Activism

  • Trolling and occupying has to stop

    The movement of people across our towns and cities isn’t just the faces of the newest Middle East crisis. It’s the repetitive antisocial action of protest groups that have no root or moral in our society.

    They don’t support us or our institutions. They threaten our lawmakers into silence. They inhabit our neighbourhoods to make our lives a mistake. They end our hopes and crush our dreams.

    This trolling and occupying of our success stories needs to stop. They’re backward apes on a landscape of development, and activity. Their unhelpful phrases are bits of errors they manage to cobble together, but don’t inspire hope in us.

  • Labour is a fool at play

    The Labour party is the original party of activism in the UK. The others don’t compare to its history and legacy of protest, picket, and pressure tactics. This has led to the rise of the party as it is today.

    However, a nefarious streak of activism has stalked the streets of the UK in recent decades, and Labour has taken it on as a serious force.

    The announcement by the Prime Minister that he now recognises a state in the Middle East for a new Palestinian people is a grave capitulation to their sorts of falsehood we’ve heard for so long.

    The divisive, objectionable movements that pollute communities and stain the reputation of Universities have succeeded in running its insanity straight into the halls of power in Parliament.

    Although the delusional promise will likely never come to pass, it still strikes a bad note. It proves that greatness comes and goes. It proves we don’t lead anymore. It shows that crowds matter more now than meanings or real measures.

  • Caught: Irish thug

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, an Irish thug believed to have an armed militia of his own has been spotted in central London.

    A suspect alleged of militia activity seen here in the Southbank Centre, in London.

    He’s accused of collaborating with editors of the Spectator, the Telegraph, and the Daily Mail as well as other News Journalism figures in London to target UK citizens.

  • The socialist Left aren’t the answer

    Much of the self-declared Your Party platform is their opposition to things that aren’t right for people. While it’s not a perfect state of affairs, for example, capitalism needn’t be replaced by a system that has gone wrong on multiple occasions by itself.

    The fact is many people also see the same problems, but they don’t see the same solutions. This is the party’s real standpoint.

    It joins a chorus of the self-righteous to declare billionaires are bad people, but it hasn’t stipulated how there are any good people anywhere else. The Bill may become law, but there’s plenty of room for manoeuvre for those who want to scupper its progress elsewhere.

    Your Party lack a momentum of real integrity because the socialist Left is a criminal cabal intent on wrecking our lives.

    The protest movements that truly help are few in number. Overall they don’t impress change and it hasn’t resulted in any significant improvement of life chances for the “many” that socialists point out in our society. This is a stubborn problem for all in modern politics.

  • Gaza is not a New York issue

    The first New York City Mayoral debate is perhaps a chance to flesh out responses to any crisis that exists in the City.

    It’s a place of meeting for all types of creed and character. It produces its own problems and has taken in many more.

    This is the forum for that sort of tricky interaction with difficult and often controversial topics.

    Andrew Cuomo – an NYC Mayoral candidate – stipulates his position on Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    However, Gaza simply isn’t one of them. An example is Andrew Cuomo, who has already been challenged over his visits to Mosque’s during his campaign.

    He faced questioning about Gaza also, although the Strip is thousands of miles away.

    In last nights debate he stuck to an obvious line about Hamas, and denouncing the infrastructure of hate that supports it.

    This isn’t the point in New York politics, or America, but protests ship it in as if it’s a legitimate import and a product ready to sell.

    The sadness is that candidates like Mamdani can’t see the irrelevance of so much activity over the investment of time needed in the City he lives in and seeks to govern.

  • Protesters fight us without legitimate weapons

    The threat or fear created by radical politics and its public expression is unlawful, but the causes and the issues continue.

    The investment of blood, sweat, and tears is for something genuine, and true.

    This era of mass mobilisation, as it’s often called, is false, and a fake manifestation of academia.

    It doesn’t work. It can’t sustain. It can’t prosper a future.

    The true heritage of a great people is in an inward struggle of hope over darkness. This isn’t it.

  • MP says Musk poses a risk

    Yesterday, Daisy Cooper MP (St Albans/Liberal Democrats) asked the Prime Minister for Elon Musk to be assessed as a security risk to the UK after Tommy Robinson claimed his legal fees are being covered by him in his latest trial at Westminster Magistrates Court.

    Daisy Cooper MP says Elon Musk may pose a threat due to his control of social media.

    It’s not been confirmed yet if this is true, but it shows a reactionary probing of online speech by those who say they defend the rights of anyone to say what they will in their own way, yet draw a line at conservatives.

    Musk may not be funding Robinson, but Robinson has been allowed to act as he does, so Musk is entitled to his own interest in it.

  • Exclusive: “Subject Control” criminal

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, an elusive criminal alleged to have antagonised MI5 Agents over decades is now exposed as the culprit behind “No to Digital ID”, an insurgent, anti-State movement.

    It’s alleged to be guided by a “Subject Control” ideology, a psychologically subversive intellectual clique that believes in dominating public narrative and critics. It results in controlling contexts and misinformation in public outlets.

  • Court Reports: Tommy Robinson explainer

    Tommy Robinson is due in court today to answer to a charge he refused to give a pin number to his smartphone while stopped by Police in Folkestone, Kent, as he was about to cross into mainland Europe. His claim is that he doesn’t have to because he’s a Journalist. While it’s true some Journalists have successfully refused to do this before, Robinson is not noted as being a Journalist in the proper sense. He’s seen by some as an unofficial documentarian of his own activism, and this makes him a celebrity rather than a reporter or a fully fledged Journalist.

  • Caught: Army agitator

    In a stunning exclusive for Conservative News Site, a criminal agitator alleged to make threats to the British Army by promoting nefarious people has been spotted.

    A suspect alleged of criminal interference seen here on an outbound train from London.

    He’s alleged to support Tommy Robinson and his street activism. He’s also said to be a key contact for ideological groups seeking to disrupt business activity in London.

  • Each new issue brings a protest

    The groove or rhythm of politics for an increasing number of people is to launch a protest against an issue. It’s now commonplace in London, for example, to discover a protest about a new policy just announced. This is single-issue protesting because the ideology is just a bedrock.

    A protest outside BBC Broadcasting House to oppose the introduction of digital ID cards for UK citizens.

    It isn’t the point. The day to day ramifications of what’s said and done inside halls of power is the point. Therefore, many have found it more convenient to latch onto the latest idea from Whitehall by walking or pounding the streets looking for support to oppose it.

  • A protest is also predatory behaviour

    It’s not that protest groups are accused of terrorism per se, but they’re known for tactics of intimidation. The facts are laid bare on the ground. People have felt threatened for being a member of a party, participating in public debates, or voting in elections. This has gone on for decades.

    The causes people follow are mainly to blame, because they highlight differences. The political system is built around compromise, or bridges linking together people of different persuasions. This is not found in activism. The affronts are meant to undermine our starting points to make us submit.

    The agent of this is the common man and woman. It can be plotted at kitchen tables. It’s the effect of out working it constantly in neighbourhoods. The fear that’s spread builds if the people doing it don’t give up. It’s not a simple refusal that works. They don’t listen to personal complaints.

  • Pres. Trump targets political disorder

    There’s a jokey health ailment in American media called Trump Derangement Syndrome. It’s used by the President himself to describe the protests of opposing groups. It epitomises the emotions of those that gather repeatedly to oppose his agenda in public.

    In response to real disorder the President also has a tactic. It’s not media based. It’s a National Security Presidential Memorandum that instructs the moderation of political mobilisation by use of legitimate, reasonable force.

    It highlights “organised political violence and domestic terrorism” as a real, significant problem in America. It isn’t just in response to the killing of Charlie Kirk, a political activist, but it feels like it. It reaches deep and seeks to uproot a virulent form of activism.

    The starker events in recent modern American history haven’t always been positive. Apart from either party getting their President from time to time, the real issues of politics have been divisive. It’s a reality that bears down heavily on the nation as it moves forward.

  • Do Your Party run the risk of a revolt?

    The Your Party brand has barely launched and already socialist groups are jumping at the opportunity to unite to defeat the country. An X account for it suggests the grassroots movements that populate our streets time after time with hateful slogans should form a super-group to take on the “failed political class”. This is no mere glass of grass juice, it’s the reorganisation of agitators into a much larger force.

    The need to clarify events is pressing now on the fledgling party. This is to reassure the rest of the political class that it doesn’t have designs on power – or our lives. It will take some doing. Most people are aware of the disruptive effects of activism in our towns and cities. They know its roots and its shoots. The need now is to move away from such revolt and turn back to democracy. This is the hope of most of us now.

  • Caught: “French 24” member

    In a stunning exclusive for Conservative News Site, a member of “French 24” – a politically alternative supremacist group acting against national interests in France – has been spotted.

    A suspect in French nationalist politics spotted in The Oracle, in Reading, Berkshire.

    He and others are alleged to play a role in targeting academics in Paris and in other centres of excellence to inflict economic damage on the country.