Sunday, March 23, 2025

Eagerly Awaited.

 Government told to prioritise biological sex, not gender identity.

21 Mar, 2025
gender (Photo: Getty/iStock)

A review into the recognition of sex and gender in public services has said that the government should require all public bodies to take a firmer line on recording the biological sex rather than gender identity.

The recommendation follows a number of cases in which failure or refusal to take sex into account potentially placed members of the public at risk.

Of these the most egregious is the failure of police forces to record the sex of those accused or found guilty of sexual offences.

The most high profile incident of this kind was Isla Bryson. Bryson is a biological male who was previously known as Adam and now identifies as a woman. In 2023 Bryson was found guilty of raping two women, although by this time Bryson had begun the process of “transitioning”.

Bryson was initially sent to a women’s prison before public concern led to relocation to a male facility.

The review into government practice in this area was led by Professor Alice Sullivan from the Social Research Institute and University College London. The review said the government should require all police forces to record the sex of offenders, rather than their gender identity.

So far, the government has pledged to consider the reviews findings, but has stopped short of saying it will implement them.

Another area of concern is the health service. The review has said that the NHS should cease issuing new NHS numbers to people who self-identify as a new gender.

There are “clear clinical risks” to this practice as it can mean people will not be called up for sex-specific procedures, such as smear tests or prostate examinations. The review also identified the risks of lab results for patients being misinterpreted with “potentially fatal consequences” if the patient’s biological sex is not clear.

Across the board, public bodies were criticised for having inconsistent records of people’s sex or gender.

The report also noted that staff in public services were afraid to challenge the new fluid approach to sex and gender, with many feeling that their workplace was a “hostile environment” in which they could not raise concerns on questions of sex and gender. CT.

Birdie.




 

Power Comes With THe Holy Spirit.

Bible Sales - A Huge Increase.

 https://www.christiantoday.com/news/bible-sales-surge-by-87-as-generation-z-rediscovers-faith

Mozambique.

 https://www.christiantoday.com/news/nun-helping-to-relieve-suffering-in-mozambique

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Farewell Reverend George.

George Foreman dead: Two-time world heavyweight boxing champion passes away aged 76.

George Foreman, who won the heavyweight title in 1973 and then again in 1994, has passed away at the age of 76, his family announced on Friday afternoon

George Foreman in boxing ring

Two time world heavyweight champion George Foreman has died, his family announced on Monday (Image: Mirrorpix)

The world of boxing mourns the loss of a true heavyweight titan, George Foreman, who has passed away at the age of 76.

In a heartfelt statement released on social media, Foreman's family shared their grief: "Our hearts are broken. With profound sorrow, we announce the passing of our beloved George Edward Foreman Sr. who peacefully departed on March 21, 2025 surrounded by loved ones.

"A devout preacher, a devoted husband, a loving father, and a proud grand and great grandfather, he lived a life marked by unwavering faith, humility, and purpose."

They continued to honour his legacy, stating: "A humanitarian, an Olympian, and two time heavyweight champion of the world, He was deeply respected - a force for good, a man of discipline, conviction, and a protector of his legacy, fighting tirelessly to preserve his good name - for his family." Express.

Ukraine.

A Christian view of talks to end the war in Ukraine. 

20 Mar, 2025 
Ukraine (Photo: Unsplash/Yaroslav Romanenko)

Efforts by President Trump to end the war in Ukraine have sharply polarised opinion in the Western world.

On the one hand, many have praised these efforts on the grounds that, unlike the previous American administration, President Trump and his administration are not simply providing open-ended political, monetary and military support in order to enable Ukraine to keep on fighting but are seeking to make such support unnecessary by bringing about peace between Ukraine and Russia. 

On the other hand, there also many who are critical of this effort, not because they do not want to see the war between Russia and Ukraine come to an end, but because they believe that the way that President Trump is seeking to achieve this goal rewards Russian military aggression and runs the danger of the end of Ukrainian independence. 

In this article I want to try to bring a Christian perspective to bear on this polarised argument by looking at those Christian principles which need to be borne in mind when assessing the current efforts to bring the war in Ukraine to an end. 

The first of these principles is the paradoxical principle that the goal of war is the achievement of peace. This point was famously made by the early Christian theologian Augustine in a letter to a Roman general called Boniface who wanted to know whether, as a Christian, he could continue to be a soldier. Augustine’s answer was ‘yes’ but with the crucial caveat that: 

‘Peace should be the object of your desire; war should be waged only as a necessity, and waged only that God may by it deliver men from the necessity and preserve them in peace. For peace is not sought in order to kindle war, but war is waged in order that peace may be obtained. Therefore, even in waging war cherish the spirit of a peacemaker, that by conquering those whom you attack you may lead them back to the advantages of peace; for our Lord says ‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God’’ (Matt 5:9).

In the light of this principle, the desire of President Trump and his administration that there should be peace in Ukraine is a legitimate one. The only good outcome of the present war in Ukraine is the achievement of peace. However, the assessment of the administration’s approach becomes more complicated if you take a second Christian principle into account. 

This principle is that war is to be fought under the authority of secular rulers for the sake of peace with justice. To put it another way, the magistrate is called to exercise the God given power of the sword (Romans 13:4), to prevent the wicked doing harm to the innocent. Seen in this light, as the sixteenth century German Reformer Martin Luther wrote, the waging of war can be viewed as a ‘work of love’ comparable to the actions of a doctor:

‘…. a good doctor sometimes finds so serious and terrible a sickness that he must amputate or destroy a hand, foot, ear, eye, to save the body. Looking at it from the point of view of the organ that he amputates, he appears to be a cruel and merciless man; but looking at it from the point of view of the body, which the doctor wants to save, he is a fine and true man and does a good and Christian work, as far as the work itself is concerned. In the same way, when I think of a soldier fulfilling his office by punishing the wicked, killing the wicked, and creating so much misery, it seems an un-Christian work completely contrary to Christian love. But when I think of how it protects the good and keeps and preserves wife and child, house and farm, property and honour and peace, then I see how precious and godly this work is; and I observe that it amputates a leg or a hand, so that the whole body may not perish. For if the sword were not on guard to preserve peace, everything in the world would be ruined because of the lack of peace. Therefore, such a war is only a very brief lack of peace that prevents an everlasting and immeasurable lack of peace, a small misfortune that prevents a great misfortune. 

‘What men write about war, saying that it is a great plague, is all true. But they should also consider how great the plague is that war prevents. If people were good and wanted to keep peace, war would be the greatest plague on earth. But what are you going to do about the fact that people will not keep the peace, but rob, steal, kill, outrage women and children, and take away property and honour? The small lack of peace called war or the sword must set a limit to this universal, worldwide lack of peace which would destroy everyone.’ 

The reason that this second principle complicates the assessment of the American administration’s approach is because it raises the question of whether the sort of peace that the administration seems to be suggesting would be peace with justice. If the administration were to pressure the Ukrainians to agree to peace on Russia's current terms this would indeed bring the war to an end. However, as I have already indicated, the administration’s critics would say that the peace would be an unjust one because Russia would be rewarded for its aggression and Ukraine would probably end up losing its independence. 

Such critics would argue that support should be given to Ukraine to enable it to keep fighting until a just peace can be achieved involving the restoration of all the territories that Russia has taken from Ukraine since 2014 and the punishment of Russia (or at least its leaders) for having started the war in the first place. However, at this point some on the other side of the argument would then invoke a third Christian principle, which is that if there is no realistic prospect of justice being achieved then people should be prepared to negotiate rather than continue a pointless war, this being the lesser of two evils. 

For example, the contemporary American theologian Rusty Reno has recently written in an article entitled ‘Just war principles in Ukraine’ that:

‘It is immoral to unleash the violence of war when objectives cannot be achieved, however just those objectives may be. The Ukrainian army is unable to bring an end to hostilities by achieving victory. The nations of the West are unwilling to enter the fray with sufficient force and commitment. These seem to be indisputable facts. Moral reasoning must reckon with realities. Trump’s thinking is far removed from reflection on just war theory. But he is acknowledging reality and taking the steps necessary to put an end to a war that cannot be won. No doubt many mothers and fathers whose sons have died in the last two years of fruitless combat may have wished that the negotiations in Saudi Arabia had taken place in 2023.’

A good historical example of the point that Reno is making is the decision made by the Finnish government in March 1940 to agree to the terms offered to it by the Soviet Union to end the war between the two countries. The Soviet Union had been the aggressor and the terms it was offering involved the surrender of the Finnish province of East Karelia and other territories plus  the city of Viipuri. This meant that half a million Finns would lose their homes (12% of the Finnish population). Nevertheless, the Finns accepted these terms, unjust though they were, because the Finnish commander in chief Marshal Mannerheim told the Finnish government that they had to negotiate a peace deal while the Finnish army was still able to fight. In his words: 

‘I told them that I did not think we should allow bitterness over the hard conditions to blind our judgement. The Army was not defeated, and this gave us a chance of discussing peace. Were a military catastrophe to occur, our chance would be lost.’ 

What this third Christian principle means is that those with governmental responsibility have to make a prudential judgement about whether they think the aims of a just war can realistically be achieved. If the answer to this question is ‘no,’ then they must seek to end the war on the best terms that they can, even if it seems almost unbearable to have to do so. 

The question this raises in the case of the current war in Ukraine is whether a similar decision now needs to be made there. The answer to this question depends on the answers to two further questions: a) can the Ukrainians win in the long term if they receive sufficient external support? b) can they depend on that support being forthcoming? If the answer to both these questions is ‘Yes’ then in terms of Christian principles it could be right to continue the war. If the answer is ‘No’ then peace now needs to be sought by the Ukrainians on the best terms they can achieve. 

For the Ukrainians to be able to make this kind of ethical judgement there needs to be honesty by the countries of the Western world about the amount of support they are actually able or willing to supply. It may look good, for example, for European leaders to say that they will stand by Ukraine, but if they cannot actually give effective support, then encouraging the Ukrainians to keep on fighting is actually, in Christian terms, deeply immoral. 

There is a haunting account by the American journalist Carl Mydans about his encounter with a Finnish colonel following the end of the war with the Soviet Union in 1940. 

‘“You are an American?” he asked in clear English. Mydans nodded, noticing that the other two Finish officers were studiously averting their eyes. The Colonel began to scrape at his chin once more. At least you will tell them that we fought bravely.”

‘Mydans felt his guts knot. He whispered that he would, indeed.

‘The Colonel carefully wiped his razor, then dabbed at himself with a towel. He had cut his cheek and there was a tiny bubble of blood swelling there. When he had taken care of that, he began to button his tunic. Mydans observed that the officer's hands were trembling.

‘Suddenly he peered up at Mydans with an expression of anguish twisting his features. He began in a hoarse, quiet voice:  "Your country was going to help…" Then, in a louder voice: "You promised, and we believed you…."

‘Then he grabbed Mydans by the shoulders, his fingers digging in, and screamed: "A half dozen God-damned Brewster fighters with no spare parts is all we got from you! And the British sent us guns from the last war that wouldn't even work!"

‘The other Finns turned their backs and self-consciously finished dressing. The train rattled into the station. The Finish Colonel dropped his hands, fell onto a bunk, and wept convulsively.’  

From a Christian ethical standpoint what must be avoided is a repetition of the situation Mydans describes. Either Ukraine needs to be given the support it needs to defeat Russia, or it needs to be encouraged to make peace as soon as possible. Letting the war drag on to no purpose is the most immoral decision of all. CT.

Labour's New Plan For Public Transport Is In The Testing Phase.


 

Thankyou Jesus.


 

Cathedral Destroyed.

Myanmar junta burns down cathedral in latest attack.

21 Mar, 2025 
myanmar (Photo: Getty/iStock)

St Patrick’s Cathedral in Kachin State, Myanmar has been “reduced to ashes” following an attack by troops working for the country’s military junta.

The attack happened just days before the celebration of the church’s namesake, St Patrick.

Locals have shared footage of the cathedral’s destruction with DVB English News.


Religious liberty organisation, Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), has said that the incident is just the latest in a string of attacks on Christians and their property. CT.

Douglas Murray Is Right.

 https://www.christiantoday.com/news/douglas-murray-is-right-about-persecuted-christians

Friday, March 21, 2025

You Get No Bull From Melanie.

Sir Keir Starmer at Downing Street Ramadan reception with Liverpool imam Adam Kelwick

I am in London where the air is not sweet.

  • The Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, accuses Israel of breaking international law by stopping aid from entering Gaza. This is untrue. Israel stopped the aid two weeks ago in order to weaken Hamas and force it finally to release the remaining Israeli hostages whom it kidnapped on October 7 2023. International law requires limited humanitarian aid for civilians, but only if no advantage will result “to the military efforts or economy of the enemy”. Since Hamas has seized most of the aid delivered to Gaza during the war to keep its genocidal war going, it’s clear that withholding aid is not only legal but essential.

Lammy also says the Israelis are starving Gazan children. This is untrue. It is also a blood libel. Everyone could see from the grisly propaganda circus staged around the recent release of skeletal hostages that the Gazans were conspicuously well fed and it was their Israeli hostages who had been starved. In Israel, there’s a view that stopping the aid is pointless because there’s enough food in Gaza to feed the population for around four months.

Sir Keir Starmer walks back Lammy’s remarks. The Prime Minister’s spokesman says:

Our position remains that Israel’s actions in Gaza are at clear risk of breaching international humanitarian law. And we continue to call on the government of Israel to abide by its international obligations when it comes to humanitarian assistance to the population in Gaza.

Israel’s actions are not at clear risk of breaching international humanitarian law. And it has consistently abided by its international obligations. Walking back Lammy means continuing to defame Israel with different words.

  • I go to a reception where I get into an argument with a Labour party veteran. I tell him the Labour government has promoted hatred of Israel and fomented antisemitism in Britain. He denies this and requires examples. He’s polite and courteous; this is England, after all. I tell him the government has consistently pushed the lie that Israel has stopped aid from entering Gaza and has starved the Palestinian Arabs there. He insists that Israel has indeed done this. I tell him this is untrue, that Israel has let in hundreds of trucks of aid but most of it has been stolen by Hamas. He says he knows for a fact that Israel stopped the aid trucks because he was told this by Someone who saw it happen. I tell him that whatever this Someone saw was only one event in 17 months of war and could have been the result of many things, such as active military activity that day (which happens sometimes making the aid crossings unsafe) or the relief agency UNWRA stopping the aid coming in (which it has repeatedly done). He tells me I have now said contradictory things. As a result, he looks satisfied that he has won the argument.

  • In a Westminster watering-hole popular with the political crowd, I spot this very same Someone, who is a government minister dealing with the Middle East. He is deep in conversation with a prominent member of Britain’s Jewish community and a Labour party member, who despite purportedly supporting Israel also fervently supports the Palestinian cause. Upon leaving, the government minister thanks him.

  • I am told that another prominent British Jew, knowing that Starmer intended to impose a partial arms embargo against Israel, told him that the Jewish community would have no problem with this. The Jewish community, many if not most of whom were horrified by the arms embargo, may be surprised to hear that.

  • I learn that a number of Labour MPs have become intensely concerned that the Starmer government is being sucked into a catastrophically anti-Israel stance because of the rising electoral force of Britain’s Muslims to whom the party is increasingly kow-towing. Around an estimated one hundred out of 403 Labour MPs support Israel, but most don’t dare speak up in its defence because their political careers would then be over.

  • I ask one Labour MP who does support Israel why so many of his colleagues parrot murderous lies about the Jewish state. He looks unhappy and lowers his voice. “It’s pressure from… the community,” he murmurs. Which community, I ask? Does he mean Britain’s Muslims? He nods, wordlessly. And his Labour colleagues believe absolutely everything the BBC tells them about Gaza, he says in despair; the BBC is the prime source of the lies and the hatred of Israel in Britain.

  • Starmer holds a reception in 10 Downing Street to mark Ramadan. One of his guests is a Liverpool imam, Adam Kelwick. Four days after the October 7 atrocities in Israel, he posted on social media: “David beats Goliath!” and subsequently urged fellow Muslims to “pray for victory” over Israel in the Gaza war. He has also posted how he looks forward to Israel’s death, writing that it is “lashing out like a wild animal that thinks it’s about to die” which he thinks is a “good sign” in military terms.

  • Cambridgeshire Police call off their investigation into the slashing on March 8 last year of the portrait of Lord Balfour which hung in Trinity College, Cambridge. The noble Lord was the eponymous writer of the 1917 Balfour Declaration in which Britain committed itself to a homeland for the Jews in Palestine. In a video posted on social media, an unnamed female activist was seen spraying red paint onto the painting before slashing it with a box-cutter and pulling apart the canvas. At the time, the activist group Palestine Action stated it had carried out the attack. The police say: “A thorough investigation was carried out but the investigation has now been filed pending any new information coming to light.” Is it likely that the police cannot discover anyone who can identify this videoed criminal? Trinity College says it “continues to condemn this act of vandalism in the strongest terms”.

  • The courageous pro-Israel writer and activist Jonathan Sacerdoti finds that his invitation to address students at the UWC Atlantic School in Wales has been cancelled. Sacerdoti had been invited to talk to them about antisemitism and journalism. After complaints by pro-Palestinian students, the school lost its nerve. Sacerdoti writes in the Spectator:

They cited concerns over students’ “emotional safety” and the difficulty of managing their reactions. The solution they proposed? That I record a pre-vetted video answering pre-approved questions, ensuring that my presence would be absent in every possible way…

In one discussion, I was told that some students might lose control of their emotions and say something “perceived as being antisemitic”. Their concern was that this might be “incriminating”, putting the student in a “vulnerable position”. The real risk was not antisemitic abuse, but how they would be judged for it.

Founded in 1962 by Kurt Hahn, a German-Jewish educator who fled the Nazis, the school was intended to bring together students from diverse backgrounds, including conflict zones, to engage in rigorous education and meaningful dialogue.

  • In the same week, the London School of Economics hosts the launch of a book on “understanding Hamas” that describes it as a resistance movement which has been demonised in the West. It says the demonisation of Hamas “intensified after the events in Southern Israel on October 7,” with the group being branded “as ‘terrorist’ or worse.” One contributor to the book, Jeroen Gunning, professor of Middle Eastern Politics and Conflict Studies at King’s College London, led a seminar last year for Britain’s Foreign Office, where he and three other academics told officials that calling Hamas terrorists was an “obstacle to peace” and suggested that Israel was a “white, settler colonialist nation”.

  • London’s Metropolitan Police decide to take no action against an imam who, shortly after the October 7 atrocities, cursed Jews and called for the destruction of their homes. This imam, who preaches at an east London mosque in an area with a sizeable number of Jewish residents, told his followers: “Oh Allah, curse the Jews and the children of Israel. Oh Allah, curse the infidels and the polytheists. Oh Allah, break their words, shake their feet, disperse and tear apart their unity and ruin their houses and destroy their homes.” The police say the legal threshold for anti-Jewish hate crime has not been met.

  • On BBC Radio’s veteran soap-opera The Archers, the iconic “everyday story of country folk” in the fictional and quintessential English village of Ambridge, committed Christian and local bed-and-breakfast owner Lynda Snell is fasting for Ramadan. She explains to her neighbour: “Well I feel any opportunity to expand the human experience develops character and deepens our understanding of our fellow travellers upon this earth.” During the evening meal marking the end of the day’s fast with her Muslim neighbours, after she remarks on the beauty of the Arabic prayer before the meal a member of the family translates the prayer into English.

  • Faiz Shah, 22, from Bradford, Mohammad Comrie, 23, from Leeds, and Elinaj Ogunnubi-Sime, 20, from Croydon, who kidnapped and brutally assaulted an Israeli Jew last August because of his Jewish heritage and to extort money from him, are each jailed for more than eight years.

Their victim, Itay Kashti, a London-based music producer and composer, was lured to a remote holiday cottage in west Wales on the pretence of working with musicians, only to be “immediately assaulted” upon entering. The three had previously discussed their “intention of jihad” against Kashti who they believed had been on “pro-Israeli marches”.

The court hears how Kashti was kicked, punched and handcuffed to a radiator by the three men who had stocked the cottage with supplies for a week. Shah told the others: “I can actually bet that his fortune came from West Bank settlements, came from Palestinian land.” Ogunnubi-Sime said: “No remorse for a man like this, he ain’t just some Jew doing it for the bag [money], he actually loves this shit,” and told his fellow kidnappers before the attempt: “Each one of us has 100 per cent faith in Allah, so we cannot fail.”

Judge Catherine Richards states she has “no doubt” Kashti was targeted due to their “understanding of his wealth and Jewish heritage.” She says: “Anyone listening to this case would be horrified by what they heard and by the motivation behind it,” adding that the defendants “seemed to justify action against the victim in this case based on his background as if he was less worthy of your respect and compassion, and [that is] utterly abhorrent to any right-thinking person”.

The case is barely reported. Other than Jonathan Sacerdoti in the Spectator, no horror, outrage or shock are expressed that such a thing could have happened in Britain.

  • I go along to the launch in the House of Lords of the report on the October 7 atrocities by the All-Party Parliamentary Group for UK-Israel, chaired by the historian Andrew Roberts (who is also Lord Roberts of Belgravia). This unsparing, scholarly and meticulously sourced report documents in excruciating detail precisely what happened on that terrible day, and for a full 24 hours after that until the last of the Hamas-led genocidists had been beaten back or killed. The book has been produced to provide unassailable evidence that refutes the wicked lies that people in the west have told themselves, denying that that the rapes and beheadings and burnings alive and torture and mass slaughter took place. It is intended to serve for generations to come as the definitive account of what happened.

The launch is attended by a heart-warming crowd of perhaps a couple of hundred people. It includes an emotionally wrenching presentation by an Israeli victim of the October 7 massacre, Ayelet Schachar-Epstein. She recounts how in the attack on her kibbutz, Kfar Aza, her son Netta jumped on a grenade to save his fiancée and was murdered along with Ayelet’s mother-in-law, a nephew and two brothers-in law. Netta was murdered shortly before his 22nd birthday. When Ayelet and others were eventually rescued from their safe room, she says, they emerged into air full of smoke and the stench of charred flesh.

  • Some of the peers listening to this survivor of the unspeakable barbarism by the Palestinian Arabs of Gaza are still fluttering with dismay at yet another debate about Gaza that’s just taken place in the Lords’ chamber down the corridor. The Bishop of Gloucester, Rachel Treweek, says in that debate that she finds “the recent airstrikes on Gaza deeply shocking and abhorrent”, as is “the continued cruel holding of hostages”. She wants to know what the government is doing to ensure that the Israelis “abide by their international obligations as the occupying power to ensure unhindered provision of humanitarian assistance to the people of Gaza,” and “what consideration has been given to introducing targeted sanctions should the Government of Israel persist with this culture of impunity”.

Thus Israel’s desperate struggle to defend itself against genocide, conducted with greater care for civilian life and humanitarian provision than any other military in the world ever takes in war, is denounced as a “culture of impunity”. And this from a Christian cleric. Surely the angels themselves are weeping.

Other peers pile in with gratuitous attacks and vicious distortions. Lord Purvis of Tweed wants “ targeted actions against the extremist members of the Israeli Government who have rejoined the cabinet”. Lord Grocott parrots as established fact the “400 deaths reported so far” that apparently must be added “to the 48,000 that have already taken place” — the alleged total of fatalities from the resumption of the war at the weekend which Hamas somehow counted with lightning speed to add to the now-debunked nonsensical totals they’ve been pushing throughout the war but which Grocott and his ilk are still repeating. Lord Singh of Wimbledon, inveighing against “the excesses of Israel”, asks why Britain is still supplying it with arms; while Lord Sahota opines that Gaza has been transformed from an “open prison” to an “open graveyard”.

But there is is pushback from other peers against this morally bankrupt rubbish. Baroness Foster of Oxton states that “those who are really guilty of breaching this ceasefire” are the Hamas terrorists “with many psychopaths in Gaza”, and that the only solution is to to release the remaining hostages who had been “tortured and starved” and are “still in underground tunnels”. Lord Turnberg asks: “Should we not be pressing Qatar and Egypt to impress on Hamas that it really must come to the table? We must have some peace and some resolution and it is Hamas that is preventing it.” And Lord Pannick says:

My Lords, does the Minister agree that the tragedy of Gaza is going to continue until Hamas is removed from power? Can he explain what he wants to say on this subject to Ayelet Epstein, who is watching these proceedings and whose son Netta was murdered by Hamas on 7 October when he successfully shielded his fiancée from a grenade?

What indeed.

So there are still some “right-thinking” persons in Britain. But my goodness, what they are all up against.

*** My new book The Builder’s Stone: How Jews and Christians Built the West – and Why Only They Can Save It, can be bought on amazon.com and amazon.co.uk

Birdie.

Power, Love and Self-Control.

Should Kemi Be Renamed 'Sulky?'

 https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/2029182/kemi-badenoch-nigel-farage

Here Is Why Labour Is In Terminal Decline.

.

Critics said it 'beggars belief' that Labour agreed to hand two-piece Lambrini Girls a share of £1.6 million to go on tour around the world and promote their songs which 'denigrate' England. Mail.

Sacked For Stating Truth.

Christian teacher sacked for telling pupils being gay is a sin and trans people are 'just confused' loses High Court challenge.

By OLIVIA ALLHUSEN

Published: 17:23, 20 March 2025


A Christian teacher who told year seven pupils that being LGBT+ is a sin has lost a High Court challenge over a finding of unprofessional conduct.

Glawdys Leger made the comments to her pupils during a religious studies lesson at Bishop Justus Church of England School in Bromley, south London, in February 2022.

She showed a presentation on human rights and the class had a discussion on 'allyship', which led to Ms Leger saying that being LGBT+ is 'not fine' and that they should put God before the LGBTQ ideology, a professional conduct panel (PCP) found. Mail.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Escaping Iran.

Christian convert's desperate immigrant journey to escape Iran.

For Artemis Ghasemzadeh, a 27-year-old Iranian woman, embracing Christianity was both a spiritual awakening and a life-threatening choice.

Born into a conservative Muslim family in Isfahan, Iran, her journey into Christianity began in 2019 when she first stepped into a church while visiting Turkey.

Overcome by a deep sense of peace, she purchased a small Bible, smuggling it back home wrapped in her clothes. What started as curiosity evolved into a full conversion, culminating in her baptism three years ago - a moment she describes as being "reborn".

Ghasemzadeh has said she cherished her Christian community and her older brother, Shahin, 32, has also converted to the faith.

In Iran, Christianity is tolerated only for those born into it. However, under Sharia law, converting from Islam is considered blasphemy, punishable by death.

Despite the risks, Ghasemzadeh joined Iran's underground Christian movement, attending secret Bible study sessions online and in clandestine locations.

The precautions were extreme - worshippers received one-time passwords to access virtual meetings, and gatherings were constantly relocated to avoid detection.

Artemis Ghasemzadeh's faith strengthened amid Iran's 2022 protests, sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody.

Like many women defying the hijab law, she let her long hair flow freely in public and took to the streets, chanting: "Women, Life, Freedom." But government warnings followed, summoning her to court for violating Islamic dress codes. She ignored them.

With the noose of persecution tightening, she made the painful decision to flee.

In December 2024, Ghasemzadeh and her older brother Shahin left Iran, bound for the United States. The route was perilous: Abu Dhabi, South Korea, then Mexico City, where they paid smugglers $3,000 each to guide them to Tijuana. Under the cover of darkness, they scaled the border wall into the US.

"When my feet touched American soil, I burst into tears," she recalled in an interview with The Times. "It's over. We are finally here."

But the relief was short-lived. US border agents quickly detained them, separating the siblings. She has not seen or spoken to Shahin since. Her mother later informed her that he was being held in a Texas facility.

Ghasemzadeh repeatedly told officials she was a Christian convert seeking asylum. However, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson later claimed: "Not a single one of these aliens asserted fear of returning to their home country at any point during processing or custody."

Ghasemzadeh contests this, stating she was never interviewed about her asylum claim. Instead, on February 12 - her 27th birthday - she says she was shackled, placed on a military plane, and deported to Panama.

Ghasemzadeh now finds herself in a migrant detention camp on the outskirts of the Darién jungle, alongside nine other Iranian Christian converts, including three children. Conditions are dire. The sleeping area is muggy, blankets are scarce, and migrants are given one bottle of water daily, refilled from a bathroom faucet.

Panamanian authorities insist detainees are well cared for, but their accounts say otherwise.

"We don't deserve this. We are in a place where we feel helpless," Ghasemzadeh said. "I am waiting for our voices to be heard, for someone to help us."

She has taken to social media, sharing videos that detail their plight. One of these videos has gone viral in Persian media, drawing significant attention to their predicament.

Every night, Ghasemzadeh finds additional solace in writing Christian reflections in her notebook. One page, written in Persian, pleads, "I am certain you can hear my voice from up there. So please help." Next to it, she has drawn a small red heart.

Ali Herschi, an Iranian-American human rights lawyer, has taken up their case pro bono. His immediate priority is preventing Panama from deporting them back to Iran, where they could face imprisonment or execution. His long-term goal is to convince the US authorities under the new Donald Trump administration to reverse course and grant the group entry on humanitarian grounds. CT.

Eagerly Awaited.

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