A. Was the bullshit at Bristol not already against the law?But taxes are not and will never go up as you suggeted Rascal. You are objecting about unrealistic theoretical nonsense which will never happen anyway.
Seems to me that laws which give the police more power to stop the sorts of utter bullshit we saw in Bristol at the weekend, should be welcomed. Is your best objection really that it would also cover ludicrously fictitious and unrealistic scenarios which would never happen? Seems like a very lame objection indeed.
I get why many tossers (not you) do object however. For they are the very tossers who would be impacted: The sorts of tossers who turn up at every march, intent on causing anarchy and disruption for disruption's sake. In short, complete arseholes. The new law is in effect, an anti-arsehole law, and one we should all therefore support.
B. Have you read the bill or just following the silence of the lambs (Tory MPs)?
C. '“It’s tempting when home secretary,” May said to Patel from the benches above her, “to think that giving powers to the home secretary is very reasonable, because we all think we’re reasonable. But actually future home secretaries may not be so reasonable.” It was a mark of how far the country has fallen that May is now the voice of liberal conscience on the government benches.'