The Shamelessness of Evil

BY ALEX STORY The Sentencing Council’s recent guidance asking the courts to consider the ethnic, cultural, and religious minority status of offenders as potential mitigating factors when pronouncing a judgement is the modern equivalent of the passing of the Nuremberg Laws of 1935. Crime, according to our quangocrats, is no longer a function of a person’s sovereignty, it becomes the mechanical corollary of the arbitrary … Continue reading The Shamelessness of Evil

Rectifying Injustices

BY NICK BRAMALL My father, Field Marshal Lord Edwin Bramall (pictured), was a dedicated public servant who led a life of distinction and public service: he served during WWII, participating in the Normandy landings in June 1944 and served with the 2nd Battalion of his regiment in Northwest Europe during the later stages of the war, receiving the Military Cross in 1945. He subsequently became Chief … Continue reading Rectifying Injustices

The Subjective Nature of ‘Hate’

BY DANIEL JUPP One of the oddest things that has been accepted with little real challenge is the notion that there is such a thing as a ‘hate crime’. Throughout the western world we have seen legislative changes and judicial advice that embeds the new notion that a crime is particularly heinous if it is motivated by an entirely subjective interpretation of whether it was … Continue reading The Subjective Nature of ‘Hate’