In this eye-opening episode, we discuss the growing movement in the UK where citizens are flying the English and British flags, and the resulting governmental backlash labeling it a 'hate movement'. We dive into various incidents including arrests, school detentions, and public shaming centered around displaying national symbols. We also explore the broader implications on free speech with laws against 'grossly offensive' communications and the looming threat of the UK's Online Safety Bill. We delve into historical context, pointing out the disparity between actions taken against British symbolism versus those of other groups. Join us as we question the current state of British national pride, the potential for revolution, and the chilling parallels with dystopian narratives. Operation Raise The Colours
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] in. Narrative dystopias is if you say anything against the government, you know, God forbid, no, no, no. It's literally just supporting your country.
Your country.
Malcolm Collins: Derates you. Well look at it this way. Okay. Suppose the UK was under occupation by a foreign power right now. Yeah. What would that foreign power, what symbol would it fear the most if it was under occupation? By a foreign power? Oh,
Simone Collins: fair. Yeah. Yeah. Like so, so France, when it was occupied. By the axis.
By
Malcolm Collins: the axis, if you had a French flag, you had flew a French
Simone Collins: flag. Yeah. You okay? You're immediately
Malcolm Collins: going to jail. Being
Simone Collins: detained. Being isolated.
Malcolm Collins: certainly a government wouldn't punish people for flying its own flag. So if the government is punished people for flying the British flag, what conceivable reason could it have to do that?
Oh, that's not who's in charge anymore. It is occupied.
Simone Collins: Oh my gosh. Wow.
Would you like to know more?
Malcolm Collins: [00:01:00] Hello Simone. I'm excited to be here with you today. Today we are gonna be talking about a growing movement in the uk in which people are raising the English and British flags. So the, the, the cross of St. James and the Union Jack all over the uk. Nice. The government is of course freaking out about this, calling this a, a hate movement, but the, that it's the government's flag.
Right, but it's a hate movement. So they're doing, it's such a hate movement that one guy, he was complaining, he made a video and I'll post the video here so you can see that. I'm like, not exaggerating. It is a mild video just being like, why are there all these Palestinian flags all over our town? Yeah.
Its not Palestine flag. They go to his house and they arrest him. What? Wait. Whoa. Hold on.
Speaker: This morning and this is the kinda that's going on. Yeah. So there's a look at this. Yeah. You see it. Then over here at this one we've got this crap going on as well. Yeah. And then we come along to this pole here [00:02:00] and they've then done the same here as well. Look at this
Speaker 5: You're talking about, John, have, did you hear that?
Speaker 4: What all those Palestinian flags in Beth Green Road.
Speaker 5: Tread on them! Tread the all over
Speaker 4: them!
Speaker 6: You gotta fight! For your rights! At home in such despair. Now
Speaker 20: Is free speech under threat in the UK? With the rise of so called non crime hate incidents, arrests over grossly offensive memes, and the government's online safety bill threatening to clamp down on social media posts, can you really speak your mind in 21st century Britain?
Speake
Published on 4 months ago
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