Hausbesuche wegen non-crime hate incident (NCHI)
Und weiter geht’s mit der Zensur. Auch in England.
Oder: Wenn der Orwell mit dem Kafka …
Female journalist visited and police didn’t even say what the post was. On remembrance Sunday too, they fought for our freedoms.. https://t.co/VcoqLxohMo
— Ben (@benwarren52) November 13, 2024
BREAKING: Hundreds of British citizens, including journalists, are reporting that they’ve been visited by the police this weekend regarding X posts.
Make Orwell fiction again. pic.twitter.com/LgNUwkE9fZ
— Inevitable West (@Inevitablewest) November 13, 2024
PC S, the one on the left, who did all the talking, told me that they were here to inform me that I had been accused of a non-crime hate incident (NCHI). It was to do with something I had posted on X (formerly Twitter) a year ago. A YEAR ago? Yes. Stirring up racial hatred, apparently.
Muss man sich klar machen: „Sie werden einer nicht strafbaren Tat beschuldigt!“
“What did this post I wrote that offended someone say?” I asked. The constable said he wasn’t allowed to tell me that.
„Was habe ich denn gemacht?“ – „Das dürfen wir Ihnen nicht sagen.“
“So what’s the name of the person who made the complaint against me?”
He wasn’t allowed to tell me that either, he said.
„Und wer beschuldigt mich?“ – „Das dürfen wir Ihnen auch nicht sagen.“
“You can’t give me my accuser’s name?”
“It’s not ‘the accuser’,” the PC said, looking down at his notes. “They’re called ‘the victim’.”
„Sie können mir nicht einmal sagen, wer mich beschuldigt?“ – „Wir nennen sie nicht Beschuldiger. Wir nennen sie »Opfer«.“
In January 2020, an ex-police officer called Harry Miller was shocked to be interviewed by a Humberside police constable after the force had received a complaint over tweets he had made in which he questioned whether transgender women were real women. It was recorded on a national database as a non-crime hate incident. “Even though I had committed no crime the constable said he needed to check my thinking,” recalled Miller, who said it made him frightened for his country’s future. Me too.
Kommt mir irgendwie bekannt vor. Faeser und Haldenwang hatten es doch auch mit den Äußerungen unterhalb der Strafbarkeitsschwelle. Da steckt offenbar eine länderübergreifende Aktion dahinter.
Wehe jedem, der einen Mann nicht bereitwillig für eine Frau hält.
Zimmer 101: Wieviele Finger sehen Sie?