In the wake of the pro-Palestinian protests in the UK, the Home Secretary, Theresa May, said that the government will be looking at ways to restrict the right to protest in the country, including a ban on repeat protest.
00:00:00.000So we've been covering the digital ID rollout in the UK, the involvement with Larry Ellison via Tony Blair, essentially, who's been kind of a go-between between the current, sorry, the Labour government in the UK and Oracle, essentially, who seeks to run the digital ID kind of on its backbone infrastructure.
00:00:18.580So we had a bunch of signatures come in in a petition at the UK Parliament's website to please do not introduce digital ID cards. It said we demand that the UK government immediately commits to not introducing a digital ID card. They are reports that this is being looked at. So you've gotten almost 3 million signatures. They keep coming in. However, the Parliament has already responded. They said about two weeks ago, we will consider this for debate.
00:00:46.420It takes 100 signatures for them to bring this up as an issue in the Parliament. And this was the government's response.
00:00:54.340We will introduce a digital ID within this Parliament to help tackle illegal immigration, make accessing government services easier and enable wider efficiencies. We will consult on details soon.
00:01:07.980So I guess it doesn't matter how many people sign a signature. As we know, the democracy claim is a sham anyway. But they like to tout it when someone, I don't know, I guess, don't want to have, you know, migration or being replaced or something.
00:01:22.160Then that's anti-democratic ideas. And then they can shut you down for it. But it is interesting that they're seeking to do this.
00:01:27.920The first, you know, kind of excuse they used out the gates is to tackle illegal immigration, such as somehow having ID cards will prevent you from letting people in over your borders, which is just ridiculous. Right.
00:01:41.680And we also know that when they do implement it, there's going to be no enforcement, basically, depending on if you're brown, because it's going to be racist to ask people for their digital papers, essentially, because it will be, I don't know what, like Nazi Germany or something like that.
00:01:53.340So this comes in a, at the same time that there's trends to now ban the protesting in the UK altogether, at least repeat protest.
00:02:02.680And this was brought up as an issue when, you know, too many pro-Palestinian protesters had been out too many times.
00:02:10.400So what they call repeat protesting is something that they're seeking to restrict with the broader, basically, powers given to the police.
00:02:18.620And, of course, we have an Arab mixed-meat, I don't know what she is, Paki or something now, who is the Home Secretary, who's going to, you know, make sure that, basically, the Palestinian protesters can't protest.
00:02:31.040And they're doing this, obviously, on behalf of Zionist interests, which is always an interesting concoction when you get these Muslims blended with, you know, anti-Palestinian stuff.
00:02:40.280But anyway, check out what she said here on Sky News.
00:02:42.420You said this morning that you'll legislate to give police new powers to ban repeated demonstration.
00:02:49.260Would that have stopped the pro-Palestinian demonstrations repeated, that came repeatedly in London earlier this year?
00:02:58.000And would it have prevented yesterday's demonstration?
00:03:00.800Well, look, the strengthening of the legislation that I'm going to bring about is based on the ability of the police to place conditions and restrictions on protests.
00:03:13.800And what I will be making explicit is that cumulative disruption, that is to say the frequency of particular protests in particular places, is in and of itself a reason for the police to be able to restrict and place conditions.
00:03:28.180That is to say they can move them to a different place.
00:03:30.360They can restrict the time that those protests can occur on.
00:03:34.020So that will unlock all of the broader measures that the police can already do on protests.
00:03:39.940It's been clear to me in conversations in the last couple of days that there is a gap in the law and there is an inconsistency of practice.
00:03:48.260So I'll be taking measures immediately to put that right.
00:03:51.700And I will be reviewing our wider protest legislation as well to make sure the arrangements we have can meet the scale of the challenge that we face,
00:04:00.640which is protecting the right to protest, but ensuring that our communities can go about their daily business without feeling intimidated and also that public order can be maintained.
00:04:43.820And so if you protest too many times, you can do it one time, but if you try to drive a message home against Israel, against Jews, I guess,
00:04:51.860well, they don't even do that, they just go against Israel, then that might make Jews feel uncomfortable in the country, you see.
00:04:59.720So they want to combat anti-Semitism and want to make sure that Jewish life flourish in the UK.
00:05:05.500But I guess that's not good enough to Ben M. Friedman here who said,
00:05:08.700I'm making Aliyah partially because I do not feel safe or comfortable being Jewish in the UK.
00:05:29.100Well, good luck to you, Friedman, because, of course, you do have an actual homeland to return to while the British people do not have a homeland.
00:05:36.240So obviously this tweet came after the synagogue attack in Manchester, right,
00:05:40.500when this Arab drove into, through the doors of the synagogue, and I think he stabbed to death two Jews during Yom Kippur or something like that.
00:05:50.120But, of course, you know, they won't recognize that people like David Aronovich and so many other Jewish activists in the UK
00:05:55.960have promoted Muslim immigration and promoted diversity.
00:05:59.260And now, of course, when the powder keg is popping off, which leads to violence partially now against them,
00:06:03.760most of this violence had been directed at white people for the longest time in the UK.