High Court Blocks Cumbria Plan for U.K.’s First New Deep Coalmine in 30 Years in Landmark Legal Defeat
The U.K.'s first new deep coalmine in 30 years will not be allowed to go ahead after a landmark ruling in the High Court.
The U.K.'s first new deep coalmine in 30 years will not be allowed to go ahead after a landmark ruling in the High Court.
It's a striking coincidence that Kamala Harris and Keir Starmer are both former public prosecutors, says Dr David McGrogan. It's symbolic of the way law has been weaponised through political bias and double standards.
Bridget Phillipson is wrong about the Higher Education Freedom of Speech Act she has just torpedoed, says Oxford law academic Dr Julius Grower. It won't increase legal action for universities but will ease it.
The truly appalling thing about the Lucy Letby case has been the way in which vital legal precedents of wrongfully convicted mothers were disregarded by the judges, says legal expert Dr Peter Hayes.
The week before last, a panel of federal U.S. judges did something unusual – it called out a government agency for lying and, in the process, opened up for litigation the question: was it really a vaccine?
Why are U.K. courts still forcing people to be vaccinated? Lawyer Stephen Jackson looks at the disturbing case of a disabled man that the Government is trying to inject against the warning of a specialist medical report.
Judges are the world’s greatest confidence tricksters, says Dr. David McGrogan. Purporting to apply neutral law, in fact they impose their own politics via tendentious interpretations skewed towards elite biases.
Don't be fooled by bills of rights, warns Law Professor James Allan. They failed to stop lockdowns (everywhere) and are just tools of Leftist judicial activism.
The Human Rights Act 1998 was a judicialisation of politics, says Dr David McGrogan. "It transfers political decisions away from democratic processes and into the courts, where it will be unsullied by the electorate."
The controversial judge facing criticism for leniency towards women celebrating Hamas's 'paraglider' attacks, is accused of breaching the judiciary's code of conduct by discussing the imprisonment of a police officer.
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