Predictably, Bella Caledonia's eccentric hit-piece the other day about me and this blog led to an extended pile-on from The Trendies in the Bella comments section (although, interestingly, they haven't had it all their own way by any means). Most of the diatribes are barely worth responding to, but there are one or two comments that make a brief reply irresistible by virtue of being so full of downright lies, or of being so brazenly hypocritical.
On the latter theme, let's begin with our old friend Alec "LOL" Lomax.
"Ah yes, the GRA, the topic that takes priority over independence, damage from Brexit, climate change, the escalating cost of living etc."
Extraordinarily, this is an attack line from a supporter of the Scottish Government's plans to reform the GRA by legislating for gender self-ID within the next few months. Dear reader, you and I may be naive enough to believe that someone who claims to think the GRA is a less important topic than independence, Brexit, climate change and the cost of living would want to see self-ID put firmly on the backburner so we can get on with dealing with these far more pressing priorities. But no. Apparently the way Alec demonstrates his total disinterest in the GRA as a topic is by agitating for precious parliamentary time to be eaten up in the hope of pushing through a hugely controversial GRA reform at breakneck speed.
Answers on a postcard, folks.
Next up we have "Mr Chips" - a moniker that means nothing to me, which may not be a coincidence given that practically every single claim he makes about me and this blog is factually inaccurate...
"His tweets imploring people to vote Alba because they had a good chance of “gaming the system” were either hopelessly naive or deliberately stupid."
Alternatively they could just be a figment of your imagination, old son. The inverted commas around the words "gaming the system" are particularly bonkers given that I've spent half my waking life explaining why attempts to game the Holyrood electoral system are a bad idea, and given also that I stressed when I joined Alba that I hadn't changed my view about that. I made clear again and again that I was voting Alba on the list simply because Alba are my first choice party, and not because of any tactical wheeze. So are you intentionally lying about my stance, Mr Chips, or are you just some clueless soul making a wild guess at what you hope I might have said? I've no idea which it is, but I do know that it's one or the other.
"Alba were polling between 1% and 4%. The statistical variance suggested just noise and no signal."
That claim is plain and simply untrue. Alba actually polled between 1% and 6% during the Holyrood campaign, and no fewer than three polls had them on 6%. (I'm in a very good position to remember that, because I commissioned one of them myself.) The guff about "statistical variance suggesting just noise" spectacularly misses the point, because the real question was never whether Alba were "recovering" - it was which pollster was getting it right. If the 6% showings from Panelbase had been accurate, then Alba were on course to win multiple seats throughout the campaign. The seats projection from the Scot Goes Pop / Panelbase poll in April 2021 had Alba on eight seats.
"Anyone familiar with statistics knew support for Alba was so small it could not be successfully measured. Despite this, Kelly implored his followers that the system could be gamed with a vote for Alba."
Actually, what anyone with even a primary school grasp of statistics knows is that you can't claim that Alba were polling between 1% and 4% when they in fact polled at 6% three times. And what anyone familiar with even the basics of the English language knows is that you can't claim that someone who thinks attempting to game the system is a bad idea was "imploring his followers that the system could be gamed".
"He was one of the many bloggers and tweeters who supported Craig Murray throughout his trial and imprisonment..."
Crikey, he's got something right at last - although of course even broken clocks are accurate twice a day. Yes, Mr Chips, I'm opposed to the jailing of journalists. I believe that's known as "being on the right side of history".
"...without really understanding the gravity of Murray’s offence. Let’s not forget what Murray did: he impaired the Article 8 ECHR rights of complainers at a sexual offences trial. When you do stuff like that, prison is an appropriate sanction. Despite this, Kelly believes there is no inconsistency in his new role as one of the “women protectors”."
It's hard to know where to start with such gibberish. Presumably, again, the inverted commas are meant to indicate that I've portrayed myself at some point as a "women protector" - the only snag being that I've done no such thing. What I certainly have said is that the Alba Party are defenders of women's sex-based rights - a statement that is irrefutably accurate.
To suggest that I supported Craig at his trial without understanding "the gravity of his offence" is a nonsense, because the purpose of a trial (at least in a free country, which hopefully this still is) is not to assume an offence has been committed and adjudicate upon the "gravity" of it, but instead to determine whether an offence has been committed in the first place. Those of us who supported Craig at his trial believed - and still believe - that "not guilty" was the appropriate verdict, not least because of the total lack of evidence to substantiate the notion that anyone was actually identified in the real world due to Craig's reporting.
Even if the erroneous verdict of "guilty" was taken at face value, though, imprisonment was plainly an inappropriate sentence for three reasons: a) it was a non-violent offence, b) there is little or no recent precedent for other journalists being jailed for similar offences, and c) Craig has health conditions which meant that a jail term needlessly put his life at genuine risk. One of the ugliest parts of this saga was a tweet from a senior person in the SNP demanding that Craig be jailed, on the grounds that if he was sentenced to community service he would supposedly use his health conditions to worm his way out of it. The implication being that the health conditions were somehow bogus, in spite of the testimony from his doctors. It's amazing how the mask of progressivism slips, isn't it? That's the kind of inhuman rhetoric you'd expect to hear from the hard right "hang 'em, flog 'em" wing of the Tory party.
"Murray deserved to go to prison. Apart from anything else, it serves as a deterrent to anyone else thinking of doing the same thing. Anyone supporting him is similarly stamping all over the human rights of the complainers at the Alex Salmond sexual offences trial. For that reason, I have no time whatsoever for James Kelly."
And because "Mr Chips" supports the jailing of journalists, and doesn't give a damn about whether a medically vulnerable man lives or dies in prison, I'm afraid I have no time whatsoever for "Mr Chips" - whoever the sodding hell "Mr Chips" may be.
"It [gender self-ID] was put to the people of Switzerland, hardly the epicentre of woke Europe. They voted to adopt self-id by the majority rule that so many commenters here are keen on. I think you underestimate just how far the public have moved on questions of sexuality, identity and state intrusion into our private lives."
I'm not going to pretend to be an expert on Swiss politics, but having looked into it as carefully as I can, this appears to be yet another false claim. It looks as if gender self-ID was introduced by the Swiss parliament, and was not tested in a referendum in the same way that the simultaneous introduction of same-sex marriage was. It's also worth making the point that Switzerland is one of only a small minority of European countries that have thus far introduced gender self-ID, which gives the lie to the suggestions elsewhere in the Bella thread that there's some sort of unstoppable global trend at play here. Whatever "international best practice" may mean, it certainly doesn't appear to mean "international common practice".
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Oh no does this mean I will have to read Bella again. Reading WGD and Bella in the same day is just to much, especially if Lomax is involved.
ReplyDeleteImposter at 9.09am. If not Skier it must be that thicko Hamish100 or nasty Dr Jim, WGD nicophant numpties have no shame.
DeleteImposter at 10.39 pm.
DeleteFunny how numpties like Mr Chips never suggest a referendum on Self ID. I think we all know the answer to that.
ReplyDeleteImposter at 9.45am.
DeleteScotland and the UK are representative democracies. Our legislatures should make the decisions they can make and leave referendums only for decisions they cannot make. Westminster was perfectly able to decide the UK's membership of the EU. There should have been no referendum in 2016. Westminster cannot make a decision for Scotland because it is a UK-wide legislature. Meanwhile, Holyrood has no constitutional powers. This is the case for an indy ref.
DeleteHolyrood is perfectly capable of legislating for self-id or not legislating for self-id. Those powers are set out in the Scotland Act. It is for Holyrood to decide. Let's leave non-essential refs for the populists and let Holyrood exercise the powers it has. After all, the clamour for constraining Holyrood's power is supposed to come from Westminster Tories rather than indy supporters.
Cheers,
The Constitutionalist
"Meanwhile, Holyrood has no constitutional powers. This is the case for an indy ref."
DeleteThere's a gaping logical hole in what you're saying, because Westminster does have constitutional powers and is "perfectly capable", as you would put it, of deciding whether Scotland should become an independent country. Westminster's answer will be "no" for all eternity, regardless of what the people want, but that's absolutely fine according to the logic of the rest of your comment.
Anonymous
Delete"Westminster cannot make a decision for Scotland because it is a UK wide legislator."
You mean like the Poll Tax being introduced in Scotland before anywhere else in the UK.
There is no democracy for Scotland now or in the past. Westminster and its English MPs rule Scotland.
Whatever "international best practice" may mean, it certainly doesn't appear to mean "international common practice".
ReplyDeleteNor does it mean international common sense. The lawsuits are now starting in the US for the harms done to kids on Puberty blockers.
I don't know where you find the patience to respond to these infantile idiots James. Our independence movement certainly has it's fair share of numpties and heid bangers making making stupid noises around it's edges.
ReplyDeleteThe mad Irish liar Skier says we are seeing a covert plan to protect ‘Big Dog Whistler’. is he talking about Sturgeon, Swinney or Leslie Evans.
ReplyDeleteImposter at 10.53pm.
DeleteThe people who turn a blind eye to Sturgeons persecution of Salmond because it is their party are no better than the Tories who turn a blind eye to Johnston's behaviour because it is their party.
ReplyDeleteImposter at 11.17am.
DeleteIt's about time we said Goodbye to Mr Chips. What a numpty.
ReplyDeleteImposter at 12.52pm. What a sad person.
DeleteNumpties to the left of me and numpties to the right of me. The National (Sturgeon fanzine) giving coverage of a numpty called John Parker raising a complaint with Ofcom. He says: “….but because it could lead to jigsaw identification of victims. “ They are not victims ya numpty. They lied in court and were found not to be victims. How hard is it for people to understand?
ReplyDeleteThe Sturgeon Fanzine then goes on to describe Parker’s comments as “Parker’s forensic analysis…” Laughable - it’s this type of coverage of the persecution of Salmond that made me stop buying the National.
A very good point.
DeleteAnd another thing. Did Mr Murray publish details of the victims from some secret or illicit source, or were they all in the public domain? If the latter, then he was imprisoned simply for collating information.
My fellow WGD numpties should ask themselves 2 questions about the work being carried out by civil servants on independence.
ReplyDeleteAre the 11 civil servants working full time?
How many civil servants are working on the SelfID law?
Being numpties they probably prefer sticking their head in the sand.
The silly WGD numpties are foaming at the mouth about a councillor joining the Alba party.
ReplyDeleteAs ever they say Alba is irrelevant then froth and foam at the mouth about how they are stealing " our" votes and voters will take revenge in May etc etc. They sound just like Labour when Labour were top dogs in Scotland.
Newsnight tonight manage to do a report on the possibility of indyref2 and all its contributors are Britnats. They even have Kevin Hague of These Islands on it. The worse is Professor Mairi Spowage, the NEW Director of the Britnat Fraser of Allander Institute. Spowage only joined in 2018 and is now Director. Could it be down to her reliably telling viewers that oil revenues have essentially disappeared and will not contribute to the finances of an independent Scotland. Try and square that comment with all the new oil and gas fields being opened, high oil and gas prices and bumper profits for BP/ Shell. Methinks the Britnats have parachuted a reliable propagandist in to be the new director.
ReplyDelete