I'm curious about @Antoli and their membership history. As I mentioned earlier their posting style is reminiscent of the Thai school of belligerence.
to be fair to Thai people - the ex pat living in Thailand school
I'm curious about @Antoli and their membership history. As I mentioned earlier their posting style is reminiscent of the Thai school of belligerence.
Yes it's a foreign run school, I intended no disrespect to the Thai people.to be fair to Thai people - the ex pat living in Thailand school![]()
Here we go again, your posts are really starting to get repetitive and boring.
Here is the results of a search on Google about this topic...with sources.
Nothing’s being challenged -- I just didn’t find the direction particularly engaging. It felt less about the topic and more about shutting things down, which isn’t especially productive. May the echo chamber continue.Strange how clarity becomes "boring" the moment it challenges you.
That's nuts. I guess they're trying to prevent minorities from being attacked and other hate crimes.Here is the results of a search on Google about this topic...with sources.
Police-recorded arrests for “speech offenses” in the UK have risen sharply over the past decade, particularly for online communications. Recent analyses suggest that arrests are now running at more than 30 per day, or around 12,000–13,000 per year in England and Wales, several times higher than in the mid‑2010s.[1][2][7]
## Scale and trend
Freedom of information data reported in UK media indicate that arrests for speech‑related offenses (such as “grossly offensive” or “menacing” communications and some hate‑speech offenses) rose from roughly 5,500 in 2017 to nearly 12,500 by 2022, with 2024 figures reported at over 13,000. Commentaries summarizing police records say this represents roughly a fourfold increase compared with about 2016 levels and now averages over 30 arrests per day.[2][7][1]
## Legal basis and online focus
Most of these arrests fall under laws that predate social media but are now applied heavily to online content, including provisions against “grossly offensive” or “indecent, obscene or menacing” messages on public networks and various hate‑speech and public order offenses. Human‑rights monitors have linked the rise in arrests to broader moves such as the UK’s Online Safety Act and expanded police practice of recording “non‑crime hate incidents,” which can be logged even when no criminal charge is brought.[5][6][7][1][2]
## Controversies and criticism
Civil‑liberties groups, some foreign governments, and media commentators argue that the current approach produces a chilling effect on free expression, pointing to cases involving social‑media posts, private chat groups, or even silent prayer near abortion clinics. Recent international assessments of UK internet freedom explicitly note a deterioration tied to the increase in criminal charges for online speech and the expanding scope of what is treated as a speech‑related offense.[6][7][5]
[1](https://www.forbes.com/sites/steveforbes/2025/09/09/people-are-being-thrown-in-uk-prisons-over-what-theyve-said-online-can-free-speech-be-saved/)
[2](https://eternallyradicalidea.com/p/yes-the-uk-really-is-that-bad-for)
[3](https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62ln7mzd5ro)
[4](https://www.reddit.com/r/charts/comments/1mut3gv/12k_arrests_last_year_in_the_uk_for/)
[5](https://nypost.com/2025/08/19/world-news/uk-free-speech-struggle-30-arrests-a-day-censorship/)
[6](https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-kingdom/freedom-net/2025)
[7](https://www.city-journal.org/article/free-speech-uk-keir-starmer-unite-kingdom-rally)
[8](https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/10/world/europe/graham-linehan-free-speech-uk.html)
[9](https://www.reddit.com/r/reformuk/comments/1p1gtrq/the_uk_arrests_citizens_158x_more_than_china_for/)
Context does matter therefore 12,000 to 13,000 related to speech offenses is ambiguois. What did the 13,000 say, each one. How did it violate the law? Without all the facts, , FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL CASE, you have no basis of assuming that civil liberties have been abused.Thanks for pulling the numbers together, they actually reinforce what I was saying. When you’re looking at 12,000 to 13,000 arrests a year for speech related offenses, it’s difficult to dismiss that as "tabloid exaggeration." The scale is real, the trend is real, and the civil liberties concerns are real. That’s why context matters and why some of us aren’t willing to shrug it off. So thank you again for staying on topic and posting the information above.
Context does matter therefore 12,000 to 13,000 related to speech offenses is ambiguois. What did the 13,000 say, each one. How did it violate the law? Without all the facts, , FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL CASE, you have no basis of assuming that civil liberties have been abused.
Do the usual now and defer to some deficit in my thinking. 13,000 related cases does not equate to violations, convictions or penalties. Simple means there were 13k offenses registered.
You have to ways to go with this. Ignore me or produce the facts for all 13,000 cases that will justify what you are saying.
I notice many things, but don't we all -- it’s interesting how some posting styles just stand out, regardless of the topic.
Because things can very quickly become heated and abusive. Doesn't make for a pleasant atmosphere.
That's nuts. I guess they're trying to prevent minorities from being attacked and other hate crimes.
Here is the results of a search on Google about this topic...with sources.
Police-recorded arrests for “speech offenses” in the UK have risen sharply over the past decade, particularly for online communications. Recent analyses suggest that arrests are now running at more than 30 per day, or around 12,000–13,000 per year in England and Wales, several times higher than in the mid‑2010s.[1][2][7]
Well, if he loves his religion so much, why did he move to Scotland? Why doesn't he live in one of the many predominantly Muslim nations -- all of which have been torn apart by his religion. Oh, I guess I just answered my own question.Indeed. Like Imam, Dr Zaheer Qadri, living in Scotland, who is afraid to wear religious clothing outside his Mosque because he's afraid of being attacked. This is the environment that is being created by the anti-immigrant movement today.
Well, if he loves his religion so much, why did he move to Scotland? Why doesn't he live in one of the many predominantly Muslim nations -- all of which have been torn apart by his religion. Oh, I guess I just answered my own question.
Maybe the people of Scotland don't want to become a Muslim nation, so they're speaking out against Muslim immigration, as are the people of many European nations.
The way I see it, if you immigrate to another country, you should assimilate into their culture. You shouldn't expect their culture to adapt to your way of life.
his audience are laughing, but it;s no laughing matter ! It's all true.....That free speech in Great Britain is endangered is not new:
No because it had already happened.. this was just 2 years ago .....and now it's much, MUCH worse.. no-one outside of the UK>.. certainly no-one outside of Europe can possibly imagine how much our freedom of speech has been stolen from us... it's like living in an Iron curtain country...I think at that time they couldn't even imagine what will happen in future. Now we are there.
I wanted to edit my comment, but just had deleted it by mistake. But it's in your answer too.No because it had already happened.. this was just 2 years ago .....and now it's much, MUCH worse.. no-one outside of the UK>.. certainly no-one outside of Europe can possibly imagine how much our freedom of speech has been stolen from us... it's like living in an Iron curtain country...
You are so right. The people just can't imagine what happens in GB and Europe. After the Brexit I thought that GB would be in a better position regarding free speech, but NIL. The opposite has happened.No because it had already happened.. this was just 2 years ago .....and now it's much, MUCH worse.. no-one outside of the UK>.. certainly no-one outside of Europe can possibly imagine how much our freedom of speech has been stolen from us... it's like living in an Iron curtain country...
Precisely.. and people who deny it's happening..remind me very much of denials about events during Germany's occupation in WW2.... I'll say no more than that..don't want to cause uneccesary offence or upset..You are so right. The people just can't imagine what happens in GB and Europe. After the Brexit I thought that GB would be in a better position regarding free speech, but NIL. The opposite has happened.
Well, if he loves his religion so much, why did he move to Scotland? Why doesn't he live in one of the many predominantly Muslim nations -- all of which have been torn apart by his religion. Oh, I guess I just answered my own question.
Maybe the people of Scotland don't want to become a Muslim nation, so they're speaking out against Muslim immigration, as are the people of many European nations.
The way I see it, if you immigrate to another country, you should assimilate into their culture. You shouldn't expect their culture to adapt to your way of life.
Precisely.. and people who deny it's happening..remind me very much of denials about events during Germany's occupation in WW2.... I'll say no more than that..don't want to cause uneccesary offence or upset..
The way I see it, if you immigrate to another country, you should assimilate into their culture. You shouldn't expect their culture to adapt to your way of life.
But aren't you all protesting about lack of freedom of speech?
and freedom of religion and dress too, I presume
or does that only apply to people of same religion and dress as you??
and how is he expecting the culture to adapt to him? - he is dressing that way, he isn't telling anyone else to do so
But aren't you all protesting about lack of freedom of speech?
and freedom of religion and dress too, I presume
or does that only apply to people of same religion and dress as you??
and how is he expecting the culture to adapt to him? - he is dressing that way, he isn't telling anyone else to do so