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Wow, UK has lost freedom of speech

Here is the Met's response:


We understand the concerns raised, but the claim this man was arrested for wearing a star of David necklace is not true. He was arrested for allegedly repeatedly breaching Public Order Act conditions that were in place to keep opposing protest groups apart.

The conditions required protesters from the pro-Israel group Stop the Hate to remain in one area with protesters from the pro-Palestinian group IJAN required to remain in a separate area.

The man told officers he was acting as an independent legal observer but his actions are alleged to have breached the conditions in place, and to have gone beyond observing in an independent and neutral way to provoking and, as such, actively participating as a protester.

Over the course of an hour, the man is alleged to have continuously approached the area allocated to IJAN, getting very close to protesters to film them and provoking a reaction. Officers had to intervene at least four times to ask the man to return to the Stop the Hate area as required by the conditions.

When he failed to do so after multiple warnings, he was arrested.
 
Matthew, are you telling me that how this story was initially presented ("framed" if you will) was not totally an accurate version of events?

I'm shocked! Shocked, I tell you!

Where's my fainting chaise longue?
So The Jerusulam Post and The Telegraph did yet another piss poor job of journalism, omitting the important part of the event and focusing on a detail out of context.

Two for two for suck-ass reporting in this very thread.
 
Part of why he was arrested was the presence of the Star of David. Police have made that clear. The Star itself was not the criminal act, but wearing the star while trying to antagonize the protestors was part of the context for the arrest.
Did you know you could be arrested "for" wearing a Manchester United shirt?!
As a Murcan, I have the Telegraph mentally in the 'don't bother reading' category. I value the BBC and Guardian for their credibility, and try to use them whenever possible, despite their pretty open left lean. A leaning doesn't make their reporting unreliable, and they stand strong to fact checks and sourcing.
I've found the BBC is good for retractions and corrections, which gains it additional credibility in my eyes.
 
Here is the Met's response:


We understand the concerns raised, but the claim this man was arrested for wearing a star of David necklace is not true. He was arrested for allegedly repeatedly breaching Public Order Act conditions that were in place to keep opposing protest groups apart.

The conditions required protesters from the pro-Israel group Stop the Hate to remain in one area with protesters from the pro-Palestinian group IJAN required to remain in a separate area.

The man told officers he was acting as an independent legal observer but his actions are alleged to have breached the conditions in place, and to have gone beyond observing in an independent and neutral way to provoking and, as such, actively participating as a protester.

Over the course of an hour, the man is alleged to have continuously approached the area allocated to IJAN, getting very close to protesters to film them and provoking a reaction. Officers had to intervene at least four times to ask the man to return to the Stop the Hate area as required by the conditions.

When he failed to do so after multiple warnings, he was arrested.
Of course there is the issue of the too broad powers the police now have to police and control protests but in this instance it seems a reasonable compromise to allow protestors with ...er... different perspectives on current events to co-exist.
 
Matthew, are you telling me that how this story was initially presented ("framed" if you will) was not totally an accurate version of events?

I'm shocked! Shocked, I tell you!

Where's my fainting chaise longue?
I always bring my fainting couch with me; life is such a shocking affair, i find. If you let me know in advance next time you think you might feel faint, I'll lend it you. You can have some of my smelling salts as well.
 
The police indicated that such a thing at such a place and time could antagonize others, and the guy was being heavily disingenuous to act like he had no idea that it would do just that.

Eta: yet it was explicitly not the reason for his arrest.
Free societies don't care if some bigoted ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ is offended by the sight of, God forbid, a Star of David.
 
Free societies don't care if some bigoted ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ is offended by the sight of, God forbid, a Star of David.
Ok. And?

This guy was arrested for faking to be an independent legal observer, so he could get close access to the opposing side, when he was really a protestor and was wearing his 'colors' in full view to provoke a reaction.
 
Ok. And?

This guy was arrested for faking to be an independent legal observer, so he could get close access to the opposing side, when he was really a protestor and was wearing his 'colors' in full view to provoke a reaction.
Pathetic that anti-Semitic protestors are offended and provoked by an ancient symbol of the Jewish People.

Luckily the good police of UKia have their back.
 
You just keep that pitbull-like grip on the 'symbol' bs even in the face of evidence that it was not relevant to the arrest. :rolleyes:
If it was completely irrelevant to the arrest why did the cop bring it up multiple times? Clearly it was relevant.
 
If it was completely irrelevant to the arrest why did the cop bring it up multiple times? Clearly it was relevant.
He brought it up for like 5 minutes total of an hour long interview, and he seemed to be saying "dude... you said you were an impartial legal observer and there you were displaying one side of the protests symbol while approaching the adversary. Can't you see that it was provoking a fight, when you agreed to be a neutral observer?"

Actually we could ask you the same question.
 
If it was completely irrelevant to the arrest why did the cop bring it up multiple times? Clearly it was relevant.
Ah, so the detailed Metropolitan Police description of the arrest was a bald-faced lie, but you with your remarkable skills of deduction saw right through that!

Or is it that once a single police officer said a thing that thing remains as the sole and absolute truth and is never subject to change, and anything contradictory is a lie?
 
He brought it up for like 5 minutes total of an hour long interview, and he seemed to be saying "dude... you said you were an impartial legal observer and there you were displaying one side of the protests symbol while approaching the adversary. Can't you see that it was provoking a fight, when you agreed to be a neutral observer?"

Actually we could ask you the same question.
Wearing a Magen David is not provoking a fight.

Such a concept is pretty bigoted.
 

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