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Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Links - 14th July 2026 (2 - UK Politics)

Greens overtake Labour in wake of by-election - "The pollster, which sampled around 2,000 adults on March 1 and 2, said it had never recorded a lower score for Labour in its 26-year history."

The Greens are finally coming under serious scrutiny – and they’re rattled - "they’re starting to come under some actual scrutiny. And they clearly don’t like it one little bit. Look how they reacted after Mothin Ali, the Green Party’s deputy leader, was criticised in the Commons on Monday for attending a protest against the air strikes on Iran. Sir Alec Shelbrooke, a Tory MP, accused Ali of “protesting in support of the Ayatollah”. In reply, Sir Keir Starmer said, “I think we’re all shocked by the actions of the deputy leader of the Green Party.”  Pretty mild stuff by the usual standards of Commons debate. Yet it seems to have sent the Greens into a shrieking meltdown. Zack Polanski, their leader, howled that Sir Keir was guilty of “blatant Islamophobia”, by “smearing a caring man of principle for standing up for peace”. Meanwhile, Ali wailed that he was a victim of a “defamatory lie” and “pure racism”. Funny how things turn out. Polanski has spent almost his entire leadership smugly proclaiming that any politician or pundit who dares criticise the Greens is “rattled”. Yet all of a sudden, he’s sounding distinctly rattled himself. All I can say is that he’d better get used to it. Because, for the first time, people are beginning to take the Greens seriously. And for Polanski’s party, that’s bad news. After all, let’s face it – one of the main reasons for their recent success is that many of their own voters don’t actually know what their policies are.  We demonstrated this at the weekend, when Telegraph reporters visited the scene of the Gorton and Denton by-election and asked Green voters whether they knew that, for example, the party wants to legalise crack cocaine and prostitution. Local Muslims, in particular, were aghast. “It seems they hid those policies,” lamented one. “Who supports these policies?” gasped another. Both said they would never have voted Green if they’d known. Well, lots more people will soon know about those policies, too, because the Green Party’s opponents will be making sure everyone does. No voter will be able to avoid hearing that the Greens want to give primary school children lessons in how to take drugs “safely”, make the UK pay billions of pounds in reparations for the 18th-century slave trade, and allow absolutely all illegal immigrants to remain in Britain (while giving them a house each, and handing them free money “at the level of Universal Basic Income”, with no obligation to work for it). As a result, the next general election should be somewhat unusual. Normally, political parties spend the campaign telling the electorate about their own policies. But this time, they’ll all be telling the electorate about Green Party policies – purely to ensure that the nation finally grasps just how screamingly bonkers they are. I used to think of the Greens as the party that puts the “mental” into “environmentalism”. But of late, they seem to have gone oddly quiet on the environment – and started putting the “mental” into everything else, instead... Still, Polanski can cling to one small hope. Most of his party’s policies are so preposterous that voters may assume that their opponents have simply made them up."
If you criticise Muslims, that's Islamophobia

British strikes on targets in Iran would be lawful, says deputy prime minister - "Cyprus has vocally criticised the UK over its lack of alacrity in sending defensive assets to protect the island. On Friday Lammy wrongly claimed to the BBC that “Cyprus is a Nato ally”. It is one of four EU nations that are not part of the 32-state alliance. Lammy also mistakenly referred to a Typhoon jet as a “tycoon”. A Number 10 spokesperson said the prime minister retained confidence in him."
Damn racists criticising a black man!

Lammy accused of forcing through plans to scrap jury trials - "David Lammy has been accused of railroading plans to scrap jury trials through Parliament.  MPs on the Commons justice committee said the Justice Secretary had failed to seek a “broader consensus” for the proposals before introducing a bill that enacts them in Parliament. Failing to consult on the Courts and Tribunals Bill “inhibited” scrutiny of the plans, which represent the biggest change to criminal courts in more than 50 years, the MPs said.  The cross-party committee also warned that the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) was placing “unrealistic” demands on magistrates who would have to hear tens of thousands more criminal cases under the plans... The committee also expressed concern that defendants with previous convictions will be more likely to get a jury trial than those with a clean record if the court reforms go ahead.  The disparity would be an “unintended consequence” of the new trial allocation process, which will factor in the length of sentence someone would probably get when deciding whether their case should be held before a jury, the committee said... The Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association told the committee that the “differential impact” on defendants would amount to “a penalty for being of good character”."

The Free Speech Union on X - "Senior figures at Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service, under the command of Andy Burnham, have cautioned firefighters who support Reform UK over their political views.  In a further chilling assault on free speech, staff have also effectively been urged in an email to report colleagues who support Reform.  Fire brigade bosses have also said they are seeking legal advice on what to do about firefighters who decide to stand as Reform UK candidates. This is despite the fact that, unlike police officers, there is no legal bar preventing firefighters from participating in national or local politics.  In their email, fire brigade bosses Mr Petch and Ms Ahmed said: ’We are aware that some staff members have chosen to represent Reform UK in their local areas. We know this may cause concern within our network and wider.  ’The individuals involved have been spoken to, to make it clear that as members of GMFRS (Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service) our core values and professional behaviours must be displayed at all times.  ’The service is currently seeking formal legal guidance… to ensure we are protected from all perspectives and that our inclusive culture remains safe.  ‘Our priority is and always will be ensuring that every member of this network feels supported, respected and safe at work.’  They also confirmed that they would be consulting the Fire Brigades Union on the matter.  In his role as Mayor of Greater Manchester, @AndyBurnhamGM  — who is also tipped by some to be a future Prime Minister if he wins the Makerfield by-election — is also Greater Manchester’s Fire Commissioner, responsible for overseeing the service.  General Secretary of the Free Speech Union, Lord Young of Acton, has now written to Mr Burnham to raise concerns about the chilling effect this has on free speech.  Lord Young said that the ‘clear implication’ of the email from the fire brigade bosses was that ‘representing Reform UK constitutes an inherent threat to the institution’s culture and values and is to be treated as morally suspect’. He also highlighted that no action appears to have been taken against firefighters who support other political parties.  The letter also states: ‘Staff are further invited to report colleagues who support any groups that go against the service’s values, which effectively amounts to an instruction to inform on colleagues for their political beliefs.  ’The email will create a chilling effect on the free speech of GMFRS employees who support Reform.  ’The practical effect is that a public fire and rescue service governed by you is treating the lawful political activity of your electoral opponents as a reputational risk to their employer.  ‘Regardless of whether this reflects your instruction, it reflects your governance; and a public office-holder who permits his institution to demonise or chill the speech and political activity of those who support his principal electoral rival cannot claim to be discharging that office with the impartiality it demands.’"

Stuey Beef 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 on X - "If Vladimir Putin changed the voting system days before an election to stop his opponents winning, every British journalist would call it what it is: rigging the rules.  Tonight, Labour rammed through a last‑minute switch in the Lords so that if Andy Burnham wins Makerfield and quits as Greater Manchester Mayor, his replacement won’t be chosen on a simple first‑past‑the‑post ballot, but on the supplementary vote system instead.  Why now?   Because Labour knows the race to replace Burnham would be a straight two‑horse fight with Reform UK – and under FPTP, the candidate with the most votes wins, no second chances, no back‑room redistributions, no “stop Reform” stitch‑ups.  Under SV, Labour gets a second bite of the cherry: if their candidate can limp into the top two, they can hoover up second preferences from every other party and magic a “majority” on the second count, even if Reform tops the poll on first preferences.  This isn’t “modernising democracy”. It’s the governing party using its Commons majority and the unelected Lords to hurriedly doctor the rules of one specific contest because it’s terrified the voters might choose someone else.  When the establishment preached to the world about “rules‑based order”, they forgot to mention one thing: in Britain, the rules are “based” on whether Labour thinks it might lose."

 Stop ignoring the Islamisation of our democracy | Robert Clark | The Critic Magazine - "In addition to rising anti-Semitic violence, two other areas must be urgently addressed if the next Government is to combat rising radical Islam: family-based voting — a threat to British democracy and freedom of speech — and the Government’s tacit support for polygamy in the form of increased welfare payments. This latter problem is liable to essentially endorse people trafficking through forced marriages.   The recent Gorton and Denton by-election was an inflection point. Independent election observers Democracy Volunteers raised concerns in Gorton and Denton, reporting instances of family voting across multiple polling stations. In 2022, the group reported up to 5% of voters engaging in family voting, 85% of whom were women from Asian families.  Reform UK reported their observations in Gorton and Denton to Greater Manchester Police; in 2022 the previous Conservative government made some attempt to combat the practice, including pushing the Electoral Commission to prioritise the issue of family voting.   Labour has now vowed to scrap these measures. Sir James Cleverly, the shadow communities secretary, has said: “Off the back of a by-election marked by allegations of breaches of electoral law, this Labour Government is now going soft on electoral fraud as part of a wider lurch to the sectarian Left”.   The next government must ensure that toughened Electoral Commission guidance is enforced, support independent observers like Democracy Volunteers to increase fair election monitoring, spread awareness and education in wards with high Muslim demographic, improve polling station and voter booth infrastructure to afford voters greater levels of privacy and introduce much tougher sentencing for offenders, with special tribunals and very public naming and shaming.   Fundamentally the Electoral Commission must get serious targeting Islamic dominated wards and districts for heavy observation, rather than the government relying on misguided blanket national policies such as national ID.   Separately, it was recently revealed that the Department for Work and Pensions has since April 2026 increased the benefits paid out to households in polygamous marriages. Whilst illegal under British law, polygamous marriages are common amongst any African and Asian cultures, and under sharia law.   Monogamy is one of the Judeo-Christian world’s great advantages, and created a family structure that has been a massive developmental advantage for western societies. This is now being eroded, not simply from imported Islamic tradition, but by the British Government itself.   Under a Central Tribunal system to handle the deportations of illegal migrants, failed asylum seekers, and foreign criminals from Britain, there must also be a special tribunal established for individuals engaged in polygamous marriages.   Whilst there are estimates of up to 20,000 polygamous marriages, this goes to a much deeper concern; a 2024 poll discovered that up to 32% of all British Muslims were in favour of sharia law. This level of support by British Muslims for sharia law – let alone by its foreign agents on UK soil – is one of the root causes for much of the sectarian strife we are witnessing unfold on our streets.   The next government must go further than any before it and ban sharia courts which operate across British towns and cities, with stringent penalties, whilst also naming and shaming Islamist charities which support these courts and their ideologies...   Much of this — especially deportations — is only possible once Britain leaves the ECHR. Both the Conservatives and Reform UK have already committed to this long-overdue action. Without this sense of urgency, and preparation, expect the march of Islamisation to roll on."

 David Lammy defends tweet about growing up on 'tax credits' - "London mayoral candidate David Lammy has defended a tweet in which he claimed his mother had relied on tax credits to bring him up – despite him having been aged 31 when the benefit was introduced... Lammy was born in 1972, but child and working tax credits were introduced by the Labour government in 2003, when the MP was in his 30s."

Green council destroys thousands of flowers planted by volunteers - "Volunteers have been left “beyond angry” after flower bulbs they planted were mown over by a Green Party-led council.  More than 70 volunteers planted almost 30,000 bulbs in St George Park in Bristol on Saturday after raising thousands of pounds to fund the initiative.  But thousands of the bulbs were “shredded” days later when council workers mowed the grass in the park."

James Heale on X - "Starmer didn’t fall in the battle for any great cause or principle. He didn’t have a foreign policy crusade (Suez) or major reform (poll tax), a strategic gamble (referendum) or economic package (mini Budget). His support just seemed to ebb away in pointless, petty matters."
Mike Jones on X - "Starmer made two genuinely big calls in office.  The first was scrapping the Rwanda plan on day one, despite it being paid for, legislated for, and ready to go. He replaced it with the nebulous promise to “smash the gangs”. That decision blew a hole in his entire approach to illegal migration.  The second was his mobilisation of state power during the Southport riots. A muscular response was necessary, but Starmer crossed a red line. In doing so, he exposed the two-tier nature of the British state.  Those were the two defining decisions of his premiership. Both were deliberate choices. And both ultimately helped undo his premiership."

Threads - "The truth about the Keir Starmer resignation: He was hounded out of office. A concerted effort from the mainstream media to trash him began almost immediately. Then, as Trump destroyed the international rules based order, and forged a new era of domestic and international corruption, Social Media bosses fell in line. Musk, Zuckerberg and others allowed disinformation and AI generated lies to proliferate unchecked. Bots flourished, and foreign actors took advantage. This cannot go on!"
Jack Dart | Facebook - "Legislation must be passed to tackle this. Social media companies must be forced to take action. They want to push responsibility onto others. That is not acceptable."
Left wingers hate free speech so much and want to control everything

Sam on X - "The first major wave of online misinformation resulted in Brexit, a decision that the majority of economists regard as the most damaging economic choice Britain has made in modern times, making millions of working families poorer.   Now it appears a second wave may succeed in forcing out a democratically elected Prime Minister who in a short timeframe has a track record of delivering policy designed to help millions of working families. Not a perfect man, but certainly one of the better PMs of the last 30 years or so.   A wave of gross & obvious misinformation, spread and amplified by foreign-owned social media platforms, in a deliberate campaign designed to indoctrinate UK citizens, may have toppled a British Prime Minister.   We are going down a very dark path here."
Peter Hague on X - "You cannot just brand all disagreement as misinformation and expect to be taken seriously. This bunker mentality among metropolitan elites is a large part of why governments keep failing one after another. Consider, just for a nanosecond, that you and your mates might be wrong."

Peter Hague on X - "While we are doing our autopsies of Keir Starmer’s unimpressive premiership, I’d like to suggest he is a prime example of a certain personality type that causes us problems.  He has been a high achiever his whole life. From the 11+ onwards he passed tests and ascended every hierarchy he found himself in. This, I believe, shaped his worldview in a way that made him absolutely unsuited for the office.  For Starmer, you accept the rules of the system, you play the game, and when you win you get rewards. Number 10 was just the last objective that he earned by mechanically playing society like a video game - it was his by right for ticking all the boxes correctly.   His visible confusion and inability to grasp the job of actual leadership is, I think, a result of never having had to deal with the world beyond whichever social game he was playing at the time. Law is such a bounded game where a rigid, goal oriented thinker like Starmer can and did thrive.   A better leader would be someone who has some experience doing something which contacts base reality, where outcomes are not socially determined. Business, STEM, the military etc all fall into this category. Those people who spend their careers in the purely social feedback loops of law and politics do I think make poor leaders even if they excel at the process that gets them to the leadership."
AB on X - "I think this is partly right but omits the impact of his particular choice of legal career.   His Doughty Street private practice was built on deep distrust and challenge to the exercise of power and authority by state and business with human rights as the highest norm. I think that is a damaging world view for someone who goes on to wield the power and authority himself.   That was seen with him as DPP in stuff like the Twitter Joke Trial where he, having identified himself so strongly with being on the side of right, was unable to get off those rails to challenge himself as the holder of power and authority. Same again on Chagos and probably assisted dying.   Had he been a lawyer whose career had been about working within the system and believing it to be a good one or at least a morally neutral one, he would have been better at the actual persuasion and good faith negotiation needed both in law and politics.   But the combination of complete moral certainty, opposition to the existing structure of society, and procedural exactitude proved bad for the more ambiguous real world."
Peter Hague on X - "He was still working In a hierarchy, just a parallel one. And one that still ultimately was part of the greater hierarchy of the law"
AB on X - "True but the way that human rights driven practice, particularly in its earliest days, worked was by subverting the system and exploiting the features of its hierarchy.   Running that angle on everything turned cases into intellectual games divorced from the substantive “did X commit Y crime”/“should Z be deported?” to focus on whether regardless of the substance there was a breach of rights to trump it.   So the likes of Starmer and Hermer became adept at arguing those drily to judges, separate from the substantive case, rather than persuading juries of innocence. But because the hierarchy and system rewards winning and in particular winning in novel appellate cases, it drove them rapidly upwards."
Helen Dale (not on your team, but always fair) on X - "Lawyers can be able politicians—Australia’s longest-serving & second-longest serving PMs (Menzies & Howard) were a barrister & solicitor respectively. Both were outstanding in the top job. However, when lawyers in high office fail, they fail in a particular way—they mistake process for outcome. That is at the root of Starmer’s failure."
AB on X - "Absolutely. Both Thatcher and Blair here also were barristers and similarly outstanding PMs and politicians.   Though I think maybe being middling enough barristers to switch early career rather than outstanding ones may have helped.   It gave them and honed all the valuable professional skills but also an awareness of their limits and the limits of process and law which only politics can address. So they were interested in and understood how to get things done by law and process but knew that it was a politician’s job to decide what things should be done and to persuade people of this.   Many people don’t get this. Even in my mundane legal career I spend a lot of time telling clients who want me to decide what to do that while I can, it’s their job, mine is to help them achieve the thing they want to do. If they want me to decide that then they’ve got no role at all. And if I wanted to do that I’d go and become the Sales Director or CEO myself."
Helen Dale (not on your team, but always fair) on X - "I have given similar advice at least hundreds of times in my life. “Lawyers act under instruction,” repeated over & over."

Heskel Balas 🚁 on X - "This is correct. Lawyers don't have the right mental models to be in charge - they approach problems through regulation and paperwork, which is why we have so many in the west. For some reason lawyers have become a dominant force in government instead of builders and doers"

All of our submarines are missing - "None of the Royal Navy’s attack submarines are currently at sea. A fleet of nuclear-powered hunter-killers all tied up alongside or in dock, every one of them, is a serious matter. This is not the first time it’s happened and last time it did, the Ministry of Defence trotted out the tired mantra “we continue to meet all our operational tasks”. We do not."

Chaotic Green Party tearing itself apart over internal complaints - "Since Zack Polanski became leader last year, the Green Party has been consumed by factionalism, infighting and accusations of anti-Semitism.  Now the party’s own disciplinary committee is tearing itself apart as it tries to deal with a mounting backlog of complaints... Between July 1, 2025, and June 10, 2026, the party received 116 disciplinary cases, representing a “significant and sustained increase” in complaints.  Of those, just 18 have concluded, while seven have been paused and 74 are still active, according to the report. Just six disciplinary hearings took place between July and November last year. Then, for the next six months, from December 2025 to May this year, no full hearings took place.  In May, the chairman of the committee resigned. Currently, the committee has only managed to fill 15 out of 22 seats, stalling progress. Reacting to the report and news that the party had made almost no progress resolving complaints, one Jewish Green Party member, who wishes to remain anonymous because of fears of a backlash, told The Telegraph: “To hear there has been little to no progress with complaints is deeply concerning.  “I am aware of Jewish members who are submitting complaints about members, and there is real concern that if these complaints are delayed then these people will continue to be a threat to Jewish members.”"

Council staff in Norfolk invited to ‘safe space’ session to air fears about Reform UK - "Staff at a Reform-led council were invited to a “safe space” session to vent about the party’s newly formed administration.  Unison, Britain’s largest trade union, urged Norfolk county council employees feeling “vulnerable and targeted” to attend the two-hour drop-in session last Wednesday.  But the event was criticised by several of Reform UK’s 40 newly elected councillors in the county – with one describing it as a “snowflake session”... Scott Hussey, a Reform councillor, said: “We value the professionalism and welfare of council employees and if any employee has a genuine concern about their welfare or working environment, they should raise it through the appropriate channels.  “But here we have a Labour-affiliated union – operating at a council with just one Labour councillor – organising needless snowflake sessions.  “Even Unison’s own members don’t share their leadership’s ideology. Recent polling found trade union members now back Reform UK and Labour equally, with six in 10 believing Labour has lost touch with working people.”"

UK puts Chagos Islands deal on hold to avoid ‘toxic backlash’ : r/unitedkingdom - "You mean giving away territory and paying for it is an unpopular policy? Colour me surprised..."

Once a Bastion of Free Speech, the A.C.L.U. Faces an Identity Crisis

This was after left wingers stopped pretending that they believed in free speech; they hate free speech and take over many institutions. Book bans and violating due process are good when they push the left wing agenda. 

The Charlottesville mention is ironic, given what we now know about the SPLC. 

From 2021:

Once a Bastion of Free Speech, the A.C.L.U. Faces an Identity Crisis - The New York Times

"It was supposed to be the celebration of a grand career, as the American Civil Liberties Union presented a prestigious award to the longtime lawyer David Goldberger. He had argued one of its most famous cases, defending the free speech rights of Nazis in the 1970s to march in Skokie, Ill., home to many Holocaust survivors.

Mr. Goldberger, now 79, adored the A.C.L.U. But at his celebratory luncheon in 2017, he listened to one speaker after another and felt a growing unease.

A law professor argued that the free speech rights of the far right were not worthy of defense by the A.C.L.U. and that Black people experienced offensive speech far more viscerally than white allies. In the hallway outside, an A.C.L.U. official argued it was perfectly legitimate for his lawyers to decline to defend hate speech.

Mr. Goldberger, a Jew who defended the free speech of those whose views he found repugnant, felt profoundly discouraged.

“I got the sense it was more important for A.C.L.U. staff to identify with clients and progressive causes than to stand on principle,” he said in a recent interview. “Liberals are leaving the First Amendment behind.”...

The organization, said its former director Ira Glasser, risks surrendering its original and unique mission in pursuit of progressive glory.

“There are a lot of organizations fighting eloquently for racial justice and immigrant rights,” Mr. Glasser said. “But there’s only one A.C.L.U. that is a content-neutral defender of free speech. I fear we’re in danger of losing that.”

Founded a century ago, the A.C.L.U. took root in the defense of conscientious objectors to World War I and Americans accused of Communist sympathies after the Russian Revolution. Its lawyers made their bones by defending the free speech rights of labor organizers and civil rights activists, the Nation of Islam and the Ku Klux Klan. Their willingness to advocate for speech no matter how offensive was central to their shared identity.

One hears markedly less from the A.C.L.U. about free speech nowadays. Its annual reports from 2017 to 2019 highlight its role as a leader in the resistance against President Donald J. Trump. But the words “First Amendment” or “free speech” cannot be found. Nor do those reports mention colleges and universities, where the most volatile speech battles often play out. 

Since Mr. Trump’s election, the A.C.L.U. budget has nearly tripled to more than $300 million as its corps of lawyers doubled. The same number of lawyers — four — specialize in free speech as a decade ago. 

Some A.C.L.U. lawyers and staff members argue that the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and the press — as well as freedom of religion, assembly and petitioning the government — is more often a tool of the powerful than the oppressed.

“First Amendment protections are disproportionately enjoyed by people of power and privilege,” said Dennis Parker, who directed the organization’s Racial Justice Program until he left in late 2018.

To which David Cole, the national legal director of the A.C.L.U., rejoined in an interview: “Everything that Black Lives Matter does is possible because of the First Amendment.” 

A tragedy also haunts the A.C.L.U.’s wrenching debates over free speech.

In August 2017, officials in Charlottesville, Va., rescinded a permit for far-right groups to rally downtown in support of a statue to the Confederate general Robert E. Lee. Officials instead relocated the demonstration to outside the city’s core...

The A.C.L.U. unfurled new guidelines that suggested lawyers should balance taking a free speech case representing right-wing groups whose “values are contrary to our values” against the potential such a case might give “offense to marginalized groups.”

A.C.L.U. leaders asserted that nothing substantive had changed. “We should recognize the cost to our allies but we are committed to represent those whose views we regard as repugnant,” Mr. Cole said in an interview with The New York Times.

But longtime free speech advocates like Floyd Abrams, perhaps the nation’s leading private First Amendment lawyer, disagreed. The new guidelines left him aghast.

“The last thing they should be thinking about in a case is which ideological side profits,” he said. “The A.C.L.U. that used to exist would have said exactly the opposite.”

The 2016 election blew like a hurricane over the A.C.L.U. Lawyers texted one another in disbelief; a deputy director broke into sobs as he told his 4-year-old that Mr. Trump had won; some staff members spoke of a nation irredeemably racist.

Mr. Romero, who is Latino and the organization’s first nonwhite executive director, arrived at the office just past dawn the next day. He crafted a letter to Mr. Trump and ran it as a full-page ad in The Times, attacking the president-elect on such issues as immigration and abortion rights. “If you do not reverse course and instead endeavor to make these campaign promises a reality,” he warned, “you will have to contend with the full firepower of the A.C.L.U.”

The A.C.L.U. became an embodiment of anti-Trump resistance. More than $1 million in donations sluiced into its coffers within 24 hours and tens of millions of dollars followed in 2017, making the organization better funded than ever before. Salaries reflected that — Mr. Romero now makes $650,000 and some lawyers in senior management $400,000. Its 2017 annual report came with “RESIST” superimposed on an image of the Statue of Liberty.

When Brett M. Kavanaugh was nominated for the Supreme Court, the A.C.L.U. surprised longtime supporters by entering the fray, broadcasting a commercial that strongly suggested the judge was guilty of sexual assault. When a book argued that the increase in the number of teenage girls identifying as transgender was a “craze” caused by social contagion, a transgender A.C.L.U. lawyer sent a tweet that startled traditional backers, who remembered its many fights against book censorship and banning: “Stopping the circulation of this book and these ideas is 100% a hill I will die on.”

The A.C.L.U. embraced dormitories set aside for Black and Latino students and argued that police forces were inherently white supremacist. “We need to defund the budgets,” Mr. Romero said last year. “It’s the only way we’re going to take power back.”...

The A.C.L.U. in 2018 poured $800,000 into what looked like a campaign ad for Stacey Abrams during her bid for governor of Georgia — a questionable move for a nonprofit organization that calls itself nonpartisan...

The $1 million anti-Kavanaugh ad campaign, which compared his denial of a sexual assault accusation to Bill Cosby’s incredulity at mounting allegations and Bill Clinton’s lie about an affair, left some longtime lawyers inside the A.C.L.U. uncomfortable. No organization aside from the U.S. government argues more cases before the Supreme Court, and A.C.L.U. amicus briefs have drawn praise from even the strictly conservative justice Clarence Thomas.

“I share the discomfort with the A.C.L.U.’s engaging in partisan-looking activity; it risks taking luster off our reputation as straight shooters,” noted Ben Wizner, the longtime head of the A.C.L.U.’s free speech, privacy and technology project.

The money that flooded into the A.C.L.U. after Mr. Trump’s election allowed Mr. Romero to flex the organization’s progressive muscles and greatly increase the size of its staff. Many of the new employees, however, were not nearly as supportive of the A.C.L.U.’s traditional civil liberties work. They worked inside their policy silos, focused on issues like immigration, transgender rights and racial justice.

Some fired off tweets like bottle rockets, causing headaches and confusion...

Those who control the official A.C.L.U. Twitter account can prove erratic, at the national and state levels. In 2018, the Trump administration proposed revamping Obama-era regulations on Title IX, which sets guidelines for investigations of sexual harassment and assault on campuses. It strengthened protections for the accused.

The A.C.L.U. tweet in response to the news was scathing: This “promotes an unfair process, inappropriately favoring the accused.”

Because the A.C.L.U. has championed the due process rights of the accused for 100 years, the tweet came as a surprise. It turned out a staff member at the A.C.L.U.’s women’s rights project had typed and clicked “send.”...

In another case, a police officer in Columbus, Ohio, fatally shot 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant as she tried to plunge a knife into a young woman. The A.C.L.U. of Ohio tweeted, “@ColumbusPolice murdered a 15 year old Black girl.

Here too was another example — in this case an A.C.L.U. affiliate — of seemingly overriding its traditional insistence on the presumption of innocence. Video shows that the officer made a split-second decision. And murder is determined in a court...

Several younger lawyers suggested a toll taken. Their generational cohort, they said, placed less value on free speech, making it uncomfortable for them to express views internally that diverged from progressive orthodoxy...

After Charlottesville, Mr. Cole wrote an essay in The New York Review of Books that defended the decision. “We protect the First Amendment not only because it is the lifeblood of democracy and an indispensable element of freedom, but because it is the guarantor of civil society itself,” he wrote.

That ignited anger among some 200 staff members, who signed a letter stating the essay was “oblivious” to the A.C.L.U.’s institutional racism. The A.C.L.U.’s upper ranks are diverse; 12 of the top 21 leaders are either Black, Latino or Asian. Fourteen are women...

Two decades ago, as free speech battles erupted on college campuses, a new civil liberties group took shape to vigorously advocate for First Amendment principles. Called the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, the organization was purposely nonideological and nonpartisan. A founder, Harvey Silverglate, had served on the board of the A.C.L.U. of Massachusetts and considers it an ally even as he sees its limits...

“FIRE does not have the same tensions,” Mr. Wizner said. “At the A.C.L.U., free speech is one of 12 or 15 different values.”...

In 2015, University of Missouri students protested racism and established an encampment in a campus quad. When a student journalist tried to take photos and talk to protesters, students and a communications professor physically blocked the reporter from doing so. The A.C.L.U. of Missouri applauded the “courageous” leadership of student activists and faculty members, and two national A.C.L.U. officials wrote columns about the protests. They did not mention First Amendment rights.

Four years later at the University of Connecticut, two white students walking home late at night loudly repeated a racial slur. In the ensuing uproar, the university police arrested and charged the students with ridicule on account of race.

The A.C.L.U. of Connecticut demanded that the university hire 10 Black faculty and staff members and require a freshman course on ending racism on campus. It made no mention of the arrests, other than to opine that the police force is “an inherently white supremacist institution.” 

Two days later, Mr. Cole issued a corrective: The students’ conduct “is not criminal,” he stated. “The First Amendment protects even offensive and hateful speech.”

Even the New York Civil Liberties Union, traditionally an independent-minded A.C.L.U. affiliate that has produced several national executive directors and stood at the forefront in defending free speech cases, did not want to talk about those issues. A spokeswoman for its executive director, Donna Lieberman, said, “We don’t feel we’ll have anything to add.”

Such reticence sounded like terra incognita to Norman Siegel, who led the New York group when Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani tried to block the Ku Klux Klan from rallying downtown in 1999.

The Klan was anathema to Mr. Siegel, but he fought like a cornered cat for its First Amendment rights. “Did I give anyone else a veto? No way,” he said. “I would have compromised my integrity.”

Mr. Siegel, who is white, drew support from the Black publisher of The Amsterdam News and from the Rev. Al Sharpton, a Black activist, who filed suit in support of the N.Y.C.L.U. Mr. Siegel recalled receiving a standing ovation from a Black audience. 

“A woman came up and said: ‘You did the right thing. If Giuliani could shut down the Klan, he would do it to us,’” he recalled." 

Links - 14th July 2026 (1 - Socialism)

Sandy Petersen 🪔 on X - "A group of city leaders organized and saved Leningrad when it was sieged by the Germans for 800 days. They rationed food & medicine, set up a submachinegun factory (which made better SMGs than the Red Army’s), kept morale high. They were true national heroes. After the war, Stalin had these harmless old men all executed lest anyone steal his spotlight. This is Communism’s legacy."

Konstantin Sonin on X - "88 years ago, on February 3, 1938, Stalin's henchmen executed 32 members of the Skatuve Latvian Theatrical Company in Moscow. All of them - 22 actors and actresses, five stage hands, two directors, one stage director, one general director and a secretary. Just because they were Latvians, just because this was culture."

Meme - "THE USSR MURDERED MY FAMILY
CHINA PUT MY WHOLE FAMILY IN CONCENTRATION CAMPS
Yerba Mate Girl with Mao, Antifa, Stalin and one more Communist badge: NICE TRY CIA!"

Meme - Swann Marcus @SwannMarcus89: "I'm sorry, but leftists are low-IQ mental defectives. I don't even know what else to say at this point. Your plan is to eliminate labor specialization. That's literally what you're arguing here. Are you motherfuckers brain damaged"
"But a shared labor socialist society would change the character of the necessary labor, because necessary labor would be shared; everyone would do some, so that nobody had to spend their whole life doing all of it. And it would be work that everyone has a reason to do, therefore, because it means they are not contributing their efforts to a society that just uses them. They're contributing their efforts to a society that has their freedom as its aim. You start that by sharing the necessary labor; that reduces the amount that anyone has to do to a relatively small amount. It does create real free time then to use as you like, including to go and develop and contribute your talents if you want. But that would then mean that work has been transformed from something merely necessary into something that is an expression of human solidarity."
Jacobin @jacobin: "Some leftists imagine a postcapitalist society will free everyone from the need to work. But the only realistic and fair way to manage production under socialism is to democratically distribute and share in the burdens of labor."

The Forsaken Road: Reassessing Living Standards Following the Cuban Revolution and the American Embargo - "We investigate the causal effects of the 1959 Cuban Revolution on income using a synthetic control approach. We employ a novel dataset with revised GDP estimates that do not rely on the regime's self-reported statistics. We also analyze GDP estimates net of aid coming from the Soviet Union. Our identification strategy allows us to separate the direct effects of the revolution from the diplomatic events that ensued. By overcoming concerns that Cuban GDP statistics are inflated either by the regime's direct manipulation or by Soviet aid, we identify a large decline in Cuban GDP per-capita relative to its counterfactual. The decline is larger when accounting for Soviet aid. The embargo only accounts for a minor share of Cuba's under-performance relative to the counterfactual. Our results hold after being subjected to multiple robustness checks and lead to the conclusion that the Revolution was the main driver of the inferior economic path Cuba has followed since 1959."
Clearly, the US embargo made Cuba carry out the 1959 San Juan Hill massacre

Creative Deduction on X - "In the 1970s, Labour minister Tony Benn came up with a bold socialist plan to rescue failing British factories: hand them over to the workers. The results were equal parts tragic and farcical. One factory on Merseyside began producing washing machines, car radiators, storage heaters - and, bizarrely, orange juice. Another tried to save the iconic Triumph motorcycle brand. A third launched a worker-run newspaper in Glasgow. All three experiments - Kirkby Manufacturing, Meriden Motorcycle Co-operative and the Scottish Daily News - received generous government support and quickly collapsed in spectacular fashion. The Scottish Daily News lasted just six months, Meriden limped on until 1983, and Kirkby became a national joke for its chaotic mismanagement and bizarre product lines. The entire episode is a perfect illustration of the gap between socialist theory and economic reality. Without the discipline of private ownership and market competition, workers’ cooperatives suffered from the same problems that plagued nationalised industries: weak incentives, political interference and an inability to allocate resources efficiently. The fundamental realities of economics remain undefeated."

𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉 on X - "Religious people will describe heaven as a classless, stateless, moneyless society with no private property, no suffering, and everyone’s needs met, then turn around and call communism evil. It will never stop being funny."
When communists admit communism runs on magical-religious logic, which is why it could never work in the real world

Octavian 🇪🇺 on X - "Marx struggled quite a bit with this. The basic assumption of communism is that there's a single, identical, collective interest of the global proletariat by virtue of their relation to capital (as propertyless individuals). The big question for communists then is why isn't the proletariat realising this collective international interest and why aren't they organising as such to pursue their interests as workers. In other words, why aren't they just thinking Rationally Enough to realise it? One problem for Marx was that the English and the Irish proletariat didn't unite or work together, mainly because the English proletariat sided with the empire and wasn't too keen to accept Irish nationalism and saw the Irish as competitors, and the Irish proletariat was on the other hand not too keen about being part of the British Empire. He outright says he expected them to work together, which then didn't happen. Look how he describes in a letter (first pic) to Engels that Irish needs to emancipate itself from the working class, so that the working class focuses on its struggle as the working class, but that he "cannot tell the working class" themselves. Basically, he, Marx, as the great intellectual, knows better than the working class themselves what's good for them, and his job now is to manipulate things in a way that is good for the working class themselves, even if they themselves are not aware of it. Basically he wants to be the catalyst for Hegel's Cunning of Reason. There's constantly all these factors that supposedly prevent the working class from thinking Rationally and doing what's Right (according to Marx). The classic "billionaires tell the English to hate the Irish to divide them" trope was actually thought of by Marx all the way in 1870. The history of communism is just a long, very long list of copes to try to explain why the proletariat is not thinking rationally and isn't coming to the "correct" conclusion of communist revolution. From Stalinist purges and de-kulakisation, to the Maoist cultural revolution, to Adorno and Horkheimer's Culture Industry, to Gramsci's "cultural hegemony"... it's all this. Over and over and over. They simply do not want to accept that there could be genuinely rational and legitimate reasons to not do communist revolutions and build "international solidarity"."

Handre on X - "The Soviet whaling fleet killed 180,000 whales between 1948 and 1973, delivering rotten carcasses that nobody wanted to eat. Soviet citizens had zero demand for whale meat. The ships hunted anyway, fulfilling quotas handed down from central planners who counted tons of dead whale as economic output. This was bureaucratic box-checking that nearly drove multiple whale species to extinction. Soviet whalers targeted endangered right whales and humpbacks specifically because they were larger, helping them hit tonnage targets faster. The meat rotted on deck during long voyages back to port, where officials dutifully recorded the numbers and sent reports to Moscow declaring another successful harvest. Central planners measured success in tons harvested, not consumer satisfaction or long-term sustainability. Factory managers got promoted for exceeding whale quotas, regardless of whether anyone actually wanted whale meat (they didn't). The feedback mechanism that normally connects production to human needs had been severed entirely. When bureaucrats replace market prices with administrative targets, you get mass slaughter with zero purpose. You still see this today every time politicians promise to "create jobs" in industries that lose money year after year. When government agencies measure their success by dollars spent rather than problems solved. When university administrators chase enrollment numbers instead of student outcomes. Remove the profit motive and price signals, and you get 180,000 dead whales rotting in the sun while commissars celebrate meeting their targets. You don't get rational planning. Socialism is fundamentally destructive to the environment and inevitably leads to ecological disasters."
Proof that capitalism destroys the planet

Alice Smith on X - "“Capitalists are obsessed with money,” says the socialists whose entire vision of life is built around seizing and redistributing the money made by others."

Rothmus 🏴 on X - "National socialism IS a form of socialism. In “The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius” (1941), Orwell wrote: “Internally, Germany has a good deal in common with a Socialist state. Ownership has never been abolished, there are still capitalists and workers, and - this is the important point, and the real reason why rich men all over the world tend to sympathize with Fascism - generally speaking the same people are capitalists and the same people workers as before the Nazi revolution. But at the same time the State, which is simply the Nazi Party, is in control of everything. It controls investment, raw materials, rates of interest, working hours, wages. The factory owner still owns his factory, but he is for practical purposes reduced to the status of a manager. Everyone is in effect a State employee, though the salaries vary very greatly.” In this system, the State exercises direct control over virtually every aspect of the economy, wages, investments, raw materials, and the means of production themselves. “Everyone is in effect a State employee.” It is not Marxist. It is not internationalist. But it is socialism. And this is precisely why authoritarian socialist regimes have so often flipped from one variant to the other with relative ease. Far from being opposites, they are two sides of the same coin. Rival authoritarian gangs competing for control over the same centralized power structure and the same conquered territory."
Left wingers need to dismiss George Orwell, a dedicated Socialist, as someone who was stupid and had no idea what he was talking about

Handre on X - "When People's Democratic Republic of Yemen declared itself a Marxist-Leninist state in 1967, it promised to transform the Arabian Peninsula's poorest region into a socialist paradise. By 1990, South Yemen had achieved something remarkable: it remained the poorest Arab state while managing to make its already dire economic situation substantially worse. You can trace the socialist experiment's failures through the numbers. Per capita GDP stagnated at roughly $500 throughout the 1980s while North Yemen's market-oriented economy grew. South Yemen's government employed 75% of the formal workforce by 1989, creating a massive bureaucracy that produced virtually nothing of value. The state controlled all major industries, from fishing to agriculture, and predictably drove productivity into the ground. The human cost tells the real story. Over 300,000 South Yemenis fled to North Yemen and Saudi Arabia during the socialist period, voting with their feet against central planning. Those who stayed endured chronic shortages of basic goods while party officials lived comfortably in Aden's government quarters. The state's agricultural collectives destroyed traditional farming methods that had sustained communities for centuries, replacing local knowledge with Soviet advisors who knew nothing about Arabian Peninsula agriculture. Compare this disaster to the Gulf states' experience during the same period. While Kuwait, UAE, and Saudi Arabia built modern economies through market mechanisms (however imperfect), South Yemen's planners allocated resources according to ideological fashion rather than economic reality. They built a steel plant in a country with no iron ore, subsidized unprofitable fishing cooperatives, and maintained a bloated military that consumed 20% of GDP. The 1990 reunification wasn't a merger of equals. North Yemen absorbed a failed state whose currency had become worthless and whose infrastructure had crumbled under central planning. Socialism doesn't eliminate scarcity. It ensures that scarce resources flow to politically connected bureaucrats instead of productive entrepreneurs."

Meme - Alice Smith @TheAliceSmith: "Communists in the U.S. *obese woman*
Communists in North Korea *starving woman*"
BlueBerry! @BlueLynxCat: "considering north korea is a democracy and not a communist, this image is more western propagranda."
Commies insist that China is communist, but North Korea is not communist. Also that the Nordic countries are socialist. Clearly, communism and socialism are defined by outcomes

Daniel Priestley on X - "John Lennon wrote a beautiful song about socialism. “Imagine no possessions” he told us. He also:
– helped write his band’s anti-tax anthem, Taxman
– incorporated his IP holdings
– moved to a lower-tax country
– fiercely protected his royalties
- drove two Rolls Royce’s and had multiple luxury homes.
– made sure even the royalty cheques for Imagine were kept safe for his estate so his family would remain wealthy in perpetuity.
If he believed it, he’d have lived it. The trouble with socialism is that even the people who love the idea won’t run the experiment on themselves. John Lennon writing Imagine while owning two Rolls Royce Phantoms and later having a law suit to protect his royalties tells you all you need to know about socialism in practice. It doesn’t work outside of the imagination."

Creative Deduction on X - "The most dangerous thing in politics is not malice. It's arrogance: the belief that a small group of experts can redesign society better than the countless individuals who actually live in it. Friedrich Hayek had a name for this mistake: The Fatal Conceit. In his final book, Friedrich Hayek delivered his most pointed critique of socialism and central planning. The book’s title refers to the fatal intellectual error at the heart of socialist thought: the arrogant belief that human reason is capable of deliberately designing and controlling the complex order of society. Hayek called this “constructivist rationalism” - the idea that we can scrap inherited institutions and traditions and rebuild society according to a rational blueprint. Hayek argued that this conceit is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how civilisation actually works. The extended order of the market - our system of prices, division of labour, property rights and moral traditions - was not invented or designed by anyone. It emerged through a long process of cultural evolution. No single mind, and certainly no central planning board, possesses the knowledge required to coordinate millions of individuals with constantly changing needs, preferences, and local circumstances. The price system, Hayek explained, is a remarkable mechanism that communicates dispersed knowledge far more effectively than any planner ever could. When socialists attempt to replace this spontaneous order with conscious direction, they do not merely cause inefficiency. They destroy the very foundations that make advanced civilisation possible. The Fatal Conceit goes beyond economics to defend the moral and cultural foundations of a free society. Hayek showed that the socialist project is not just impractical - it is based on a dangerous overestimation of human reason and ability, and an arrogant dismissal of evolved wisdom. The fatal conceit is still very much alive today in every attempt to centrally engineer society, the economy, or human behaviour. Hayek’s warning endures: civilisation is fragile, and those who believe they are wise enough to redesign it are usually the ones who end up destroying it."

Daniel Priestley on X - "Karl Marx wrote the communist manifesto 7 years before the creation of Limited Liability Companies. Before then, if you wanted to set up a business you have to be seriously rich because anything the business did could impact your entire net worth. If your business got sued, you could lose your entire estate. Only the very rich had businesses and they ran their businesses like every decision could be financially catastrophic. Then in 1855, the Limited Liabilities Companies Act was passed into British Law and the game changed. Suddenly anyone could set up a business, raise investment and trade. There was separation between ownership and control. This wasn’t lost on Karl Marx either. He wrote good things about this change. He was even a company director at one point. Essentially, it means that under capitalism you can be a socialist if you want to. A socialist can set up a company, give shares to all the workers, put workers on the board, pay executives the same as everyone else and if there’s any profit remaining they can freely donate it to the government. There is absolutely nothing stopping any socialist from living according to these values under a capitalist system. Nvidia is the most valuable company in the world and most of the employees own shares. Many are millionaires. In the UK, John Lewis and Waitrose are owned by their workers and are much loved successful businesses. Capitalism has no problem with workers owning the means of production. Under capitalism, anyone with an idea can set up a company, pitch to investors and launch it. Starting with nothing, they can be a millionaire (on paper) within a month. Socialists can lead by example; the fact that they almost never do this tells you a lot about socialists and human nature. The same is not true under socialism. It is not possible for a capitalist to live according to their values. Under socialism, if I believe in small government, self-sufficiency, low regulations I must leave the country - if it’s even possible to do so. It’s not enough for a socialist to live their values, they need everyone to do it too."

Ilektra Mercury 🌟 on X - "Read Marx. Read Engels. Read Lenin. Read Stalin. Please, I’m begging you, just read the theory."
Possum Reviews on X - "I don't care what communism is in theory because I know what it is in practice."
Charles Murray on X - "My daughter's friend in grad school, upon being asked by a member of her dissertation committee why she didn't include a Marxist perspective. "I grew up in the Soviet Union. I don't practice recreational Marxism.""

RedWave Press on X - "WOW: CNN’s statistician Harry Enten BREAKS DOWN the “stunning” rise of socialism in the Democratic Party. “Capitalism has absolutely fallen through the floor. Look at this: it’s now just 42% of Democrats who have a favorable view of capitalism. Socialism, on the other hand, has risen like a rocket…” “You mention New York, you mentioned Vermont, obviously, there’s the D.C. mayor. We’ve seen it in Pennsylvania as well. The Democratic Socialists seem to be doing considerably better than they used to be, and they have the chance to knock off, in fact, Democratic incumbents in Congress.” “And part of the reason for that, why we’re seeing these Democratic Socialists having such good chances, or downright outright winning nominations, is — take a look here. Net favorability among Dems, Democratic Socialists of America — look at that, a plus-17-point net favorability rating among Democrats.”"

Handre on X - "While Western intellectuals spent the 1970s and 80s gushing over Soviet "achievements," Ludwig von Mises had already written the empire's obituary decades earlier. In 1920, he published his devastating critique of socialist calculation, proving that rational economic planning becomes impossible without market prices. The academic establishment ignored him. The Soviets dismissed him as a capitalist propagandist. You cannot allocate resources efficiently when you have destroyed the price mechanism. When the state owns all means of production, it eliminates the very market signals that coordinate human action. No central planner, regardless of intelligence or computing power, can substitute for the decentralized knowledge that emerges from voluntary exchange. The proof arrived exactly as Mises predicted. By the 1980s, Soviet grocery stores sat empty while millions of bureaucrats shuffled paper in Moscow offices. Factory managers produced worthless goods because they responded to arbitrary quotas rather than consumer demand. The entire system collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions in 1991, stunning the same Western economists who had spent decades praising Soviet growth statistics. Meanwhile, Paul Samuelson was still teaching students in 1989 that the Soviet economy might overtake America's. The New York Times continued publishing editorials about the resilience of socialist planning. Mises got it right because he understood human action and the impossibility of calculation without private property. The establishment economists got it wrong because they confused mathematical models with economic reality. They treated human beings as equations instead of purposeful actors making choices under uncertainty."

Thread by @sfliberty on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "In 1960, newly independent African leaders had a choice: capitalism or socialism. Almost all of them picked socialism. A Ghanaian economist named George Ayittey spent forty years documenting what happened next. His findings are in print, and almost nobody outside Africa wants to hear them. 🧵
The reasoning in 1960 looked airtight. Colonialism had been run by Western capitalists. So capitalism was a tool of oppression. Socialism, its opposite, would be the path to liberation. Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana, Julius Nyerere in Tanzania, Sékou Touré in Guinea, Mengistu Haile Mariam in Ethiopia, and Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe all reached the same conclusion through the same logic. The logic was tidy. The results were catastrophic.
In Ghana, Nkrumah's government built 64 state enterprises before his overthrow in February 1966. Only three or four were profitable. By 1970, the Ghanaian state was setting prices on nearly 6,000 items across more than 700 product groups. In Tanzania, Julius Nyerere called the program ujamaa, a Swahili word for familyhood. By 1976, the state had relocated more than 11 million peasants into roughly 8,000 collective villages. Much of the relocation was done at gunpoint. Government bulldozers flattened old houses so families could not return. Tanzania exported 540,000 tons of maize in 1970. By 1974 it was importing 300,000 tons. Within a few years a country that had been able to feed itself was depending on Western grain shipments to survive. In Guinea, Sékou Touré made unauthorized trade a criminal offense. Smuggling could be punished by death. Out of a population of 5.5 million, about 2 million Guineans fled the country. The richest territory in French West Africa ended up importing food it once exported.
Ayittey then asked the question he considered most important. How do the rich get rich in the United States compared to Africa? In the United States, the wealthiest people are builders. Elon Musk built Tesla and SpaceX. Jeff Bezos built Amazon. Roughly two thirds of American billionaires founded the company that made them rich. In socialist-era Africa, the wealthiest people were heads of state and their ministers.
- Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo): estimates of stolen wealth ranged from 1 to 5 billion dollars.
- Sani Abacha of Nigeria: around 5 billion.
- Ibrahim Babangida of Nigeria: roughly 12 billion.
- Hosni Mubarak of Egypt: estimates ran as high as 40 billion.
- Muammar Gaddafi of Libya: estimates reached 200 billion.
Ayittey put it plainly. The combined net worth of every American president from George Washington through Barack Obama, all 43 of them, was about 2.7 billion dollars in 2010 figures. Sani Abacha alone stole more than that in five years in office. African socialism built a ruling class that created nothing and extracted everything. The argument Ayittey most wanted Africans to hear, and the one almost nobody quotes, is that socialism was never African. Pre-colonial Africa had open markets, long-distance trade, and private enterprise. Cloth-weaving, iron and gold smelting, regional commerce. Property was held by extended families and clans, not by the state. Nyerere and his peers took kinship-based property and relabeled it communism. They confused village solidarity with state ownership. They imported a nineteenth-century European industrial ideology and applied it to agricultural societies that already had functioning markets older than the modern European state. Shortages, political prisons, and a parasitic ruling class followed.
South Africa in 2026 is preparing the same policies. The Expropriation Act was signed in January 2025. The MK Party introduced a constitutional amendment bill this April to push land restitution claims back to 1652 and remove compensation from the property clause. Zimbabwe ran this experiment in 2000. Tobacco export earnings fell from 600 million dollars to 175 million by 2009. Maize production did not return to pre-seizure levels until 2017. Ayittey warned about this for thirty years. He died in January 2022. South Africa is doing it anyway."
Damn legacy of colonialism keeping Africa poor! White people need to send even more trillions over!

Monday, July 13, 2026

Links - 13th July 2026 (2 - Air Conditioning in Europe)

Melissa Chen on X - "How on earth did air-conditioning become so right-wing coded? Apparently man can conquer biological sex, but God forbid he conquers the heat wave"

CJ on X - "It's actually because socialist countries are too poor to afford the cost of an AC unit and its high electric usage. Only by supporting capitalism can the average person afford it."
NekoGaDaisuki on X - "You forgot some details : Is is also forbidden to protect the most at risk, such as our old ones, our kids, people that are disabled or with pathologies that put them in danger, etc.. Here in France, it is "bad" apparently to expect schools, regardless of the students age, as well as hospitals and EHPAD to have reversible heat pumps (pompes à chaleur), because bureaucracy and ecologist apparently consider it is needed to fill tons of papers just to "ask" for permission to provide air-conditionning. Oh, also, look at the irony : we are told the global warming is a reality, so lets enact laws that force new constructions to be more efficient during the winter (because global warming for shure) while these new buildings are littéral ovens during the summer. Yes that is a thing, it is called RT2012 construction standard in France. Earth becomes hotter, but lets make our lives hotter than ever just to be sure..."
Ex-Lefties on X - "The ideas of anthropogenic climate change and the solution to that 'problem': the sustainable economy are both communist coded. Communists believe that everything which opposes them is right-wing coded."

How Europe Became the World Champion of Heat Deaths - "a Frenchman relaxing in a spacious air-conditioned villa, drawing on nuclear power, still emits less carbon than a frugal German drawing from a coal-fired grid. Grid management beats self-flagellation... 'I’ve been scarred mentally and physically from sweating bedridden after a C-section in a German hospital without AC during a heat wave. And I was extremely fit and strong. I can’t even imagine what it’s like for the truly sick and disabled this entire week. It’s torture. And it’s crazy that the people supposedly in charge of the vulnerable are the ones most opposed to A/C for ideological reasons.'
The harder task for Europeans is the mental switch: to stop treating energy as something to atone for. Energy is the master resource, the thing that buys us nearly every other good. The whole of human history is the story of harnessing ever more energy to improve our lives and to hold the lethal forces of nature at bay. To despise energy is to bite the hand that feeds you. Which brings me to one last trivia question: which continent suffers the most cold-related deaths? It’s neither Europe nor North America, but Africa. Prosperity is what allows us to adapt—to heat and cold alike—and adaptation is what stands between us and an inhospitable nature."

Make Europe Cool Again - "when it comes to AC access Europeans are not only behind North America, they’re also behind the Asia Pacific, the Middle East, as well as Central and South America. Why does Europe have so little AC? We could start with the fact that Europe has historically enjoyed a mild climate. As such, Europe has no existing “AC culture” and adoption will slowly change as a result of climate change. However, this “natural” explanation of European AC-poverty becomes less convincing if we compare Europe to other cases with a historically mild climate, such as South Korea. As recently as 1993 South Korea had a European-equivalent AC adoption rate of 6%, a “luxury tax” on AC and misinformed cultural beliefs such as “fan death”. Today, it has one of the world’s highest AC adoption rates at 97%. A better explanation is that European policy has strongly disincentivized installed ACs through a variety of national and local regulations. These regulations have not happened by accident, but they come from an ideology that emphasizes energy degrowth as the only viable solution to climate change... France has passed a Climate and Resilience Law (2021) that requires a “Diagnostic de Performance Énergétique (DPE)”, which means all apartments are assessed by how many kWh/m²/year they consume. Based on this, they receive an energy performance certificate that rates homes from A (best) to G (worst). This energy rating comes with severe consequences... Despite having the highest exposure, most heat deaths are not from outdoor workers. A typical heatwave victim in Europe is an older adult with pre-existing health issues, living alone in suboptimal housing... during the COVID-19 pandemic we shut down pretty much all economic life largely to protect the elderly. In comparison, allowing people to own an AC seems like a very small price to pay to protect the elderly... In Europe indoor heating consumes more energy and contributes more to climate change than AC. Yet, Europeans (rightly) don’t treat indoor heating as a luxurious indulgence that should require a strict permit and is by default not included in new buildings, unless you can prove carpets and ski jackets are not helping enough and that you have a special medical need for warmth. Similarly, AC is increasingly essential for health and well-being. If you want to ban indoor ski slopes in the desert, fine, but we can’t deny people AC when thousands die during heatwaves... As Europeans increasingly suffer from heat in their homes, more and more will eventually buy ACs, and if they can’t have installed ACs, they will buy mobile ACs... This is part of the irony. De facto banning installed ACs forces more and more people to choose less energy efficient alternatives. To maximize energy efficiency you should go in the opposite direction and promote scale through district cooling where chilled water from central plants is provided to multiple buildings... an individual living in France consuming 116’000 kwH (50% more energy than the average American) still has lower carbon emissions than an individual living the 2000 watt society lifestyle (17’520 kWH per year) in Germany... If you are concerned about the impacts of climate change, you should care about heatwave deaths. According to the European Environment Agency 94% of all fatalities from climate-related disasters in Europe from 1980 to 2023 have been due to heatwaves. However, as the old saying goes: There are no natural disasters, only natural hazards. We know how to prevent many if not most of these deaths. AC will not solve everything on its own, but it is a key tool for climate adaptation, especially during heatwaves."
Clearly, the solution is to ban mobile air conditioners

Greg Lukianoff on X - "Dear Europe (yes, even you, Glasgow!): a couple of points. Your aversion to air conditioning is moralistic, not scientific. Heating homes across Europe takes VASTLY more energy than cooling them. Not a little more. Orders of magnitude more. Depending on how you count it, home heating can swallow something like a hundred times the energy used for cooling. Globally, the same basic point holds: heating is the much bigger energy burden. Cooling matters, and it will matter more as the planet warms. But pretending AC is the great sin while everyone blasts heat all winter is just silly. I’ve watched the anti-AC theater in my mother’s home country, the UK, and it has all the earmarks of a devotional self-flagellation ritual: less environmental science than a belief in the nobility of suffering. Also: heat pumps exist. They cool your home in the summer and heat it in the winter, using far less energy than traditional heating."
Iain Murray on X - "One of the many ironies is that the government is insisting on heat pumps being installed, but also insisting that the cooling function is disabled."

Air conditioning must be REMOVED from homes say councils in Net Zero crackdown despite 40C heat - "Britons have been ordered to remove air conditioning from their homes - despite the country baking in up to 40C heat this week - under a fresh Net Zero crackdown. Planning officials at councils have told residents to take down their cooling units over concerns about carbon dioxide emissions. They say AC, despite the heat, should serve only as a "last resort". The crackdown comes from building regulations which demand "active cooling" is used only after all "passive cooling" methods, like opening windows or running fans, have been exhausted. The Tories have accused the Government of leaving Britain "in the dark ages" through Net Zero policies which prevent citizens from accessing "modern conveniences that are completely normal in other countries". Standard guidance says planning consent is not needed for air conditioning in most circumstances. But permission becomes mandatory in specific scenarios, including properties in conservation areas - with separate regulations applying to flats, leasehold properties, and shared buildings. This creates situations where units are fitted believing they comply with rules, only for council enforcement teams to turn up and demand their removal. One Londoner received orders to "permanently remove" two cooling units from the rear of their property, The Telegraph revealed. Camden Council's planning inspectors determined there was "no justification" for the equipment, ruling it breached the authority's "cooling hierarchy" policy. During an appeal, the homeowner was advised to open windows and balcony doors in their first-floor flat to achieve ventilation "by natural means". When the resident raised security concerns in the crime-addled capital, inspectors dismissed these, arguing the risk was not "as great as those associated with ground floor windows" and suggesting windows could remain closed overnight. Camden inspectors specifically noted "the absence of ceiling fans" in the property, though this was never a stated requirement. Even after determining the units were "neither intrusive nor harmful" to the neighbourhood's character, officials still demanded they were scrapped. The homeowner ultimately won on appeal to the Planning Inspectorate by proving their property already featured environmental improvements like solar panels. Londoners are at greater risk of enforcement action. The capital's borough councils have incorporated rules derived from Sir Sadiq Khan's "London Plan" into their local planning frameworks. The Mayor's 2021 strategy notes that "new development in London should also be designed to avoid the need for energy intensive air conditioning systems as much as possible". Camden's local plan pledges to actively "discourage the use of air conditioning" over concerns it raises "demand for energy" and warms "the local micro-climate". Islington Council also restricts cooling systems on environmental grounds, saying they "must only be considered as a last resort". These local policies go above and beyond national building regulations, which merely prioritise "passive cooling" measures like window shading before AC. Shadow Energy Secretary Claire Coutinho said: "It is totally bonkers for council bureaucrats to block people from installing air conditioning because it uses too much energy. "This is exactly why we must repeal the mad building regulations that force councils to care more about box-ticking and process than letting people keep their homes cool in the summer. "We have to get out of this miserabilist Net Zero mindset which says that Britain alone has to stay stuck in the dark ages and can't enjoy the modern conveniences that are completely normal in other countries." Estimates indicate roughly three per cent of British homes have air conditioning, compared with 90 per cent in America. The Climate Change Committee has acknowledged the need for cooling systems in care homes, schools and hospitals as temperatures increase, appearing to contradict official Government policy. Labour failed to amend building regulations last week, saying they reflected "the Government's commitment to improving energy efficiency". A Government spokesman said: "Air conditioning units are not banned. They can be installed in both existing and new homes and we expect councils to take a common-sense approach to the rules around this, which are there to manage the interests of communities and the environment.” A Camden Council spokesman said: “Residents seeking planning permission need to demonstrate that alternative, more climate-friendly measures are not suitable, and that units will not create noise or other harmful impacts on neighbours. “Enforcement action in these cases is rare and used only as a last resort where this guidance has not been followed.” Meanwhile, a spokesman for the London Mayor said the policies kept “keep homes cooler without relying on energy-intensive solutions”. They added: "Local planning decisions are the responsibility of the boroughs, who have their own policies in place”."
The cruelty is the point

Ben Habib on X - "They cannot fix the roads. They cannot police the streets. They cannot stop the boats. But they can tell you to rip air conditioning out of your own home during the summer because it offends the net zero cult."
Human rights mean they cannot police the street or stop the boats. Human rights also mean they can force you to die of heatstroke

The Sales Bull 🎯 Follow if you sell B2C or B2B on X - "The British state gets away with so much because if you describe the the truth people think you’re mad"
See also "The Democrats' Insanity Defense"

Air conditioning: saving lives and accelerating net-zero - "Britain is getting hotter, but is poorly prepared for the heat. Only 5% of British households have air conditioning, compared to 37% of people worldwide. Half of all UK homes overheat during the summer months. Heat-related death rates in the UK in 2022 were over 10 times those in Sweden, and twice that of the (climatically-similar) Netherlands. London's rate of heat related deaths exceeded any other northern European capital city, and were similar to those in Rome. High temperatures are not only uncomfortable; they cost lives. In 2022, circa 3000 people in Britain died from heatwaves. Studies show air conditioning can cut heat related deaths by 75%. Heat related illness disproportionately affects the elderly and those with disabilities. High temperatures make workers less productive and students perform worse in exams during heatwaves. Despite these costs, government heat pump upgrade schemes exclude air-to-air devices whilst building regulations decree that air conditioning is only used when other measures are insufficient. This effectively bans air conditioning in new build homes. Similar restrictions are baked into London’s planning policies. Our analysis shows that UK electricity demand peaks in the winter months, and will continue to do so as heating is electrified. Adding air conditioning demand makes use of this spare grid capacity in summer. Air conditioning can help balance the grid and support the green transition, since its demand profile is well aligned with solar generation. Adoption is likely to increase solar energy demand and help speed up clean power. It may also help speed up clean heating adoption by giving homeowners a reason to upgrade. The impact of the modern British summer – on our health, welfare and productivity – is not inevitable, but the result of policy choices. This Government has the opportunity to make Britain a greener, healthier, and cooler place to work and thrive."

Polymarket on X - "JUST IN: German public broadcaster begins “anti-AC campaign” warning of the dangers of air conditioning, as record heat wave hits the region."

Meme - NIFFTYCAT: "Someone needs to step in"
"HVAC HERO FILMS PRESENTS: CITIZEN VIGILANTE 2: CHILL ARMADA *Armie Hammer with air conditioning unit*"

Auron MacIntyre on X - "The fact that the entirety of Europe is willing to sacrifice a notable amount of their population to a Covid-esque purity spiral is a pretty good indication that no lessons were or will be learned"
Covid and air conditioning hysterias are not about saving lives but pushing left wing ideology

Cruadin on X - "It's becoming increasingly apparent that most European electrical grids can't support a 21st Century civilization, complete with modern wonders like ... (*checks notes*) indoor climate control. Instead of simply conceding their glaring governmental malfeasance they've cobbled together a religious belief system to explain why their restive populations must continue to suffer."

Ruxandra Teslo 🧬 on X - "Here, Patrick explains with common sense & compelling examples that Europe has a degrowth/anti air-con mentality and is told that "these are just anecdotes". This is a type of argument often employed by so-called "moderates" that has done much damage in the past decades. Basically, for every talking point, you have a bunch of degrowth/extreme left crazy people that are fairly well-embedded in institutions and "respectable". The polar opposite right-wing/libertarian position is almost never represented in respectable institutions. Then, you have the moderates. They often distinguish themselves by insisting on "statistics" and hard facts and refusing to accept common sense arguments and "what is before their eyes". The "just anecdotes" dismissal treats empirical observations as epistemically worthless unless accompanied by a regression table. But quantitative evidence itself is abundant for things that powerful intellectual institutions want to measure. It is scarce for things they would prefer not to examine too closely. The intellectual landscape ends up looking roughly like this:
1) On one side, there is a well-funded, institutionally embedded, socially respectable body of opinion that is broadly degrowth, skeptical of markets, skeptical of air conditioning etc. These views appear in EU policy documents, in academic journals, in mainstream journalism and in NGO reports. They might not be held by most academics broadly construed (e.g. engineering profs), but they are held by the small minority that studies these topics and that is enough.
2) On the other side, the full-throated pro-growth, pro-energy and pro-development counterargument exists but is largely confined to think tanks that are routinely described as "industry-funded" or "right-wing," which in respectable discourse functions as a full rebuttal. In the middle sit the moderates, who pride themselves on not taking sides, on demanding evidence, on resisting "populist" or "anecdotal" reasoning. This moderate position is not symmetric in its effects and moderates do not apply equal skepticism to both sides. Overall, the lack of actually balanced perspectives leads to the polarization of those who are more right leaning and suspect something is amiss. But because they lack any institutional home, they end up becoming cranky and conspiratorial. End result: broad erosion of public dicourse. Also if you wonder why AC has become a right wing shaped topic, it's also because of the craziness of the discourse, caused by the above."
Richard Hanania on X - "The best reason to be pessimistic among Europe is that degrowthers actually have power. America has crazy people. But they actually try to argue that wokeness or socialism or MAGA will make people wealthier. In Europe, you can just be pro-poverty. That's insane."
Left wingers always dismiss examples that challenge their worldview as "anecdotes", and love ones that support it as "proof". You can see that with climate change in general too

Kangmin Lee | 이강민 on X - "Japan, USA, and South Korea dominate the world when it comes to air conditioning. Air conditioning is right-wing because civilization is right-wing"
Mr. Ovis🐑💼(Office Worker Sheeptuber) on X - "The reason why the EU is having this whole debate and calling AC right-wing is because the arguments in favor of AC are pro-freedom and pro-human. The arguments against are pro-collective and anti-human. For instance, an American says "Well, you should just be able to go get an AC if you want one, you'll be comfortable" The rebuttal to this from the EU is a grand sweeping "Well, we shouldn't need AC at all, we need to terraform the entire planet by paying all of our money in taxes!""

France blames US for deadly heatwave - "Unlike the US, where air conditioning is common, in France only one in four households has air conditioning. Historically, the French have been sceptical about air conditioning: an Ipsos survey published earlier this month found that 78 per cent of French people believe that it’s bad for the environment and one in six respondents said they would rather suffer for the sake of the planet."
Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸 on X - ""Dear American social media 'influencers': for days, you have been making fun of Paris because the city does not have A/C in every room..." -Audrey Pulvar, the city's deputy mayor Yeah, we have because your garbage ideas are killing people and they need help."
Weird how they don't blame China

Neighbours turn on each other in Portofino air-con crackdown | Italy | The Guardian - "Portofino has been part of a regional national park since 1935, and up until a few years ago, the installation of AC units on its pastel-coloured buildings was entirely banned. As summers became hotter, the rules were loosened to allow use of the appliances, so long as the homeowner asked permission and ensured that the units were discreetly placed and did not sully Portofino’s natural beauty. Police have been scouring the narrow streets for unauthorised units poking out over the terraces of the village’s homes. There were reports of 22 illegally installed units spotted on various rooftops and terraces between January and May, and a further 15 since June as temperatures soared... As the intrigue heated up along with the temperature, Corriere della Sera reported a “vendetta” among residents involving tit-for-tat denunciations between neighbours. Some culprits have attempted to hide their AC unit or disguise the appliance by painting it to blend in with the local surroundings. In some cases, people have reportedly accepted an invitation into the home of a neighbour, only to secretly take a photo of a unit that they have then passed on to police."

Housebuilder behind ‘flat-pack’ net zero homes on brink of collapse - "Craig White, its chief executive, told industry publication Inside Housing last year that it had “the proven model to tackle the UK’s housing crisis at low cost and speed”... The business built its pipeline around government-backed affordable housing schemes, but has been caught in a wider slowdown in delivery. The Government is falling short of its ambition to build 1.5 million homes by 2029. To reach its target, it needs to build 300,000 homes per year, but just more than 150,000 a year will be built between now and March 2028, down from 189,000 last year, according to Savills. “The planning system is broken, delays in getting planning permission have got worse and there’s a massive skills shortage in the UK,” said Mr Pear."
Time for more environmental regulations to cripple other builders so they can compete!

Thread by @ZubyMusic on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "The fact that being 'anti-AC' is an actual political position shows you just how stupid large swathes of humanity are. It's essentially a pro-death position. It's as stupid as being against heating in the winter. Choosing to not personally use air conditioning is one thing... But actively opposing it lol? I do believe people used to be more sensible overall."

Meme - max tampers @maxtempers: "In Soviet Britain, there is a "cooling hierarchy" with five tiers that you must demonstrate to your council you have exhausted before you are allowed to install air conditioning; otherwise, it's taken down."
"The cooling hierarchy. 8.109. The cooling hierarchy, set out in the London Plan 2021, provides measures that should be used to manage heat risk in developments. The cooling hierarchy is as follows:
1. reduce the amount of heat entering a building through orientation, shading, high albedo materials, fenestration, insulation and the provision of green infrastructure;
2. minimise internal heat generation through energy efficient design;
3. manage the heat within the building through exposed internal thermal mass and high ceilings;
4. provide passive ventilation;
5. provide mechanical ventilation; and
6. provide active cooling systems."

Meme - Sir Muppet of Smegg @Galac...: "air conditioning still produces heat."
Simon Maechling @simon...: "Yes. in exchange for producing cold."
Sir Muppet of Smegg @Galac...: "feedback loop much ?"
IWaTaRA: "Not really, the interior electronics would generate significantly less heat than the cold air blasting inside. And the heat ejected outside disipates will away from your thermostat."
Sir Muppet of Smegg @Galac...: "hahahahah dude doesn't understand concept of cumulative. typical karen council."
IWaTaRA @pepperjackmack: "If only they're was some sort of cooling period either via a natural low energy state that occurs every day, or some machine that transfers heat away"
Sir Muppet of Smegg @Galac...: "hahahahah dude thinks heat floats off into space at night... clearly never been to lindos in rhodes."
Alex Godofsky on X - "Europeans literally believe that air conditioning doesn't work. their sincerely held belief is that air conditioning is actually a fraud that just creates endlessly more need for air conditioning to deal with the heat it moves outside your house, rendering net cooling impossible."

DaiWW on X - "As a Chinese person, I certainly don't want to see Europeans all installing air conditioners. If all 500+ million people across Europe ran AC and lived the way folks do in China, it would spell real trouble for our planet. Moreover, just as Europeans don't want to see modernization in China's Tibet and Xinjiang, claiming it destroys the culture of local ethnic minorities, we Chinese feel the same way — we don't like seeing modern technologies, such as AC, destroy Europe's primitive way of life. It's an assault on Europe's indigenous culture. We Chinese must speak up for the preservation of European traditions, and never allow modern technology to wipe out Europe's backward but beautiful cultures."

Lance Gooden on X - "Europe wants to blame the United States for its deadly heat wave.
1. Europe refuses AC to "save Earth"
2. The Paris Climate Agreement allows China to keep INCREASING greenhouse gas emissions.
Europe only has themselves to blame."

Pudge (Don’t Trust: Ver-i-fy!) on X - "Hey Europoors. I just got AC installed. In my garage. For my dogs. And I don’t even live in the South. My dogs live better than you do. I care more about my dogs than your govt cares about you." Meme - *Gillette The Best Men Can Be*
Interested White Man: *EUROPOORS*
White Woman walking by: *AIR CONDITIONING*
*Greta Thunberg stopping him*

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