George H

66 posts

George H

George H

@probablist

Lover of cheese, tikis and nice pencils. Partial to broad beans. Broader the better. Dedicated Pastafarian.

Reigate UK 参加日 Temmuz 2012
73 フォロー中6 フォロワー
George H
George H@probablist·
@ClarksonsFarm1 Yes, but within reason. I don't really understand why in Germany and France you can buy direct from the farmers at roughly equivalent prices to supermarkets, but in the UK it is substantially higher.
English
0
0
0
8
ClarksonsFarm
ClarksonsFarm@ClarksonsFarm1·
Would you support local farms by paying more for higher-welfare and better quality produce?
ClarksonsFarm tweet media
English
1.1K
583
6.1K
74.3K
Chris.
Chris.@chrs1927·
@scepticalists @afneil No it didn't. That is just being silly. She caused 3 million unemployed in a year. Absolute numpty decision.
Aberdare, Wales 🇬🇧 English
12
0
2
103.4K
Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
I appreciate blaming Thatcher is a common default position even 35 years after she left government. But suppose some UK coal mines had survived into the early 21st century. Do you really think they’d then have survived Ed Miliband’s near zero zealotry?
Lisa Mckenzie@redrumlisa

@afneil The mining industry was closed because the Thatcher Government said tax payers shouldn't subsidise it. Consequences millions unemployed, great swathes of the Country lay in ruins & the eventual crash of our industrial economy.

English
250
591
5.3K
189.7K
George H
George H@probablist·
@Miss_Snuffy It's a temporary exhibition of art displayed on removable vinyl - you may think that it's neither art nor appropriate, but it's not going to be visible for long, so deep breath please.
English
0
0
0
64
George H
George H@probablist·
@Miss_Snuffy What a strange comment - not an educator but works in education? Still, on the positive, now seeing Sideshow Bob in a different, positive light.
English
0
0
0
29
Katharine Birbalsingh
Katharine Birbalsingh@Miss_Snuffy·
Oooh so original. 😂 ‘Not an educator’ Amazing how we get such brilliant results, isn’t it? Must be my Slideshow Bob wizardry… 🙄
Polynesian TERF Queen 👑@AshKetc42356416

@Miss_Snuffy You are a disciplinarian. Not an educator. And frankly very, very hard on the eyes. Lookin like Sideshow Bob with that haircut

English
36
15
324
14.6K
Democratic Kampuchea!
Democratic Kampuchea!@MindVsMyth·
Womanhood is a social construct. It depends on adulthood, which is also socially constructed. This doesn’t mean adulthood is meaningless or doesn’t exist, just that it’s shaped by social, economic and political structures and institutions. The very concept of an “adult female human” depends on historical conditions. It’s not historically fixed and eternal. Like all things in time and space, it changes. Womanhood doesn’t depend solely on anatomy, but on labor, property relations, ideology and more.
English
192
0
28
33.1K
George H
George H@probablist·
@jk_rowling So I seem to adore talentless writing? Okay, good to know. I'll ask for the latest talentless writers when I'm next in Waterstones.
English
0
0
0
12
J.K. Rowling
J.K. Rowling@jk_rowling·
Not just fat. FAT.
J.K. Rowling tweet media
English
7.1K
2.5K
60.8K
3.6M
Stuart
Stuart@SiN1758·
@jk_rowling Luckily, David Tennant speaks for every decent person in the UK. You, on the other hand....
English
473
89
4.2K
350.7K
James Blunt
James Blunt@JamesBlunt·
Wanna ruin my life? I'm legally changing my name if "Back to Bedlam" 20th Anniversary Edition reaches No.1. Comment your name suggestions below, and the most-liked comment wins. #jameswho
English
4.4K
2K
22.1K
3.3M
George H
George H@probablist·
@OliLondonTV Considering we will be paying for her expensive incarceration, it seems we're all being punished. There should be punishment, but this seems draconian to me.
English
0
0
0
1
Oli London
Oli London@OliLondonTV·
This eco activist has been sentenced to 2 years in prison for throwing soup over a $90 million Van Gogh painting. What’s your reaction to the sentence?
Oli London tweet media
English
74K
8.3K
168.5K
12.1M
𝐉𝐞𝐬𝐬 𝒅𝒊𝒅 𝒊𝒕 𝐱
@Glinner Gutless man can't even tweet Godley directly. He knows how badly he's treated her and he can't resist trying to make himself look better at her expense, even now. Janey is a beacon of love and support. Highly quotable as a trans ally. Don't expect to stop hearing about her.
English
41
28
1.7K
65.5K
George H
George H@probablist·
@DreamLeaf5 A lot of the Middle East are pasty enough to be considered white - Syrians and Lebanese for example. Not sure I want to get worked up over the colour of a fictional character though.
English
0
0
0
26
DreamLeaf 🌱🌻 🍉
DreamLeaf 🌱🌻 🍉@DreamLeaf5·
They actually think a guy who lived in the Middle East 2000 years ago was white? 😭
DreamLeaf 🌱🌻 🍉 tweet mediaDreamLeaf 🌱🌻 🍉 tweet media
English
3.3K
3.7K
87.5K
6.8M
George H
George H@probablist·
@PamAyres I'm not here to defend DHL or any courier company, but all items should be packaged to survive a drop-test: a drop from standing. Those items were not packaged well, so blaming the couriers seems a bit harsh.
English
0
0
0
86
Pam Ayres MBE
Pam Ayres MBE@PamAyres·
I am so upset. I ordered a bird box for nuthatches and a dormouse nestbox for my wildlife area from #CJWildlife with a gift voucher from my lovely publisher. #DHL have just delivered the heavy box, slung it over our gates and everything is smashed to pieces. You just despair.
Pam Ayres MBE tweet mediaPam Ayres MBE tweet media
English
646
760
4.7K
584.6K
George H
George H@probablist·
@RogerHallamCS21 The idea that you can disrupt so many people's lives and think there is no consequence is absurd. And now your narcissistic rant is to scream "injustice!" Thankfully you'll now have time to reflect and hopefully grow up a bit.
English
0
0
0
3
Roger Hallam
Roger Hallam@RogerHallamCS21·
I've just been sentenced to 5 years in prison. The longest ever for nonviolent action. The 'crime'? Giving a talk on civil disobedience as an effective, evidence-based method for stopping the elite from putting enough carbon in the atmosphere to send us to extinction. I have given hundreds of similar speeches encouraging nonviolent action and have never been arrested for it. This time I was an advisor to the M25 motorway disruption, recommending the action to go ahead to wake up the British public to societal collapse. I was not part of the planning or action itself. In the trial, I swore before God to tell the truth. The truth is the science. The science is clear. We're heading for billions of deaths and ecological collapse. To prove this, I presented the jury with a 250-page dossier of leading scientists' research as evidence in my defence. This was denied by the judge as an invalid - climate science is now illegal in the British courtroom. I then began to speak about the apocalyptic conditions humanity faces - floods, wildfires, mass heat deaths - and was silenced by the judge. He sent out the jury and threatened to arrest me if I didn't stop. Instead, I stayed in the dock and argued that until I was given the right to complete my defence – I would not move. Even the prosecution tried to argue in my defence and the judge let me continue. When the jury had shuffled in again, I spoke about the legal concept of “equality of arms” – that as the prosecution had had a right to lay facts over a whole week, I also wanted an equal opportunity. I spoke of various cases where juries had acquitted defendants when they had heard the facts, such as the Extinction Rebellion cracking of Shell's windows in 2018 as a reasonable action against criminal destruction. The Dutch Supreme Court has even said that all governments have a legal obligation to prevent the emission of greenhouse gases. Whilst the prosecution accepted that emissions pose an existential threat, for the first time in British history no less, they still tried to convict us for public nuisance rather than praise us for trying to stop those emissions. Given the objectivity of existential threat, there were overwhelming grounds to be involved in a plan to cause some disruption to the M25. In the British law on public nuisance, there is a ‘reasonable excuse’ clause. Science says there is an overwhelming threat to my life, my children, you and your children. To argue there is not a reasonable excuse directly defies the wish of this legislation. Things are happening that cause harm – people are engaged in physical acts to stop that harm – it doesn’t matter whether it’s a protest or not. As I began to offer up some case law, the judge kept intervening telling me I was “wasting my time” and ordering the jury to disregard me. To illustrate that I was not talking about my motivations but speaking about real necessity, I referred to a famous case over a decision to operate on conjoined twins with the likelihood that one would die. In this dilemma, I quoted the 19th Century principle that the action was necessary if the threat faced was inevitable and irrevocable, that no more should be done than essential, and that it must be proportionate. I argued that there was a “duress of circumstances” including the objective danger I’ve experienced as a farmer unable to grow food, and the global significance of “food insecurity” – a euphemism for famine and starvation. There has never been a moment in history where ‘necessity’ has been more supported by objective facts – more than 10,000 scientific and peer-reviewed papers, indicating an outcome of mass starvation and death from man-made climate collapse. In response, Judge Hehir called for an early lunch and dismissed the jury. He turned to me and warned that I wasn't a lawyer and that “this is not the Roger Hallam show”. He then gave me just 15 more minutes to put forward my “beliefs” - a totally fucking incoherent statement. This isn’t belief - it’s the objective threat of destruction of property and livelihoods of billions of people and the secondary effects of famine i.e. war, rape, and torture. I outlined four characteristics of the effects of emitting greenhouse gases (GHGs) into the atmosphere, describing them as easy to understand, but unique to human experience and so horrific that they are impossible to assimilate. 1. They have universal effects – what’s emitted in India affects the USA, a melting Arctic affects Argentina and so on. 2. The ultimate consequence of GHGs in the atmosphere is that you destroy the basis of life – some experts say for 100,000 years, others 50 million, and some say the Earth will simply become like Venus. In other words, for the first time in human history, a group of people, namely a 1% of wealthy elites, are responsible for destroying everything forever. 3. The Earth has reached a 1.5˚C rise in temperature already and at some point in the next decade we’ll have triggered geological tipping points – regardless of any action, we’ll have started unstoppable change. In other words, we don’t have time to not pull that person from in front of the lorry, if we don’t act now it will be too late. Some scientists contend it’s already too late – the UN has said we have two years in which to make radical changes – so we’re not just trying to stop people from doing bad things, but to prevent them from doing bad things which will create badness forever. 4. There is not an insubstantial possibility of entire human extinction as a result of pumping GHGs into the atmosphere, we’re talking about a crime fundamentally different from any other in history. This, I said, is why I want to be able to show the jury expert evidence. The judge, showing obvious disinterest, told me to wrap up in a few minutes. Returning to the idea of ‘necessity’, I gave more examples. We agree that if a man pulls a dagger out in a pub and someone else pushes him and disarms him then there would be no question of prosecution. In Ireland, a cyclist who stopped and intervened when an immigrant was being attacked became a national hero. But what if someone plants a bomb under the table in a pub, set to explode in 30 minutes? If you push him over, grab the bomb and take it out to the police, you wouldn’t be prosecuted, even though the harm you’re trying to prevent is in the future. And what about those people pulling down houses in the Great Fire Of London? Their action was to try and prevent harm in other parts of London if the fire had spread. So just because something causes damage over a long time or space is irrelevant – it comes down to causality. The fact that emissions will cause damage across the planet for millions of years is not a reason to stop it from coming into court. In fact, the massive extent of the time and space is the very reason it should be in every court. At this point, the judge sent the jury home, and again scoffed at me for defending myself as an “amateur lawyer” getting “amateur results”. The next day reminded the courtroom that I was under oath to tell the whole truth and would continue with my evidence. The judge immediately ordered the jury out, and when I continued to declare I was under an obligation to continue, the public gallery was cleared and I was warned he would be arrested if he didn’t return to his seat. Then three police officers arrived. I said I would not resist, but also would not assist in my own arrest. As they forcibly dragged me towards the prisoner dock I announced to the observing journalists that this was “Democracy in Action” - Nonviolent resistance to a grossly unjust system. This obscene miscarriage of justice happened to me five times throughout the trial. What a fucking indignity. I received no good reason why I could not tell the jury what is blindingly obvious - that the elite putting carbon in the atmosphere will kill billions. Without the whole truth, it is not a fair trial. If thousands of people were going to die further up that motorway, we would have a reasonable excuse to disrupt it. Except it's not further up the motorway - it's everyone, all around us. Humanity, gone forever. The judge began the next morning by bizarrely reading out my Twitter feed, which alerted my followers to the fact I wasn’t allowed to give my whole defence and called for support for a presence outside the court. But then he moved on to gleefully recounting some of the various trolls – why this was any part of a serious trial, no one could fathom. I was ordered to take them down by lunchtime or I’d be in contempt of court. This is a British judge in 2024. Meanwhile, the UN special rapporteur for Environmental Defenders, Michel Forst sat in the gallery, watching. He had previously put out a statement on the injustice of our treatment. It states that the UK could be breaking international law on the rights of environmental protesters. A repressed, UN phrase for trying to stop the carbon elite from killing us all. I stood up and told the jury that after they’d been ejected yesterday, I had been arrested and removed, but that they had a right to hear my evidence. Once again, the judge ordered the jury and forcibly removed me. The UN guy watched as I was dragged away. I was sent to prison and couldn’t hear the rest of the day’s trial. Afterwards, the judge falsely claimed that I was behind the jury protection campaign, Defend Our Juries, and had ‘conned’ vulnerable people into coming to the court. No evidence was given. Fair, right? The next day I again explained that blocking motorways has direct effects on society e.g. the farmers’ protests quickly changed EU policy, and road protests held fuel prices down. The judge dismissed this by asking whether the action had any effect on global temperatures and told me to sit down. I stayed standing and the judge just left the courtroom. What the fuck? I even looked to the prosecution for help again against the judge’s incoherent madness. When he came back, he started quoting his favourite movie, Goodfellas, and asked me “What are you still doing here?”. Then he ordered me arrested and sent to prison, again. Whilst I was jailed, the judge gave my friends a pathetic 15 minutes each to defend themselves. When they also spoke of the necessity for action against mass death from carbon emissions, the judge ordered them all to be arrested. After this gagging, people began to call us the #WholeTruthFive. Finally, we came to the prosecution's closing statement, where, I kid you not, they argued that the jury must take direction from the judge, that the rule of law keeps our society free from collapse, and that climate change is irrelevant. I, of course, was dismissed as someone who “waffles about the cause”. Not a cofounder of the most influential climate movements in the world and academic on social change. Show trials are about lies, remember? In response I gave my final statement, from behind the glass panel of the dock, reminding jurors they must be sure, not almost sure or on the verge of being sure, and that they must consider ALL the evidence and make a decision that they have actually been given all the evidence. I reminded them of the placard in the Old Bailey that confirms they can acquit based on their conscience without having to give an explanation and without any legal repercussions. There are two elements to the indictment - conspiracy and disruption. The prosecution had presented what they say is ‘powerful evidence’ of involvement in the plan, but this is not the same as ‘conclusive evidence’. I was there to make arguments for action, and not directly involved in actual planning. What does it say about civil liberties if people are imprisoned for making speeches? I offered an alternative explanation for what happened – that a Murdoch-owned newspaper, the Sun, had a journalist who just wanted to make a film of my arrest and so recorded and leaked the public Zoom meeting to the police. Let me remind you that for this I have already been to prison for four months in 2022 without a trial and have been tagged with an 11pm curfew ever since. Even during my closing statement, the judge tried to shut me down but I went on. I argued that I just wanted the jury to hear the defendants for a few hours and to present them with three or four expert witnesses to give the whole evidence. Of course, I wasn’t allowed to mention the ‘C-word’ but the jury had heard the undisputed facts of existential threats – which between them describe an unimaginable harm lasting tens of thousands of years. I simply asked them to consider doing what many other juries have done, let good people go free when they are persecuted by the state. This was about facts, not beliefs. Without facts, this is not a ‘functioning democracy’ but a government that is facilitating the destruction and death of our population. That’s why UN people sat in on the trial – because we do NOT have a functioning democratic state. If you go and ask people in the street, many would laugh at the idea that they have a say in how this country is run. Plenty of expert witnesses would come and tell us we live in a capitalist democracy, a democracy for the rich. In other words no kind of democracy at all. In the end, I said to the jury that if I speak the truth to them I may end up in prison. If the lawyers speak the truth to them they may lose their jobs. If the jury speaks the truth, nothing will happen to them. I begged them to consult their conscience and ask themselves if they were really sure we didn’t have a reasonable excuse. The result of this kangaroo court? You have guessed it. The jury representative stood up the next day, and one by one gave guilty verdicts for all of us, all unanimous. After the verdict, the judge accused me of fraud and ‘grifting’ because my social media post asked for donations towards ‘court fees’. A slight miswording by my friend who writes the posts, as there were no such fees in this trial. But of course, there are massive costs around the whole legal team supporting us and the consequences of going to prison. Please donate towards them at chuffed.org/project/suppor…. The judge then slandered me by proposing to the jurors that if I was telling lies to obtain money, I might be telling people other lies, and maybe other protesters outside the court were being told lies. He said one of them had been an elderly man hard of hearing and was worried I was exploiting vulnerable people. The public gallery gasped. The man in question was a retired GP in full possession of his faculties with a keen knowledge of the issues – what an insult, and what baseless accusations. To top it off, he said I was 'incapable of introspection'. Guess I’ll have plenty of time for that now… The judge finished his attacks by then personally thanking the jury for not being ‘intimidated’ and said “Well done”. He said he didn’t care what we thought of him. He was just 'doing his job'. This is the banality of evil all over again. He claimed our conviction was just a result of our “single issue fanaticism”. Again, no bias there from a judge who is planning to fly off on holiday when @JustStop_Oil are planning to disrupt airports… Repression is increasing around the world. Amnesty just put out a report on the systematic state attacks on peaceful protest. Look it up. Either we resist the the carbon elites' repression and build a true democracy, led by ordinary people in Citizen’s Assemblies, or Covid-like, ecological and economic shocks spark chaos and fascism. We've seen it over and over again. It's time to say never again. Never again will we let fascism produce a holocaust. Never again we will fail to tell the whole truth: that we face the greatest holocaust ever known, a worldwide gas chamber of carbon that could kill us all. Today it was me imprisoned for telling the truth. Next, it could be you. Join the resistance at juststopoil.org before it’s too late.
Roger Hallam tweet media
English
7.1K
9.1K
23K
3.1M
George H
George H@probablist·
@kylenabecker Benedict Cumberbatch - making a captive theatre audience (who have paid eye-watering sums to be entertained) listen to your diatribe is reprehensible.
English
0
0
0
35
Kyle Becker
Kyle Becker@kylenabecker·
Name an actor you used to like, but can't stand to watch on screen anymore because his or her political opinions are so ridiculous. I'll start: Mark Ruffalo.
Kyle Becker tweet media
English
18.6K
5K
118.4K
18.9M
George H
George H@probablist·
@JeremyClarkson The author's name and that title - is the modern world not confusing enough?
English
0
0
0
325
Jeremy Clarkson
Jeremy Clarkson@JeremyClarkson·
This is an extraordinary book. It’s left me feeling a bit shell-shocked.
Jeremy Clarkson tweet media
English
304
434
6.8K
1.7M
George H
George H@probablist·
@EarlswoodEco @reigatebanstead I think using this to show bias is a bit tenuous - why does Redhill have a subsidised theatre, and Reigate doesn't? Why is Redhill town centre pedestrianised, yet Reigate is a traffic jam, etc, etc...
English
1
0
1
124
EcoEarlswood 💚 Rachel
EcoEarlswood 💚 Rachel@EarlswoodEco·
For me, the 2023 version of being really annoyed about something is to make a video about it, post it online and hope that other people feel passionate about it too! Let's bombard the council to get Memorial Park toilets reopened. @reigatebanstead
English
5
9
20
7.2K
Pilot's Hub
Pilot's Hub@pilotshubuk·
Today is our last day 😔 Thanks to our customers, supporters, suppliers and our fab in-house team. It's been a great 9 years that have brought joy, inspiration, connections, awe-inspiring moments and so much more. Happy landings and blue skies! From all of us here.... x
Pilot's Hub tweet media
Redhill, South East 🇬🇧 English
28
7
134
18.3K
George H
George H@probablist·
@francesweetman You don't understand the numbers - as a male, let me explain. Without the boycott, they would have sold three gazillion billion, so a very successful campaign.
English
0
0
0
13
George H
George H@probablist·
@samandude It is quite funny (& bizarre) that the BBC chose your tweet, although the ignorance of your tweet is fairly astounding.
English
0
0
0
0