UK Politics
General Discussion for politics in the UK.
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[email protected] appears to have vanished! We can still see cached content from this link, but goodbye I guess! :'(
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I dislike Richard Medhurst for a whole bunch of reasons.
Pro-Assad, pro use of child soldiers (as long as it's the side he supports anyway), has expressed he wants to ethnically cleanse Israelis, is an avid supporter of China and denier of the Uighur genocide, is a contributor to and paid by PressTV (Iranian government owned news), is a contributer to and paid by Russia Today, believes NATO are the aggressors in the Russia-Ukraine war, etc.
There's also allegations from two women that he groomed them while they were teenagers, but as this is unproven I will assume his innocence on that one.
I don't think of this person as a journalist at all. He's a hack. A hack that has shown support of more than one proscribed terrorist institutions.
But I do believe you should have a fundamental right to privacy and not having to give your passwords up. Failing to give up his password should result in no extra charges against him IMO.
None of that has anything to do with the case at hand though, and I don't understand why you would bring it up. This bad law is being abused and just because you don't like the person being targeted in this specific instance, it will just be a matter of time before it's used to target journalists that you like.
I understand that ultimately argued against what the government is doing to him, but I think all the other information you posted (with no sources at all by the way) is not relevant at all and just a pointless distraction.
I was agreeing with the sentiment that privacy is paramount. On this instance, I'm literally on his side, despite him being a pro-Russia/Assad/China tankie. A political persuasion that I find utterly evil and repulsive.
The point of bringing it up was that even if you don't like someone or what they stand for, they should still have rights, such as the right to privacy. To me it's inalienable.