💼 Careercow Glinner / Graham Linehan - Disgraced Comedian, Mentally Ill to the point of worrying his Family, Hypocritical Misogynist, TERF ANTIFA Quasimodo Doppelganger w/ One Ball & Hateboner for GAMERS/Trump/Brexit/Count Dankula; #ThanksGraham

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Y’know, none of what he said in that part of the interview is actually wrong. I imagine most of the userbase would find nothing to disagree with here:

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Then we get onto this part:

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"Trans women are a tool of the patriarchy" is the hottest take I've heard from him so far.
 
I wonder what would happen if you accused him of misogyny because his fervent commentary is making the issue all about him, a straight white male, and not the women who are the main members of the movement and were there long before him?
 
Oh boy. Here we go again.

He's got himself in hot water over crazy child troon charity Mermaids being given half a million quid in lottery money, he's posting on mumsnet about how fucked up that is.

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The actual thread has been temporarily removed because the troons are angry and have been mass reporting it, but you can still read the google cached version for now.

The usual suspects are up in arms and he's currently trending on twitter. He does have an amazing ability to get himself negative attention, it's like he never wants to work ever again.
 
https://www.thestranger.com/slog/20...tter-in-the-uk-you-could-be-arrested-for-that

Graham Linehan was lying in bed on a Sunday morning in December when his kids yelled at him that there was someone at the door. He threw on what he’d call a dressing gown (and what I’d call a bathrobe), and headed to the front door, where he saw saw an officer with the Norwich Police Department.



The officer asked if he could come in. Linehan initially refused and asked what this visit was all about. What it was all about, the officer explained, was Twitter.

Linehan invited him in.

Karen White, a convicted sex offender who assaulted two inmates while housed at a women’s prison.

On the other side, trans people and their allies argue that self-determination will improve the lives of trans people. “At the moment, trans people have to endure a long and demeaning process to ‘prove’ their gender identity,” according to Stonewall, an LGBTQ advocacy group in favor of the changes. “It’s not just distressing, it’s complex, costly and inaccessible to many trans people.” Reforming the GRA would lower these barriers.

This debate is largely taking place online (where, naturally, the level of virulence is ramped up), but it’s left the realm of social media plenty. During a period in which the government was soliciting comments on the proposed changes, a woman purchased a billboard in Liverpool that displayed the dictionary definition of the term “woman.” “Woman,” the billboard read, “noun; adult human female.” The billboard was only up for a little while before a prominent queer activist and family physician named Adrian Harrop complained to the billboard company, saying it made transgender people feel unsafe. The billboard was quickly taken down.

It was also Harrop who sent the police to Graham Linehan’s house.


***



The UK, unlike the US, has robust hate speech laws. In addition to banning derogatory speech on the basis of someone’s race, ethnicity, disability, religion, sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity, the 2003 Communications Act banned online communication that would cause “annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to another.” With that act, arguing, trolling, or posting anything that could be perceived as remotely offensive became punishable under the law. And the law is enforced. In April, for instance, a 19-year-old woman was convicted of "sending a grossly offensive message" for posting the lyrics to a rap song on Instagram in tribute to a 13-year-old who had died in a traffic accident. (The lyrics included the n-word, which she failed to redact.)

Graham Linehan didn’t post anything about Adrian Harrop that would be considered offensive to most people. He didn’t use slurs or, for that matter, curse words. But the two men clearly oppose each other and frequently stir up fights or drag the other via Twitter.

The police didn’t tell Linehan which specific tweets Harrop complained about, but shortly before the police visited Linehan’s house, Harrop had appeared in a televised debate with Posie Parker, a feminist writer who is opposed to changing the GRA. Parker has been banned from several social media platforms, including Facebook, Twitter, and the British site Mumsnet for misgendering trans women, and her conversation with Harrop, which aired on Sky News, was heated. Harrop and Parker clearly dislike each other, and neither made any attempt to hide it.

After Linehan saw the debate, he posted a link to the video, tweeting, “Have a look at this again and ask yourself why Parker is banned from various platforms, while Harrop isn’t. Could it be anything to do with...male privilege? Could it have anything to do with men deciding what women are and are not allowed to say?” The next day, the police dropped in at his house.

After explaining to Linehan why he was there, the police officer—whom Linehan says was polite and friendly—asked Linehan if he would stop engaging with Harrop. Linehan told him he had no intention of stopping, the officer left, and Linehan immediately tweeted about what had just happened. The whole episode, he says, took about 15 minutes, and the police never told him which tweet Harrop found so offensive.


Linehan says he is sure that is was his tweet about the Sky News debate that prompted Harrop to contact the police. Harrop, however, says that it was another tweet, which Linehan posted on November 8, that led him to contact the authorities. In that tweet, Linehan alleged that Harrop “threatened women, doxxed them, called them bitches, suggested they were drunks, mocked their mental health, etc.”

In a written statement, Harrop claimed that Linehan mischaracterized his actions. “Mr. Linehan has made a range of unfounded and defamatory accusations against me,” he wrote. “Mr. Linehan made direct reference to me having threatened and harassed women, and having ‘doxxed’ them—a specific allegation relating to the revelation of confidential information about people that they have deliberately sought to keep private. This is a grossly inaccurate and unfair mischaracterisation of my conduct.” He added that by alleging that Harrop doxed women, Linehan, who has over 600,000 followers, put Harrop and his family at risk.

Linehan, however, defends his allegation and provided me with screenshots of Harrop revealing the legal name and position of a woman who opposes the GRA reforms on Twitter. The tweets have since been deleted but, Harrop wrote to the woman, “Simple solution here [woman’s name and position]. Delete your material off Twitter. Everything. Delete your profile + remove yourself from the platform. Do that + I will remove all tweets with references to your name + job as will the others w/screenshots of your info on Mumsnet.”


***


While Twitter can be just as poisonous in the United States as it is in the United Kingdom, the police are unlikely to get involved here, largely due to the First Amendment, which—outside of libel, slander, threats, child pornography, inciting violence, and shouting fire in a crowded theater—protects nearly all forms of expression, including what in the UK would be considered hate speech.


When I asked the Seattle Police Department what it would take for the SPD to get involved in a spat like Linehan and Harrop’s, a spokesperson said, “It would take a lot. We understand that social media is a place where people can have likely debates. Sometimes it’s toxic and verbally abusive, in which case, our recommendation is to unplug. Don’t feed the trolls.”

But that doesn’t mean anything goes. The SPD will start investigating if someone makes threats “that a responsible person would find alarming,” said the spokesperson. “There is a very firm line,” he added. “When someone is making credible threats, we start investigating.”

Shortly after the officer left Linehan’s house, he emailed the police department asking for clarification. What, exactly, was so offensive, so threatening, about his tweets that warranted a visit from an officer? He hadn’t threatened to harm anyone. In response, a sergeant with Norfolk Constabulary wrote back: “Whilst we recognise that there is Freedom of Speech in the UK, it is important that the use of Social Media respects diversity and takes into consideration the feelings of others.”

And failing to be considerate of others in the UK can have serious consequences. In 2016, according to The Times of London, UK police arrested an average of nine people a day for posting content online that someone, somewhere, considered offensive. In all, over 3,300 Brits were detained and questioned in 2016, a 50 percent increase from two years before. And the numbers have likely gone up since then because the government, according to the paper, “announced a national police hub to crack down on hateful material online.”

Of course, what's hateful and what's not is all in the eye of the tweeter. But local police departments seem to be complying with this directive. In September, the official South Yorkshire Police account tweeted, “In addition to reporting hate crime, please report non-crime hate incidents, which can include things like offensive or insulting comments, online, in person or in writing. Hate will not be tolerated in South Yorkshire. Report it and put a stop to it.” This tweet was widely mocked; as one tweeter responded: “Non-crime-hate-incidents' is a bit wordy. Might I suggest you condense it. I think 'thought crime' has a nice ring, don’t ya think?”


***


Linehan’s December visit from the police was not actually his first run-in with authorities over social media. In October, he was reported to the West Yorkshire Police for referring to Stephanie Hayden, a transgender woman, as “he” as well as tweeting Hayden’s “deadname,” or the name she was born with. Hayden is currently suing Linehan and so he declined to comment on this case, but he’s not unequivocally opposed to the policing of free speech. In fact, as many commentators have pointed out, Linehan has been known to celebrate when people he disagrees with are contacted by the law or kicked off of social media. When Scottish YouTube comic Mark Meechan, known online as Count Dankula, was arrested, convicted, and fined 800 EUR for posting a video of a dog doing a “Heil Hitler” salute, Linehan tweeted, “The guy is alt right. This is what they do, sneak fascism and hatred in under the guise of irony. I don’t think he could go to jail, but I’m happy the court saw through it.”

When asked if his own recent visit from the police has made him reconsider his support for hate speech statutes, Linehan said no. In the case of Count Dankula, “hate speech laws were working just as they were supposed to,” he said. When it comes to his own case, however, he thinks police involvement was an overreach as well as poor use of police resources. And, really, nothing much has come of the visit. Linehan hasn’t been charged with a crime or received any kind of citation, and he hasn’t stopped tweeting about Adrian Harrop, either. In his last tweet about Harrop, from December 14, he accused Harrop of using the police as his own personal “goon squad.” The battle between the two of them, like the battle over the GRA, is clearly far from over.

For his part, Harrop sees this as part of the fight for trans rights. “Trans women are women. Trans men are men. Non-binary people are valid,” he wrote in his statement. “Every person, without exception, irrespective of their gender identity, ought to have the freedom to express themselves and live their lives in an honest and genuine way, entirely free from the fear of harassment and exclusion."
 
tbh, just posting on Twitter should be a capital offense. UK needs to toughen up with their namby-pamby soft-on-crime bullshit.


"Linehan invited him in.

Karen White, a convicted sex offender who assaulted two inmates while housed at a women’s prison.

On the other side, trans people and their allies argue that self-determination will improve the lives of trans people. “At the moment, trans people have to endure a long and demeaning process to ‘prove’ their gender identity,” according to Stonewall, an LGBTQ advocacy group in favor of the changes. “It’s not just distressing, it’s complex, costly and inaccessible to many trans people.” Reforming the GRA would lower these barriers."

WTF is going on here with the grammar and shit? "Karen White, a convicted sex offender who assaulted two inmates while housed at a women’s prison" isn't a whole sentence, let alone a paragraph, and all 3 """paragraphs""" seems totally unrelated to eachother.

Did OP fuck up crtl+c, ctrl+v, or is journalism really this shit these days? (or does all it make perrfect sense and I'm just rctarded/sleep deprived?)
 
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At this point they should just rewrite UK law to say what is allowed. Would be a lot shorter.
 
If Linehan has a thread, this little cunt bitch Harrop should have one too.

@sperginity tried starting one but it didn't make it out of Proving Grounds.

https://kiwifarms.net/threads/dr-adrian-harrop.43600/

Mumsnet has a fuck ton of postings about Harrop, lots of content (including Glinner bitch fighting) if anyone cares to wade through it all: Latest thread; https://www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens...h-GMC-do-care-have-taken-it-to-the-next-level
Archive of the 1st page; http://archive.is/zikin

Note that Mumsnet threads have a max post count of 1000, and that is the fourth thread on this creep
 
When asked if his own recent visit from the police has made him reconsider his support for hate speech statutes, Linehan said no. In the case of Count Dankula, “hate speech laws were working just as they were supposed to,” he said. When it comes to his own case, however, he thinks police involvement was an overreach as well as poor use of police resources.

Jesus, he's such a bare-faced, hypocritical cunt.
 
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