- Joined
- Jul 24, 2017
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If they apply the same standard to everyone else, the law is gutted and useless. I doubt they will; Rowling is rich and capable of mounting a crushing defence. The real test comes when they u-turn on this announcement and arrest someone for calling a man in a dress a man in a dress. A competent defence would point to this announcement.
The state finds great use in the concept of "hate crime", as it provides the means to arbitrarily detain and arrest people for non-crimes under the aegis of "preventing hate". This will become another law that is inconsistently enforced, for the purpose of punishing wrongthinkers. It would take a serious amount of money to challenge it.
Martin was interviewed on BBC radio news this lunchtime over this story, claiming that he only wore his sister's knickers once, when he was three. He sounded rather pleasingly riled up. Go to about 25 minutes in. We've got the receipts, Marty Boy. Reduxx covered the initial story when he gave a training course and stunned all present with his extensive, openly revealed, stories of stealing clothes. It's all here at the farms too.Katie Neeves has been appointed as the UN Women UK delegate. She switched from straight man to lesbian at the age of 48 and, in a leaked 2022 webinar, described how she used to enjoy stealing and wearing her sister’s underwear. A truly relatable representative! 9/11
Neeves has on several occasions elaborated on how his crossdressing fetish led him to pursue a transgender identity. In an interview announcing his self-declared identity, Neeves told Leicester Live, “My earliest memory is when I was about three, I preferred to wear my sister’s knickers, not realising this was anything to bother about – until mum found out and chastised me.
“I still kept borrowing my sister’s clothes (and my girlfriend’s), in secret though, all through until my early 20s,” Neeves added.
The interview describes Neeves as having “soft skin” as a result of taking female hormones, and as “a naturally slightly-built person” with “an enviable figure.”
In 2019, Neeves recorded himself admonishing his sister for refusing to accept his gender identity. In the video, he reads a letter he had written to her to provoke her to respond.
“I’m writing to you to let you know how saddened I feel that I didn’t hear from you for my birthday… because it indicates to me that you don’t accept that I am transgender. That makes me very sad indeed. We were so close as children,” Neeves said.
I'm gonna channel my inner Terry for this with some schizo theories based from studying just what the rapeugees coming into Bongistan have in their cultures that makes them want to come here and the picture it paints is bleak.Given that the unelected leader of the SNP, Humza Yousaf (beautiful British name!) is a devout Muslim who swore into office on a copy of the Qur'an, has anybody considered that the troon bollocks could be basically just a Trojan horse to make new blasphemy laws in this country in order to protect Muslims and the religion of peace from criticism, given that they're a really fast growing minority in this country and they, like troons, tend to chimp out when they feel slighted, albeit in a much more 'blow-uppy' kind of way?
Martin Neeves said:I still kept borrowing my sister’s clothes (and my girlfriend’s), in secret though
It has its origins in all 3 of the major religious groups (Catholics, Protestants and Muslims) wanting to be shielded from criticism, particularly about covering up sexual abuse. They've long claimed that we mustn't smear the entire group because of a few individuals, so a claim like 'the church covered up abuse' is insulting and should be illegal. The muslims like the law because it shields them from similar accusations and they believe that insulting Islam should be a crime anyway. It will be interesting to see what each group considers 'insulting'.Given that the unelected leader of the SNP, Humza Yousaf (beautiful British name!) is a devout Muslim who swore into office on a copy of the Qur'an, has anybody considered that the troon bollocks could be basically just a Trojan horse to make new blasphemy laws in this country in order to protect Muslims and the religion of peace from criticism, given that they're a really fast growing minority in this country and they, like troons, tend to chimp out when they feel slighted, albeit in a much more 'blow-uppy' kind of way?
They almost brag about this like it's admirable rather than pure sex pest behavior.Um, fucking excuse me, but it isn't borrowing if they don't know about it, you fucking tranny freak. You have to ask permission if you want to borrow something, if you take it in secret, that isn't 'borrowing'.
Borrowing requires consent - something I rather suspect you already know, because I think that's what gets you off.
"Hey, you know J.K Rowling committed hate crimes?"
Fantastic news for free speech. However, I can’t help but wish the same could’ve happened to other people convicted of thoughtcrime in European countries, such as David Irving or Ursula Haverbeck.
Willyboy is melting down.
I would have said he's too boring before, and all he ever does is tweet, but he might be upping his game. Maybe he'll even start doing something funny in the real world.I am seriously convinced India Willoughby deserves a thread of his own at this point.
Meh, not so much. The lower classes are also likely to set a copper on fire, or smash their fucking heads in on a drug fueled murder rampage.lower class
Willyboy is melting down.
She would cheer you on being publicly beheaded if you pointed out pakis rape far more women than trannies ever do.
That's excellent news. I don't know how the goofy ass Scottish legal system works but I would imagine that anything Rowling said could be said by anyone else without it being criminal right? Would that mean that any time a troon starts harassing someone could just quote her from now on?