By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
Recently my lovely wife and I visited a hotbed of British totalitarianism, Anglia Ruskin “University” at Cambridge, to gather evidence for the courts in connection with a death threat that the “University” and one of its students had made against me in the form of a widely-publicized tombstone with my name on it, under the hate-speech slogan “Lest We Forget Those Who Denied”. I should explain that there are two universities at Cambridge: the real one, my own alma mater, which tops the league-table of Britain’s 133 universities, and Anglia Ruskin, a jumped-up polytechnic which, from what we saw of it, ranks about 250th out of 133.
Anglia Ruskin “University” suffers from an identity crisis. So its public relations people recently spent some taxpayers’ money buying advertising signs at Cambridge railway station, which, like the “University”, is 1½ miles from approaching a real University. These hilarious signs have done much to damage what little reputation the joke “University” may have had.
Sure enough, in a dusty corner of a grubby gallery on a tatty campus (why do grime and the hard Left have such an affinity for one another?) stood the tombstone on which the “artist”, a student to whom the “University” had awarded a prize for it, had engraved my name and those of five other British climate skeptics:
Ø Christopher Booker of the Sunday Telegraph, the world’s best regularly-published climate-skeptic columnist in any mainstream news medium;
Ø James Delingpole, who has transformed Breitbart London into the news website that everyone in Britain wants to read;
Ø Melanie Phillips, the redoubtable and always trenchant Daily Mail columnist, writing for the only daily paper that regularly reports how much nonsense global warming is;
Ø Lord Lawson of Blaby, Margaret Thatcher’s former Finance Minister, and founder of the authoritative Global Warming Policy Foundation; and
Ø Owen Paterson, the affable squire who, like most country folk, does not believe a word of the urban-myth cargo-cult doctrine of global warming, and is a former Secretary of State for the Environment.
Now, to put a victim’s name on a tombstone while the victim is still alive is to make a death threat, the nastiest and most repellent form of hate speech. If the tombstone had been erected anywhere in Scotland rather than on a manifestly dysfunctional campus in England, I could have had Professor Michael Thorne, the “University’s” Vice Chancellor, tried, fined, and bound over not to repeat that or any suchlike offense.
Professor Thorne had caused or permitted a press release to be issued, promoting this unspeakable death threat. The release explained that the tombstone bore the words “Lest we forget those who denied”. The implication was that, if we were not already dead, the “artist” and the “University” that promoted his “work” would very soon see to it that we were.
Indeed, the press release reinforced the threat in several unpleasant ways. Like the tombstone, it used the word “denier” or its derivatives – and did so five times in a single page. The intent of this hate-speech word, banned throughout Scotland by the law against threatening communications, is to compare climate change “deniers” with Holocaust deniers.
It mattered not to the Vice Chancellor, nor to the “artist”, that I do not deny the existence of climate change, which has, after all, been happening for 6000 or 4.5 billion years, depending on your point of view. I do not even deny that Man may have some as yet unquantified but probably insignificant and even net-beneficial influence on the climate.
Indeed, I have recently published with three distinguished colleagues – Dr Willie Soon, Professor David Legates and Dr Matt Briggs – a scientific paper making that fact quite plain. It’s well worth a read. Go to scibull.com, click on “Most Read Articles”, and ours is the all-time no. 1 in the 60-year archive of the Science Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Please download it now from scibull.com, and get all your friends to do the same. The more the Science Bulletin’s own ticker for our paper counts up, the more it will be realized that the scientific viewpoint we represent – the technical term for it is “the objective truth” – is widely supported.
The mere truth, however, did not stand in the way of the “University” or of the “artist”, who is recorded in the “University’s” press release as having said: “With this work [work?] I envisage a time when the deliberate denial of climate change will be seen as a crime because it hinders progress towards a low carbon future.” Kill them, kill them all!
To make the air of menace worse, “Dr” Aled Jones, the director of the “Global” “Sustainability” “Institute” at the “University”, said the “sculpture could be viewed in decades to come as a monument to a period of history that saw scientific knowledge battle to be heard above political ideologies.”
In the context, what this numpty meant was that climate “deniers” like me, even though our detailed and legitimate scientific objections to the climate scam have been reviewed and published in the Science Bulletin (have you and all your friends downloaded our paper from scibull.com yet?) and many learned journals, were mere political ideologues, while totalitarian true-believers like him, with little knowledge of and no interest in the scientific truth, were the sole repository of “scientific knowledge”.
In fact it is the other way about.
Every so often, I decide not to do what a couple of the other names on the tombstone did. I decided not to laugh it off. A death threat is a death threat. It is no laughing matter.
I have recently been reading Richards’ masterly three-volume history of the Third Reich. The first volume deals with the perplexing question how that monstrous regime came to be. And it is plain that the long, relentless campaign of intimidation by the Nazis of their opponents, with name-calling and death threats very similar to that perpetrated by the “University” and by all too many others over the past ten years, was an essential part of the process.
Most people laughed off the Nazi threats, at first. In Britain and in many other countries, full-on appeasement followed, in the hope that looking the other way would make the threats vanish.
It didn’t work. Tens of millions died because too few – the few including such honorable and courageous men as Popes Pius XI and XII and Cardinal Faulhaber of Munich – openly spoke out against the terror. Too many, including Britain and most European governments, went along with it and tried to appease it until it was suddenly too late.
The Nazis then, like their irrational, unlearned, hate-filled ideological successors at the “University” today, meant what they said. They killed those they had said they would kill.
So my clerk wrote to the Vice Chancellor, listing a couple of dozen previous instances, all of them in the past decade, where death threats and demands for trial, imprisonment and execution had been made, very publicly, against climate skeptics. This is by no means an isolated or exceptional incident. There is an increasingly dangerous pattern to it.
I also wrote to the police and the procurator fiscal in Edinburgh, warning them that if the “University” did not remove the press release from the web and the tombstone from the gallery I should expect them to prosecute the internet service providers who were carrying the threat into Scotland.
The “University’s” first instinct was to call in the shysters who are always willing, if paid enough, to come to the defense even of the nastiest totalitarian bullies. In this case, the shysters were Anderson Strathern LLP, of Glasgow. Don’t use them, ever, for any purpose. For they pretended there was no connection between the phrase “climate change denier” and “Holocaust denier” – though all they had to do was to Google the two terms together to see just how deliberate and how widespread that connection is. And they said the “University” had “no proposals to make”.
By then, however, the police and the Fiscal were in the picture, so the “University” found it expedient to ignore its shysters and to come to its senses. The press release has been removed from the web, both by the “University” and by another Cambridge website that had unwisely reproduced it. And the tombstone is now gone too.
The poisonous air of palpable menace remains. Dr Roger Pielke Jr., a scientist who has taken a gently sceptical view on some aspects of the climate question, has recently announced that he can no longer conduct climate research, because he fears for the safety of himself and his family.
No doubt many more scientists would have spoken out by now against the totalitarian profiteers of doom who are doing so much to destroy not only the economy but also the freedom of the West.
As the danger that an unelected world government will be inflicted upon us at the Paris climate summit this December draws ever closer, we are expecting more such malevolent attacks by the environmentalist Sturmabteilung. But we shall not be deterred by totalitarian thuggery. We shall continue to speak the truth as best we can discern it, whether today’s Nazis like it or not.
And if you are tempted to cite Godwin’s “Law” to the effect that he who calls his opponents Nazis has lost the argument, let me cite Monckton’s Law in return: those who cite Godwin’s Law confirm ipso facto that they are active supporters of today’s Fascists.
Whatever you do, don’t send your daughter to Anglia Ruskin “University”. And don’t ever send it so much as a dime. It is an unworthy institution. Send the money to Cambridge University (above) instead. We’re the real thing. We’ll put it to good and proper use: the advancement not of crude, Fascist propaganda but of learning.
I might have been tempted to leave the matter there, given that the “University” had had the sense to take down its press release and, eventually, the tombstone too. However, the shysters’ letter indicates a cast of mind I don’t like the smell of. I’m preparing a detailed report for the police in Cambridge, for under English law the tombstone and the press release together constitute – at minimum – conduct likely to cause a breach of the Queen’s peace, contrary to s.1, Justices of the Peace Act 1361, the most commonly-cited provision of English criminal law in the magistrates’ courts.
I’m going to have these wretches prosecuted: not the student, who is manifestly not adult enough to understand the seriousness of what he has done, nor even the dreadful “Dr” Aled Jones, who is arguably too blinded by Marxist prejudice and too ignorant of the true science behind the climate scam to think rationally at all.
But an outfit that describes itself, however implausibly, as a “University” ought at least to have made some attempt to behave like one, and not to have made death threats by way of press releases. It should have kept the peace. Now it will reap the whirlwind.
Ø This is an extended and illustrated version of my regular and unmissable Monday column at wnd.com. Click “Opinion”, then “Commentator line-up”.
(Another wasted effort by a banned sockpuppet. Comment DELETED. -mod)
to be fair, that’s not a death threat. I had 2 proper death threats last night in the pub.
To be fair, they may have lacked the subtlety or sophistication of a Tombstone with your name on it but if you take them seriously then you can only be taken seriously if you act on them.
Recall how that Academic from the University of Graz was it, responded when called out and invited to behave civilly. Christopher was determined but drill much too accommodating in my view, in pursuing that despicable behaviour.
to be fair, that’s not a death threat. I had 2 proper death threats last night in the pub.
is there an echo in here ?
It is the creation of somebody who tries to get attention by latching on to some large concept like death but not really saying what it is they think about death, assuming everybody understands the reference, which is probably a mistake.
I have noticed this sort of behaviour before with these ” artistic” students.
Really I would ignore it unless you want to make mischief then go ahead.
No harm in the ‘artist’ learning how they may be be misunderstood, while it is not the artist being pursued, but the institution that promoted the display & publication of whatever message it carries.
this thing is a feeble attempt at communication.
” Oy you!, yes you FVtard would you like my fist in your face ? ”
” I’ll bite your nose off ”
Now that is communication.
The communication may have been feeble, but perhaps all the more insidious for that.
The response is a far more effective & public way of holdings influential institutions to account however, than the direct speaking you suggest.
The lawsuit I’d like to see is one directed at those who have claimed that WUWT and Anthony are “on the payroll” of Heartland. This includes, Mann, SourceWatch, and Desmogblog. This would have a much bigger impact, because millions have read and believed that charge, because it would damage the credibility of those false accusers to lose in court, and because it would provide an opportunity to cross-examine and expose Gleick about the origin and authorship of his phony Heartland “Strategy” document, which Desmogblog bases its claims on.
I laid out the case for such a suit in three WUWT comments here:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/05/10/open-thread-weekend-20/#comment-1633276
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/06/07/why-climate-change-doesnt-scare-me/#comment-1656581
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/06/07/why-climate-change-doesnt-scare-me/#comment-1656913
$250,000 allocated by Heartland–or somebody–to this suit would provide ten times more bang for the buck than a similar allocation to any other project. It would get lots of press and put alarmists on the defensive. And it would do so without exposing the names of Heartleand’s donors.
[Snip. Stop your ad hominem attacks. ~mod.]
Send flowers? If they could,
I think they would send you triffids…
They describe themselves as Anglia Ruskin ‘University’.
The quotation marks tell us all we need to about this ‘university’!
I should have typed “….. all we need to know about” – I was laughing too much – my apologies.
One can never know how seriously to take a threat, even a veiled one, as nobody can really truly know the mind of another. However, after a tragic event when someone does something unthinkable, the interviews with the friends and associates of the villain always say something akin to “well, yeah, he would mutter about doing this, but we assumed he was just blowing off steam. I guess we should have taken him more seriously.”
You can also not ever know how a zealous person wanting to make the ultimate statement might interpret this. They might see this as the perfect hit list, rationalizing that in the long run they’re saving lives, and feel like their actions were justified in defense of the planet. Or perhaps a psychotic person sees the university promoting this “art”, and in their schizophrenic world these are marching orders to be followed.
Freedom comes with responsibility. There is a world of difference between a piece of art sitting on a workbench in an art studio at the university, and one that is sanctioned by the university with an award. There is a world of difference between a piece of art which vaguely references “climate change deniers” and one that specifically calls out names. This is a world of difference between hoping that “deniers” have no power (i.e. behind bars), and portraying them as dead as names on a tombstone. There is a world of difference between holding a certain position privately, and actively promoting it by publishing it clearly under the banner of the university on the web site.
A couple of days in court tap dancing and considering the ramifications of their actions might do them some good. It might urge some caution and civility to others in positions of authority to be more responsible with how they wage their campaigns. I’ll even help by composing their mia culpa:
“Recently the university awarded a citation to a student artist who piece contained the names of some prominent climate change opponents on a tombstone. The university then subsequently promoted the award on its web site. Without commenting on the merits of the art or award, the university regrets these actions. The sanctioning of this particular piece of art could have been interpreted as a threat to the individuals named, and that was not the university’s intent.
“The university does not wish any harm to the individuals named, nor do support violence in any manner for holding any particular opinion regarding climate change. We have therefore rescinded the award for this particular art work, and apologize without reservation for any perception of a threat it may have conveyed. The university supports the open and free exchange of ideas, and future citations will reflect that ideal.”
I am sure that if the university were to publish such a statement, Mr. Monckton might have a change in perspective about the need to pursue prosecution.
Perhaps as punishment you should require the student to write one hundred lines; “there is a pause, I know it”, although considering the “university” the requirement the writing need be ‘joined up’ will have to be waved… and crayons allowed?
Is that his Lordship in the background climbing the fence at Cambridge railway station with a pot of blue paint and a wet paintbrush in his hand? : )
No, it’s my clerk.
The proper response to this “art” is not censorship, it’s a tombstone of the hockey stick.
Heh, heh. What if the subjects of this ‘tombstoning’ were to commission works of their own ? In honour of the ‘university’, the institute, it’s directors & the artist and displayed prominently and with similar fanfare. Would that be brushed of so lightly by the original antagonists as the present subjects are expected to swallow this vile assault ? Works in Cotwold stone or ‘redbrick’perhaps and sited under an olive tree to signify a pleasantly warming Anglia.
Meanwhile , as I don’t expected a masterpiece worthy of the ‘university’ to be knocked up overnight, I expect Josh might delight us with a cartoon or two.
@richard Courtney 21 May post.
Sir, there is no doubt that both as a matter of dogma and doctrine, Nazism was Leftist. Just read their literature and understand their founding philosophies. The Italian form of Fascism is very similar, and there is plenty for a good argument about Spanish Fascism being Leftist too. Equally there is no argument that Communism and the ghastly subset of Socialism it spawned, are Leftist.
The default position of the political Left is totalitarianism – when they lose the debate about ideas, they demonise their opposition (always in the name of “the people”) and then start murdering them. It is just possible that we are at the very early stages of this process with CAGW, especially now that “Big Government” is weighing in with all its resources and power.
Perhaps the greatest success of the post-War intellectual Left is that it has successfully controlled the debate about Nazism and misled people like you into believing that Nazism was (and indeed that any sort of “nationalism”) is a disease of the political Right, while Socialism, particularly in its modern European guise, is benevolent. It is not and never will be, because it seeks to control absolutely.
Be careful.
With all due respect: There are always plenty of real things to criticize about any person or group. You wreck your credibility with the Hitler name-calling.
CAGW-ers, are not equivalent to Nazis, nor is “the Left.” They just aren’t. It doesn’t matter how you categorize Hitler’s politics. His Austrian-ness doesn’t indict all Austrians. He was a singular monster, and your comparison is offensive.
Ask a victim of historical Fascism and/or Nazism what they think about your analogy.
Unsolicited advice: Always try to be better and more ethical than your opponent.
@richard Courtney 21 May post
…I should add to my riposte that I agree with you insofar as there is little to choose between the outward appearance and political methodologies of the hard Right, and those of the hard Left.
The trick is not to confuse the underlying philosophies when trying to deal with these evils – they are very different political animals, and different approaches are required to neutralise them.
So much for being either a political liar or deluded fool.
What are some of these different approaches to neutralising them, when universal approaches like relentless pursuit of the truth and standing up to bullies aren’t enough ?
@CJ Richards
Always walk softly and carry a very big stick, and be prepared to use it. I see some whingers on here commenting about Dresden etc yesterday.
Dresden, Hamburg, Hiroshima etc..That is what I mean by being prepared to use a big stick. It reminds Right and Left wing lunatics not to start something they might not be able to finish.
@TakebacktheGreen 22 May post
Sir, I have called no-one a Nazi.
I observe merely that organised CAGW alarmism is coming largely from the Left of the political spectrum.
I point out that the most pernicious and murderous regimes in history have all been Leftist, and that the default position of the political Left is totalitarianism.
In UK, try having a sensible debate about immigration, for example, and in seconds you will be labelled a “racist” or “bigot” by those of Left-leaning persuasion. Try debating climate issues from a neutral, knowledge-based perspective as opposed to a “green-emotive” one, and you will be labelled a “denier” by those on the Left.
This is evidence of how the Left operates, broadly speaking. It shuts down any debate it cannot win. The totalitarian “we bien pensants know best for you the herd” attitude comes to the fore very quickly.
This is quite the opposite to the Libertarian standpoint, though not different from the extreme Right – there the basis for shutting down the debate and what follows is usually some form of chauvinism rather than appealing to a utopian ideal.
It takes courage to face this sort of thing down – and the sort of principled stand Lord Monckton takes. What he is doing in this instance may appear mildly eccentric and an over-reaction, but it is absolutely necessary.
Martin Niemoller is quoted elsewhere on this thread – his words are as pertinent today in the context of the climate debate (especially now Big Government has weighed in) as they were when he wrote them.
As for your suggestion that my observation would somehow offend a victim of Nazism (or any other -ism), you miss the point completely. Those victims, I imagine, have long since spotted the danger inherent in organised “Global Warmism” and its modus operandi in academia and in co-opting governments.
You should perhaps go off and read a little Stephen Schneider. He was very quick to play the Nazi card against sceptics, while at the same time openly espousing Goebbel’s principle on propaganda.
Its a matter of public record…and it should give you cause to think.
Your argumentation demonstrates why allowing politics into what should be a scientific debate is a distracting waste of time. “Politics” is philosophical, not scientific. Discussing Nazism is the ultimate distraction. I’m enabling it by replying, but one final try:
1) I didn’t say you called anyone a Nazi. Straw man argument.
2) You didn’t “merely…” anything. The takeaway: The politics of CAGW-ers and Climate Realists is not important. The science is. How many times does that have to be said? As an anti-theist, climate realist, pro-GMO, anti-organic, evolution-accepting, scientifically literate person, I find myself allied with all portions of the political spectrum at different times. If I didn’t set politics aside, it would be madness.
3) Immigration. Another non-scientific example.
4) People of all persuasions, including Libertarian, try to shut down debates they can’t win. Human nature plus social training.
5) It is intrinsically self-serving to decide for one’s self that one’s own experience is the “final straw.” Worse, that one’s enemies are as bad as genocidal maniacs. It distracts from the issue, gives attention to opponents, and loses sympathy. There’s a reason behind the saying “Take the high road.” (I also said I understand and sympathize with Monckton’s anger.)
6) It is fallacious to pretend you know the minds of victims of Nazism. That’s why I suggested you actually ask. Test your hypothesis. I predict you will find yourself and your question very unpopular.
7) Before I studied the CAGW issue for myself and realized my former opinion was wrong, I saw and read several interviews with Schneider and had the same opinion then that I do now. He was a bitchy, sarcastic, snide, hateful and unpleasant person who only harmed his side. (The clips of him in “Cool It” are fairly representative.)
Is that the standard we’re aiming for? Why should I think about him? Why shouldn’t I want people on “my side” to be better than that? Why shouldn’t we be allowed to constructively criticize our “allies” when they harm our cause?
You must realize and accept this: When skeptics make climate change into a political issue and try to win by personal attack, it is exactly as stupid as when CAGW-ers do it.
Skeptics don’t drink petroleum and CAGW-ers aren’t Nazis.
@takebackthegreen
Sir, odd though it may seem, we do not disagree too much:
1) I didn’t say you called anyone a Nazi. Straw man argument….
I did not say CAGW-ers were equivalent to Nazis, nor that “the Left” are. I point out some general truths about the political Left, draw attention to some nascent tendencies in the CAGW meme, and urge caution about CAGW-ers. Do you deny that?
2) You didn’t “merely…” anything. The takeaway: The politics of CAGW-ers and Climate Realists is not important…
With respect, the politics of CAGW is important the moment governments swing their weight behind the CAGW hypothesis and all the solutions that (failed) hypothesis proposes – at expense to the taxpayer and of civil liberty. Return to (1) above…
…The science is [important]. The problem is CAGW-ers don’t want to discuss the science sensibly. How many times does that have to be said?…
I agree.
As an anti-theist, climate realist, pro-GMO, anti-organic, evolution-accepting, scientifically literate person, I find myself allied with all portions of the political spectrum at different times. If I didn’t set politics aside, it would be madness…
Again, I agree, subject to the caveat above. Your point of departure is not very different from mine philosophically speaking.
3) Immigration. Another non-scientific example….
Of course it is non-scientific. It is there to demonstrate a nascent tendency of “the Left” we should be alert to.
4) People of all persuasions, including Libertarian, try to shut down debates they can’t win. Human nature plus social training….
You appear to conflate what “people” as opposed to philosophical approaches, do. Libertarianism does not as a matter of philosophical approach, shut down debate. It would require an essay in political philosophy to discuss this fully, so I will try to summarise by saying Libertarianism encourages competition of ideas and responsibility for self, whereas the Left has alarming tendencies to tell people what to think, and holds that Nanny knows Best in the pursuit of Utopia. When Nanny is challenged or defied, she gets nasty.
5) It is intrinsically self-serving to decide for one’s self that one’s own experience is the “final straw.” Worse, that one’s enemies are as bad as genocidal maniacs. It distracts from the issue, gives attention to opponents, and loses sympathy. There’s a reason behind the saying “Take the high road.” (I also said I understand and sympathize with Monckton’s anger.)…
I agree. I’m not sure whether you are making a general observation, or saying this is my approach – It is not and I didn’t say it was. See my comments above.
6) It is fallacious to pretend you know the minds of victims of Nazism. That’s why I suggested you actually ask. Test your hypothesis. I predict you will find yourself and your question very unpopular….
You do precisely what you criticise in me by implying victims of Nazism would be appalled by my analysis. It was you who presumed to know what these victims might think when you made your original observation, I simply countered your point, adopting your line.
7) Before I studied the CAGW issue for myself and realized my former opinion was wrong, I saw and read several interviews with Schneider and had the same opinion then that I do now. He was a bitchy, sarcastic, snide, hateful and unpleasant person who only harmed his side. (The clips of him in “Cool It” are fairly representative.)….
Agree. He was also an enthusiastic acolyte of the “Ice Age Cometh” cult of the 1970s, til that didn’t happen. The he became the High Priest of CAGW. What, I ask, is the real agenda of someone like this if not ultimately political?
Is that the standard we’re aiming for? Why should I think about him? Why shouldn’t I want people on “my side” to be better than that? Why shouldn’t we be allowed to constructively criticize our “allies” when they harm our cause?…
Agree entirely, save that when that debate is shut down by aggressive name-calling and wholesale co-opting of government by Left-leaning pressure groups, we should all be very wary of what happens next, given the history of the political Left.
I am not suggesting that Schneider would have resorted to brutality, or indeed that any individual CAGW-er would, in order to further their viewpoint. The problem comes when governments are co-opted – they don’t shrink from brutality.
It’s perhaps worth observing the Nazis came to power completely constitutionally. Once they had control of the levers of German state, they ran amok. All the nastiness that people had not quite believed the Nazis meant, turned out to be exactly what they meant. Have a look at the video clip of exploding “deniers” earlier on this thread…and reflect.
You must realize and accept this: When skeptics make climate change into a political issue and try to win by personal attack, it is exactly as stupid as when CAGW-ers do it…
I “must” do nothing. Leaving that aside, I have not ever sought to make a political issue out of the CAGW debate. When, however, the CAGW-ers ignore the evidence that destroys central tenets of the CAGW hypothesis, co-opt government by assiduous lobbying, and turn aggressively on sceptics wanting to debate the science, it behooves us to think very carefully about the nature of the beast we are dealing with, and what its agenda might be.
Skeptics don’t drink petroleum and CAGW-ers aren’t Nazis.
I agree. And for the record, I am appalled by the frankly criminal despoiling of the Earth and its resources by man. I am in favour of a fully-integrated approach to energy provision, for controlled and managed exploitation of natural resources, of international co-operation at every level (short of world government) to husband those resources and ensure the environment is protected and where damaged, restored. I would describe myself as a conservative environmentalist. I am open minded, trained by a lifetime of academic study and work to think carefully and analyse forensically.
And when I see nascent tendencies towards totalitarianism, I start to become concerned.
I see that my comments now await moderation. I didn’t think anything I’ve said was at all controversial. But intended or not, I don’t want to be viewed as such. So I’m happy to continue reading this site and refrain from further comment.
[Reply: The word “Nazi” in any comment will put it into moderation for review. It’s not personal, there are certain trigger words that either Anthony or WordPress use to allow a comment to be checked before approving. Your comments have been posted now. ~mod.]
Thank you for your rapid clarification, which makes complete sense.
Many thanks to your lordship for your tireless efforts. You have my unwavering support.
Like you I graduated from Cambridge University (Pembroke College). I have degrees in Physics and Electrical Engineering.
It blows my mind that our Alma Mater supports Climate Alarmism. They are doing it for the money. It makes me feel dirty.
I see that refuge for closet Guardian readers who like being humoured that they think for themselves, the ‘Independent’ has picked up the story.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/climatechange-sceptic-viscount-monckton-of-brenchley-claims-tombstone-artwork-critical-of-his-position-is-a-death-threat-10265255.html
What on earth id happening to the universities of the west? They have been infiltrated with left thinking progressive liberals who seem angry with and despise democratic principles like freedom of expression when it comes to views that differ to their views.
Just look what recently happened at the University of Western Australia, as an example.