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The Daily Sceptic
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Wokus Dei: Britain’s New Official Religion

by George Owers
14 April 2023 7:00 AM

When Charles II was restored in 1660, it was widely assumed that it would be on the condition of a new regime of (relative) religious tolerance. Charles himself had promised as much in his ‘Declaration of Breda’, a list of (vague) promises to his soon-to-be subjects made as a prelude to his reclaiming the throne. Given that the Presbyterians (one of the major Puritan sects that had caused his father so much trouble in the 1640s) were, by 1660, willing to acquiesce in his Restoration, this was hardly surprising. Certainly the Presbyterians themselves saw it as a quid pro quo: we’ll support your return if you give us freedom of worship. ‘Dissenters’ – that is, Protestant Christians who disagreed with the doctrines and rites of the Church of England, usually on the grounds that the latter was not Protestant enough – were to be allowed to exist in some reasonable degree of freedom.

This was not how things turned out. Charles’s promises came with two caveats. Firstly, “liberty to tender consciences” was promised on the condition that the religious views tolerated did not “disturb the peace of the kingdom”. Secondly, it was all conditional on the consent of parliament.

The parliament elected in 1661 was dominated by high-flying Anglican cavaliers. They had suffered themselves from religious persecution at the hands of the Presbyterians and then the Commonwealth regime in the 1640s and 1650s, and were in no mood to compromise or show ‘indulgence’ on matters spiritual. In their minds, Protestant Dissent was, by definition, incompatible with “the peace of the kingdom”. They passed a series of laws which, cumulatively, effectively made Protestant Dissent illegal. All members of the realm were legally obliged, in theory, to be members of the Church of England: to attend their parish church on a Sunday, pay tithes, and be baptised according to the rite of the Book of Common Prayer. ‘Conventicles’, i.e., Dissenting religious meetings, were banned, on pain of imprisonment or even transportation. Holding municipal office was made conditional on taking communion within the Church of England. These laws became known (rather unfairly) as the Clarendon Code (Clarendon, Charles’s chief minister, actually did not support most of it).

In practice, these laws were applied very unevenly. Charles II vacillated between patchy and ineffective enforcement of the code, more active attempts to live up to the promises of Breda and impose toleration by royal fiat (in reality, more because he wanted toleration for Roman Catholics than Dissenters), and furious reversions to persecution by means of rigid enforcement of the penal laws. At various points one policy or the other was more politically convenient for him. In the 1670s, the Test Act was passed, which actually tightened these restrictions further: it made Anglicanism compulsory for anyone holding any public office of any kind.

By the end of his regime, he had adopted a policy of whole-heartedly throwing his lot in with the Anglican establishment and the strict enforcement of the Clarendon Code (largely because they were the safest bulwarks of his regime in face of the threat from the Whigs, who were attempting to exclude his brother and heir, James, from the throne). When James acceded and became James II, he attempted to reverse this policy by giving indulgence to both Dissenters and Roman Catholics. He paid for the attempt with his crown.

James had been far more interested in toleration for his Roman Catholic co-religionists than for Dissenters, and this was incendiary in a country in which Protestant fear and hatred for ‘Popery’ united both Dissenters and Anglicans. The triumph of the revolution of 1688 in the face of (in the view of most contemporaries) the threat of rampant Popish rapine, murder and tyranny led to something of a pan-Protestant reapprochement: the common enemy of James II’s papism and the fact that the Dissenters had, in general, spurned James II’s offer of toleration made it hard for the Church of England to maintain the hardline position it had taken before 1688. The result was what is usually called the Toleration Act of 1689, which finally made Dissent legal (sort of).

The Toleration Act was not what it might appear, however. There is a widespread assumption that after the Glorious Revolution, toleration reigned and England suddenly gained complete freedom of worship and religion. This is one of those comforting fictions held by many with a superficial grasp of English history: it isn’t remotely true.

The Toleration Act was a very limited legal provision. It wasn’t even called ‘The Toleration Act’ – its actual title was ‘An Act for Exempting their Majestyes Protestant Subjects dissenting from the Church of England from the Penalties of certaine Lawes’. It did not repeal the penal laws against Dissent: it merely exempted from their penalties some of those who were prepared to take certain oaths pledging allegiance to the regime. It specifically excluded from its terms Roman Catholics and Protestant Dissenters who did not believe in the doctrine of the Trinity. Dissenters still had to register their conventicles with the authorities. And as for non-Christians – well, they gained precisely nothing from the Act. It allowed people to recuse themselves from Anglican services only if they went to a Dissenting one instead.

Perhaps most significantly, it did not give non-Anglicans full civil or political rights. The Test and Corporation Acts, which made it illegal for anyone other than Anglicans to hold any public office, ranging from being a member of a municipal corporation (effectively a local councillor) or a lord lieutenant through to being a judge or a minister of the crown, were not repealed. They were to remain the law of the land for another 139 years. By the late 1820s, the laws against Dissenters and even Roman Catholics had been repealed, and over the next few decades the vestigial elements of the Anglican monopoly (e.g. in the universities) were also dropped. It’s true that the Church of England is still the established church, but the practical political implications of this are now limited to, essentially, some ritual and ceremonial role and a few Bishops in the Lords. The confessional state ceased to be in the mid-19th Century.

It’s true that in practice elements of the 1689-1828 legal and political settlement were softened and bent over the years. Walpole ensured that the Corporation Act didn’t apply to newly founded corporations. ‘Occasional Conformity’ – where Dissenters took Communion in Anglican Churches in order to qualify for public office, while still predominantly worshipping as Dissenters – was practised by some to evade the Test Act. But the basics of what we call the ‘confessional state’ held. The state had an official religion that it actively encouraged. It discriminated against those who did not adhere to it and membership of the state apparatus at all levels (including the universities, which were a particularly pronounced example of total Anglican monopoly) was conditional on at least pretending to conform to it. But, in a modification to the older idea of Church-State relations, where being a subject of the realm and a member of the Church were merely two different ways of looking at the same thing, it was prepared to recognise and tolerate the existence of (at least some – in practice the majority of) non-adherents and give them some basic rights and freedoms.

Whatever else one might say about this, it was fairly clear. The beliefs that were officially sanctioned and those that attracted civil and political penalties were openly stated and precisely defined. Adherence to the doctrines, morals and rites of the Church of England, as expounded in the 39 articles, the Book of Common Prayer and the Church’s other official formularies and practically expressed by baptism and taking Communion a certain number of times per year was the condition of being a full member of the state and many state-aligned institutions. A hierarchy of beliefs outside of that was maintained and outlined in law: in effect, being a non-Anglican Trinitarian Protestant gave you second-class membership, being a Roman Catholic or non-Trinitarian Protestant gave you third-class membership, and anyone else was effectively in the fourth class (although that was generally practically irrelevant).

A confessional state of some kind – whether akin to the ‘full-fat’ pre-toleration version or the post 1689-version – has been the norm in human history, and remains the norm in much of the world. In many ways, the condition that flourished in England between around the mid-19th Century until quite recently, and in some other (largely western) countries around about the same time is quite exceptional. Indeed, even for quite a large chunk of that period in England – until around, say, the mid-20th Century – there remained a vague cultural and in some senses even implicit legal and political privilege accorded to, broadly, Christian (if not really specifically Anglican) doctrines and ethics. It fell some way short of a confessional state, but it was at least a fairly loud echo of it.

The short period when the state got about as near to genuine neutrality as is possible – from around the mid-20th Century, arguably somewhat earlier, until quite recently – was, I would argue, a sort of interregnum, a period that saw something like a balance of power between different world-views in which none was strong enough to enforce their own privilege or monopoly. This was the brief flourishing of something like free speech, freedom of conscience, full freedom of religion and so on.

That period is – has been for some years – drawing slowly but inexorably to a close. We are seeing the emergence of something like a new confessional state underpinned by a new orthodoxy – but with crucial differences relative to the last one.

What I’m referring to is a new(ish) set of doctrines, belief in which is effectively the condition of holding public office, elite status or full membership of a number of other powerful institutions. It would be tedious to go into this precisely, but the outlines are pretty clear. One must believe that the individual is a completely autonomous being, obliged to fashion themself according to their ‘real’ nature. This individual nature is shaped, paradoxically, by one’s membership of various identity groups – one’s sexuality, gender or race (with a few other identity categories having similar status). Certain identity categories – being ‘LGBT+’, being non-white, being Muslim – are, by virtue of their historical (and according to its adherents contemporary) status of being victims, absolutely sacred. For some reason, some of these categories are purely a matter of self-identification (gender most obviously), others (race most notably) are not. The highest good is to not only accept but actively celebrate and promote these sacred identities.

It seems fairly self-evident to me that this orthodoxy is riven by contradictions and logical absurdities, but probing those is not my purpose in this article. What I think is obvious – and this is hardly an original point, but it is important – is that these beliefs amount to a religion. A form of theology is the only way of really understanding them. The belief in individual autonomy, self-fashioning, the existence of some ‘authentic’ inner self (“Free to be me!”), and the sanctity of certain groups are all predicated on certain metaphysical beliefs that are essentially religious in nature: they are no less dogmas than the Chalcedonian definition of the nature of Christ or the Holy Trinity. They are not predicated on the existence of God, but rather the worship of other things: self, some inner gendered ‘soul’, victimhood and so on. This orthodoxy has its own religious symbols (the rainbow or ‘Progress Pride’ flag rather than the Cross); its own liturgy (LGBT History Month, Black History Month and so on); even its own rites (taking the knee, etc.).

Now, it seems to me that the fact that this world-view is essentially religious-metaphysical (and therefore ethical) and based on dogmatic premises that are difficult to empirically validate is not, in itself, the problem. I would argue that it is impossible not to hold such a worldview if one is a sentient human being, even if one holds one passively or mostly unthinkingly. There is no neutral space. The state must always embody some comprehensive worldview that is ultimately rooted in dogmatic, faith-based premises. Naturalism, empiricism, materialism: they are no less rooted, ultimately, in certain fundamental dogmas. The ‘golden age’ of ‘state neutrality’ was really more a question of the elite being sufficiently divided over which of those worldviews was correct to prevent any one becoming dominant to the point of having overwhelming and formal institutional privilege. This is a contingent situation, and one that is definitely unusual and almost certainly difficult – maybe impossible – to maintain indefinitely.

The problem with the orthodox worldview – call it ‘wokeism’, call it ‘critical social justice’, call it ‘rainbow flag orthodoxy’, call it what you like – is not that it is like all other similar worldviews in this respect: based on dogmas rooted ultimately in faith, seeking to promote and spread its doctrines, seeking state sanction and even monopoly. The problem is that it’s wrong. Its fundamental assumptions and dogmas are mistaken. But that is not my central point – that’s an argument for another day.

The most strikingly different and practically pernicious thing about the new orthodoxy is that it its priests and prophets are unable to take responsibility for or even admit what it actually is. Because part of its ideological and spiritual dynamic is rooted in the idea that is essentially oppositional – that it is inherently subversive – it can never acknowledge its own victory or status as an orthodoxy. That was, like or hate it, never a problem with the pre-Reformation Catholic Church or the post-Reformation Church of England. True, at various times – chiefly in their early stages – they had a subversive dynamic – against the Pagans, against the medieval Catholic Church. However, they were quite comfortable, after a while, with putting themselves forward as a complete, objectively true (albeit faith-based) framework for thinking about the nature of morality and reality, based on certain clear doctrinal statements and theological propositions, that could order our common life and, essentially, become the establishment. The new orthodoxy has to pretend to itself that it is always against any orthodoxy or establishment, even as it obviously becomes one to any external observer.

This is why the new orthodoxy imposes and enforces its dictates in the haphazard, often informal way that it does. People who deviate from the orthodoxy are sacked, blocked from advancement or cancelled all the time, but because the precise nature of its current contours is always unclear and because admitting their status as priests or state functionaries would run against the self-image of the orthodoxy’s supporters, it can’t be enforced in a clear or well-defined way. It is imposed in official ways that are arbitrary, confusing and often inconsistent; or in informal ways using mechanisms of social disapproval or semi-official pressure or self-censorship. Its adherents will swear blind that their opponents are imagining things or are hysterical and misinformed – then five minutes later they will admit that their opponents are quite right about what is happening, but what is happening is actually good. It manages to be an ideology that is shape-shifting, clear in outline but difficult to pin down exactly, forever denying its own status while it’s in the process of fulfilling it. It’s a turbo-charged dynamic force – and a dynamic force is, as Stanley Baldwin said, ‘a terrible thing’.

The confessional state we had between 1689 and 1828 was actually rather preferable.

Firstly, it existed in an era where the state had fair less power, particularly over non-state bodies. Dissenters may have been excluded from public office, but there were large realms of social and economic activity that were relatively free from government regulation, and therefore the sway of the confessional state, which meant they were able to dominate certain areas (commerce; finance, etc.). Given the close relationships that now exist between the state and many large corporations and employers – a necessary function of the long-term growth of the role of the state, but also a more recent development which we see in, for example, the weird private-public partnership between the U.S. state and the large tech firms that exists to censor social media – the new quasi-confessional state has more power to impose its orthodoxy over broader swathes of society.

Secondly, the old confessional state had pretty clear parameters and was, generally, applied quite consistently. The Church-State establishment rarely had serious qualms about using its power to promote its well-defined orthodoxy, and so it didn’t have to work by misdirection, constant shape-shifting and bad faith denials of its own power. Accommodations were made and loopholes allowed for practical reasons, but even they worked in a fairly predictable fashion.

All of this makes it very tempting to say: if we are going to live under a new official state-sanctioned religion, which promotes it own worldview and discriminates against those who demur from it – which it seems we are, whether I or you like it or not – then can we please have a proper, legally-defined, precise confessional state? Can we have a modern-day equivalent of the Test and Corporation Acts, of the Clarendon Code, so that we know precisely what we have to believe to be allowed to hold public office, work in universities, work for the government, etc.? At least then we would know where we stood and have some degree of legal and political certainty, which would be preferable to the ever-shifting soft-authoritarian theocracy that we are currently more than half-way towards. Then we could perhaps also have our own Toleration Act, which might let us know what legal and political rights we latter-day dissenters are still allowed.

The reality is that, for the reasons I outlined above, this is highly unlikely. The new orthodoxy, with its metaphysical underpinnings of subversion and never-ending progress, cannot face up to the responsibilities of being the establishment. They might not even have a stable or coherent enough doctrine to even be a conventional confessional state. They must exist in a weird double state, Schrodinger’s Orthodoxy – both the orthodoxy (in reality) and not-orthodoxy (in their own minds) at the same time.

And that is perhaps the most worrying thing: it seems possible that they will end up having the ultra-dynamism, the dream-logic and ideological doublethink of something far more akin to Stalinist totalitarianism than the old-fashioned Anglican confessional state, which in comparison seems positively mild.

George Owers is the editorial director of Forum Press, an imprint which aims to promote free debate and challenge cultural and political groupthink. He tweets and blogs under the name Capel Lofft. This piece was first published on his blog, The Tory Socialist.

Tags: Rainbow Flag OrthodoxyThe Confessional StateThe Test ActThe Toleration Act

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16 Comments
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Mark
Mark
3 years ago

No shame. Nothing to do with health.

Pure, authoritarian vindictiveness.

116
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Londo Mollari
Londo Mollari
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

It’s going to backfire.

54
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

Certainly hope so. But decades of experience does not encourage me to believe that the inflictors of gross injustices and mass harms necessarily pay any price for it, this side of the grave.

44
0
BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

It probably would have backfired in the past. But not in our “New Normal.” The corruption and groupthink is too comprehensive. I fear we have have passed a tipping point and Big Brother has probably won.

8
-1
milesahead
milesahead
3 years ago
Reply to  BillRiceJr

No – they have over-reached. 23.5 million people in the UK have not been jabbed! A bit more than the government have claimed!

Another one-and-a-half million have only had 1 jab. They’ll be plenty of double-jabbed who will refuse the booster – and more and more will refuse to have successive boosters. We just have to hold firm for another 12 months (maybe less).

28
0
TSull
TSull
3 years ago

I hope they have told their employers that they will be owed what ever has been deducted plus interest and penalties when this nightmare eventually ends.

54
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago

Can’t these unvaccinated teachers club together and start a school? I can imagine enquiries from parents will be high.

76
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AxelStone
AxelStone
3 years ago
Reply to  rtaylor

This, huge market for it at the moment; teaching respect for individual agency and personal liberty.

45
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Phil Shannon
Phil Shannon
3 years ago
Reply to  rtaylor

A good idea. I used to be a teacher (high school Maths and English) and am so glad I am retired before all the vaxx tryanny hit. But if I was still a teacher and under threat of the sack, I would club together with other vaxx Resistants and set up private, individual or small group, teaching/coaching groups for kids of principled parents. It would be hard to formally make it an above-ground business, as the vaxx mandates would make it illegal to operate legitimately under penalty of severe fines for all, but such a teaching underground would have legs.

12
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BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago
Reply to  Phil Shannon

Underground schools. What has the world come to? This said, I like your idea. But “they” are going to find the principals/principles of this business venture, if for no other reason then to tax the tuition payments.

5
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AxelStone
AxelStone
3 years ago

Union influence no doubt (as well as dodgy government). Interesting they say a testing regime is not sufficient. They’ll probably start one anyway once they catch up on the fact that viral load in the vaccinated is the same as in the unvaccinated. Just watch…

Last edited 3 years ago by AxelStone
21
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huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Well, this is certainly coercion.

54
0
Dale
Dale
3 years ago

Are there grounds for suing for attempted murder L

15
0
BS665
BS665
3 years ago

More recruits for Colonel Bosi.

I recommend watching the 1970s TV series ‘Secret Army’: about the Belgian resistance in World War Two. It’s kind of a serious version of ‘Allo Allo’.

Perhaps we all need to bone up on running an alternative state.

29
0
rayc
rayc
3 years ago

Hold out, sue for damages after the current government is removed.

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Backlash
Backlash
3 years ago

Governments all around the world are becoming ever more desperate to remove the control groups of people who haven’t had vaccination.

So what exactly is the issue with these mRNA experimental jabs and exactly what have they done to people that they need to cover up?

50
0
jingleballix
jingleballix
3 years ago
Reply to  Backlash

There is NO question that the jabs are dangerous, AND MAKE THINGS WORSE – even the Lancet has realised this.

https://igorchudov.substack.com/p/lancet-article-demolishes-vaccination

https://igorchudov.substack.com/p/denmark-no-vax-is-protective-vax

22
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BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

Even if the jabs were perfectly safe, I would reject them on grounds of coercion.

47
0
jingleballix
jingleballix
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

Agreed.

17
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Backlash
Backlash
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

My mother tried to blackmail me to eat sprouts forty years ago by withholding pocket money. I simply did without sweets and still don’t eat sprouts to this day.
Coercion didn’t work then and it never will on me.

Last edited 3 years ago by Backlash
30
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paul smith
paul smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Backlash

Send all unwanted sprouts to me, then!

12
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chrissybear
chrissybear
3 years ago
Reply to  Backlash

Was that yet another ruling from Brussels, one wonders??

4
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

I have the same attitude towards the similarly morally noxious seatbelt laws – I had no objection to wearing a seatbelt, in fact I had trained myself to put it on automatically when getting into a car.

Once it was coerced by law, I had to train myself out of doing that, so as to make a conscious rational decision each time whether I felt the risks of not wearing one outweighed the benefits. Now I only wear one for longer journeys on faster roads, or if there’s enforcement present.

Sadly the majority were happy to accept that law “for the greater good”. If people had held the line on that, it would have been that much more difficult for these mandates to be imposed.

4
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BS665
BS665
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I’d wear a seatbelt, but not a mask for 9 hours a day at work, or take a vaccine that enslaves not protects.

18
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  BS665

The issue isn’t (or shouldn’t be) the merits or not of the particular action, but the coercion.

And once you accept that coercion is acceptable in one case, you have sold the pass for the next case.

14
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jingleballix
jingleballix
3 years ago

In the past 25yrs, the teaching profession has ramped-up interventions that counter bullying.

Now the very educationalists and education authorities that have conferred upon ‘bullying’ the status of ‘eighth deadly sin’………..have become bullies themselves.

Teachers’ unions should be up in arms…….but the will be short-sighted and mocking those they perceive as ‘uncooperative’.

Wonder if they realise that it’s not going to be just about 2 jabs…..it’ll be about 3,4,5+ jabs, and somewhere down the line, they are going to have their pay cut if the don’t comply.

What will they do when the authorities want to jab beyond the line that they have personally drawn?

Last edited 3 years ago by jingleballix
21
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BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

Of course the people preaching an anti-bully message have become (or already were) bullies themselves. That’s the way it works.

6
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tom171uk
tom171uk
3 years ago

Is that even legal?

9
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Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Depends who’s staffing the courts and administering the law.

12
0
Hawkins_94
Hawkins_94
3 years ago

I’ve quite despondent now, we’re in their end game. I’m part of a fantasy football WhatsApp chat with 15 guys in their mid 20s. Today there was a discussion whereby a vocal few were baying for the blood of unvaccinated EPL players. Sometimes you lose hope and think the government has won the war.

I need to keep my job. I’m tied into a mortgage. I can’t move country because they’re all the same. I can’t hide forever, and that hurts. The reality is I’ll just have to live with the consequences of being vaccinated.

Ironically as I write this I’m isolating having finally caught covid. It was a mild flu. My instincts of why vaccination wasn’t appropriate for me have borne true.

31
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jingleballix
jingleballix
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

Yet your football friends have regularly seen professional footballers collapse on the pitch – often on live television.

Are they so stupid that connections cannot be made?

38
0
losingmojo
losingmojo
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

Don’t have the vax! Especially now you’ve had COVID. I’m sure I’ve read somewhere that vax reactions are worse in those who have had the “virus”.
Is being vaccinated in your contract? I’m guessing not, so a strong case for unfair dismissal, just don’t resign.
Stay strong and sane.

40
0
gone_loopy
gone_loopy
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

ignore the pricks, every group has them. The silent ones probably have a different view. Dont do anything you dont want to do until you really have no other choice.

16
0
John001
John001
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

Don’t despair. It’s obviously illegal under about five pieces of legislation.

Prepare to hire a lawyer. Or if it can be done in the county courts, you don’t even need that.

I’m mostly retired and fear receiving the state pension and buying food will eventually depend on it. However, I’d investigate the legal defences before that happened. Bear in mind that all vac mandates in the USA seem to have been thrown out by judges and we also use the common law system so have slightly more protection than Germany.

13
0
milesahead
milesahead
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

I wonder what inducement could be offered to someone who is administering these jabs to persuade them to squirt them into the nearest sink?

Last edited 3 years ago by milesahead
8
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Hawkins_94

You’re now immunised.

Don’t risk the jab now!

13
0
ewloe
ewloe
3 years ago

this will hurt them where it hurts them the most, in their pockets.

3
-1
amanuensis
amanuensis
3 years ago

Politicians only know how to do more of the same.

We do have a problem in these times as the politicians have suppressed any talk of how they’re wrong.

Some people say that the only requirement to becoming a political representative should be for the individual to not have any formal training in politics and, even better, not actually want to be a political representative in the first place — I’m beginning to think they’re right.

5
0
Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago

I thought I’d coined a new word to cover the global coup – Pharmocracy, but I see the word was previously used as the title of a book by Kaushik Sunder Rajan, published in 2017. I’ll use it anyway, though I haven’t read the book.

8
0
iane
iane
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

Idiocracy works equally well, of course!

10
0
DanClarke
DanClarke
3 years ago

There doesn’t seem any form of legal redress for being penalised for delaying the jab, and it could be only a delay, once it is out of the experimentation phase, so far the pharma companies have refused to have liablity for anything that happens. Some people wouldnt even buy a toaster without a guarantee.

Last edited 3 years ago by DanClarke
12
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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
3 years ago

Further proving that this is not about anyone’s safety, this is purely about getting people vaccinated.

21
0
TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago

Surely all they have to do is produce a copy of their contract, accompanied by a union rep and a lawyer?

9
0
JamesDrebin
JamesDrebin
3 years ago

A medicine so good, you have to lie, bully, and torture people to have it. Sign me up!

20
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LonePatriot
LonePatriot
3 years ago

They test for the flu since they’ve never isolated Covid-19. Which makes me wonder how they can tell there is a delta variant. They never isolated the virus but they use a test to show the damage of a solution does on monkey kidney cells then show the cellular debris as proof of the virus. So, they can use this method to claim an UNENDING! amount of variants. A lot of cancers and “viruses” are probably just different forms of parasites. Since the tests can’t differentiate between cold and flu and covid then doesn’t that mean ivermectin cures both the cold and the flu? Welcome to “they’ve been lying to us our entire lives about everything”. Get your Ivermectin while you still can! https://ivmpharmacy.com

2
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BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago

More “freedom” still allowed for the vaccinated. I love the “compassion” for these soon-to-be broke teachers and their soon-to-be hungry and stressed out children.

8
0
X - In Search of Space
X - In Search of Space
3 years ago

I just don’t see how this is ever legal. What is the basis/justification for witholding their holiday pay? Just what is it – in real terms – about not having a jab … what is the justification, that this is warranted?

Because, if you are unvaccinated … what? What does that positively equate to? What does the contrary – being ‘vaccinated’ – positively equate to?

I know they can just make stuff law, but I don’t see how they can actually justify this in any way, shape or form. If law or punnishment is not justifiably reasonable and necessary, then it is invalid, and wrong. It’s not good enough to say ‘it’s law – because we say so’.

Just what is it that justifies such consequenses of being unjabbed, as witholding pay, fines, sacking, etc? I mean, actual justification – not simply because ‘we say so’?

13
0
BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago

About that “Bucket List” wish to visit the land down under … scratch through that one.

Last edited 3 years ago by BillRiceJr
6
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

When did discrimatiin become acceptable?

1
0
Banjones
Banjones
3 years ago

The very idea that governments will mandate the acceptance of an unlicensed and experimental drug is deeply disturbing.

2
0
Simon
Simon
3 years ago

I wonder what’s happening in April 2022? Australian teachers and UK healthcare workers are getting sacked. Who else?

1
0
SimCS
SimCS
3 years ago

And yet the overwhelming majority of children will brush off any covid infection ‘case’ with ease and no ill effect. This is just not about health at all.

1
0
Idris
Idris
3 years ago

Don’t contract sof employment count anymore.

0
0
Gregoryno6
Gregoryno6
3 years ago

What we need is a revival of the hedge schools.
This might be the start.
Welcome to Grow Together School. We are a decentralised community network of teachers, parents and students. Driven by the need for change in the education system. We want a better future for our children, parents and teachers. Register to be connected to accredited teachers and to other parents who are seeking alternative education arrangements.

1
0
imp66
imp66
3 years ago

When the day of reckoning comes, and it will, I hope these put upon teachers, nurses, doctors, care home workers etc. are appointed to the juries at Nuremburg style courts to try these authoritarian bullies. Black cap at the ready, m’lud?

1
0
Newman20
Newman20
3 years ago

Australia is, truly, a fascist state.

0
0

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