Australian Constitution as it moves towards One World Governance'.

'The Crown is already removed...All Constitutions illegally suspended', he says. He adds that this was 'not resisted by the UK Government because there are a whole load of communist, socialist and International fabian boys and freemasons running the show over there'.

This sounds familiar doesn't it?

June 10, 2011

If we were awarding prizes for Councils hitting the headlines for all the wrong reasons then Suffolk County Council would be a strong contender for the first prize.

In June, 2010 it was revealed that the Conservative controlled Council had engaged a spin doctor on £182,000 a year who would 'involve a pro-active approach to communications, particularly in media management, including campaigns, media public relations, marketing events, branding and web'. They had also hired a teletubbies expert to speak at a motivational event for staff.

March 9, 2011

By now videos of the events in Birkenhead County Court on 7th March 2011 will have been seen around the world. If one looks closely, they were in the good old British tradition of protest. The people there had gone beyond the "muttering amongst themselves in pubs and at bus stops" stage of discontent with the Establishment, through "someone ought to do something about it" to "I will do something".

I strongly suspect that for each person present on the day, there were tens of thousands who agreed wholeheartedly with them "and felt themselves accursed they were not there" (to quote Shakespeare) and now are looking forward to the next opportunity to publicly express their discontent. And the Establishment knows this too.