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Soph0571

(9,685 posts)
Sat Jul 10, 2021, 06:09 AM Jul 2021

Harsh, but fair


@Coldwar_Steve

Truly this. Just need the fisher of men in there to get arrested for saving them from drowning in the channel...
I hate what these people are doing to our country, but more than this, the number of people passively or actively supporting this xenophobia, jingoism and racism is quite literally heart breaking.

Cruelty is the whole point with Piranha Patel and the 'very devout' Jacob “The bands of blighters bringing illegal entrants to Blighty will be broken up by this brilliant borders bill.” Rees-Mogg, what's the excuse for everyone else? Brexit Border Bollocks?



It not good enough.
4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Harsh, but fair (Original Post) Soph0571 Jul 2021 OP
Waiting for the RNLI to become an illegal organisation - the Daily Mail is already attacking it muriel_volestrangler Jul 2021 #1
Did the pic originate with Monty Python? It is being used to make a good point but it is an abqtommy Jul 2021 #2
Cold War Steve is a present day satirist muriel_volestrangler Jul 2021 #3
British trumps Cosmo Blues Jul 2021 #4

muriel_volestrangler

(101,263 posts)
1. Waiting for the RNLI to become an illegal organisation - the Daily Mail is already attacking it
Sat Jul 10, 2021, 06:47 AM
Jul 2021
Without smugglers, how are people supposed to get to the UK to claim asylum? The law currently states that the offence of helping an asylum seeker consists in facilitating a person’s arrival ‘knowingly and for gain’. (The Danish fishermen also took a fee.) This week, Priti Patel introduced the Nationality and Borders Bill in the Commons. Among its proposals are to remove ‘for gain’ from the legislation and bump up the maximum sentence from 14 years to life. In other words, anyone who rescues a would-be asylum seeker from drowning and brings them to safety in the UK, even without any personal benefit (by some lights a clear case of acting morally), will have broken the law.

As ever, government policy dovetails with the tabloid press. Last week, the Daily Mail complained that ‘it is clear that the Royal National Lifeboat Institution – the registered charity so many of us help fund through donations, garden fetes and collection boxes – is regularly sending its vessels into French waters to bring in migrants.’ In response, the RNLI issued a patient statement reminding Britons that a lifeboat institution really does have to save people from drowning:

Our charity exists to save lives at sea. Our mission is to save every one. Our lifesavers are compelled to help those in need without judgment of how they came to be in the water. They have done so since the RNLI was founded in 1824 and this will always be our ethos.

The new bill appears not only to outlaw the current operations of the RNLI but to contravene international maritime law, which recognises a duty to attempt to rescue those in danger at sea. The government, in an ambiguously punctuated sentence, says its aim is to ‘deter illegal entry into the UK breaking the business model of criminal trafficking networks and saving lives’. That means asylum seekers must instead wait to be selected by resettlement schemes, which assist fewer than 1 per cent of those who eventually qualify for protection (and in any case have been paused for much of the pandemic). Or it means they should travel as the rest of us do – board a plane or a ferry, passport and visa in hand – and then apply for asylum on reaching British soil. But the UK government doesn’t grant visas to people if

the political, economic and security situation in the applicant’s country of residence, including whether it is politically unstable, a conflict zone or at risk of becoming one, leads to doubts about their intention to leave the UK at the end of their visit.

In other words, the vast majority of those who may need asylum cannot arrive by any ‘legal’ route precisely because they might apply for asylum. As so often, people are criminalised for being in need. And the government will do everything it can to avoid meeting that need. Hence the small boats and the need for rescue.

https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2021/july/the-other-shore

abqtommy

(14,118 posts)
2. Did the pic originate with Monty Python? It is being used to make a good point but it is an
Sat Jul 10, 2021, 08:22 AM
Jul 2021

unnecessary distraction to the fact that today's Tories are operating directly out of The Fascist Handbook For Dummies and we see the results worldwide every day. It's up to all of us to provide
the means to stop their insanity.

Thanks for bringing us The Truth every day in every way.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,263 posts)
3. Cold War Steve is a present day satirist
Sat Jul 10, 2021, 09:15 AM
Jul 2021
Cold War Steve is the nom de plume of Christopher Spencer, a British collage artist and satirist. He is the creator of the Twitter feed @Coldwar_Steve. His work typically depicts a grim, dystopian location in England populated by British media figures, celebrities, and politicians, usually with EastEnders actor Steve McFadden (in character as Phil Mitchell) looking on in disgust.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War_Steve

(though I can't see Steve McFadden in this one - normally, there's more of a crowd; maybe he's the tiny figure way in the distance, that I just noticed)
The two on the right of the collage - Priti Patel and Jacob Rees-Mogg - are Tory cabinet ministers. I don't think it's a distraction, so much as a direct reminder of their fascist tendency.

Cosmo Blues

(2,465 posts)
4. British trumps
Sat Jul 10, 2021, 11:21 AM
Jul 2021

Short sighted manipulators without compassion or intellect, sad really. Is that bill really likely to pass?

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