OUR TWO-TIER JUSTICE SYSTEM

By Paul Sutton on

ai judge

A man has been fast-tracked into prison for a meme post, showing Islamists wielding knives. The judge wanted to ‘send a clear message’.

Has the Labour councillor who motioned for rioters’ throats to be cut been fast-tacked into a jail sentence? No need for a clear message, if it’s certain throats being threatened?

Come to think about it, has the slaughterer of three young girls dancing to Taylor Swift had his trial fast-tracked? Surely in our culture of almost constant knife crime, a ‘message needs to be sent’.

The thugs who tried to steal police guns at Manchester Airport - and broke a policewoman’s nose - have yet to be charged, though they’ve been clearly identified. Apparently no need for ‘fast-track justice’ here either. Nor any need to ‘send a clear message’ - other than support for their ‘community’.

The Batley school-teacher still in hiding for his life, after numerous calls by Islamists for him and his family to be slaughtered? No charges against anyone for the death threats and no police action to stop the intimidation outside the school.

Go back a bit.

In 2009, Wes Streeting tweeted for the Daily Mail journalist Jan Moir to be thrown in front of a train, saying he’d do it himself. No charges then - and the law was very clear on such specific threats - but the DPP (one Keir Starmer) did nothing.

No surprise - his now Deputy PM called Tories scum, the week before one (David Amess) was slaughtered by an Islamist in his constituency office. Rayner claimed her words were irrelevant. Nothing to see here.

People are being locked up for stupid tweets and posts - but only if they are done by one side. Starmer et al are a disgrace to the very idea of equality before the law (as were the last few governments). They operate a blatantly two-tier and politicised system, almost guaranteed to provoke outrage.

I don’t think anyone should be under police investigation, unless very specific threats of violence are made. That used to be the law but now it’s been twisted for political purposes, yet only in one direction.

When the Metropolitan Police’s Commissioner Mark Rowley was asked about his obvious two-tier policing, he responded by throwing the Sky journalist’s microphone onto the pavement. Needless to say, this buffoon isn’t facing charges of criminal damage.

Yet ‘two-tier justice’ is apparently a myth…