#Philp comments on ##TrevorPhillips about the police taking people's details ....

He incorrectly says:

"That the police should only be recording people's details if there is a clear and imminent risk of criminality following"

This unhappy idea inexorably leads to a police state, and Philp's claims here are both spurious and mask his wish for an aggressive authoritarian society.

We see you.

#Philp explains on #TrevorPhillips that "#JustStopOil have been illegally blocking roads again and again"

Rather like the farmers will next week when they protest in London

But just stop oil don't wear gilets or barbours

Xx

What were the most common surnames in Cornwall in 1861? But first, why 1861? At this time – and indeed until the 1890s – in-migration into Cornwall from England was minimal, Cornwall having a higher proportion of locally born residents than any English county. Mass migration had set in during the late 1840s but the largest exodus was still to come, after the later 1860s. That took with it many distinctively Cornish surnames. But the 1850s was the decade when Cornwall’s mining economy peaked. For all these reasons 1861 seemed the best choice to capture the traditional, native stock of surnames.

The 20th most numerous Cornish surname in 1861 was Phillips and its direct spelling variants. In the medieval period Philip was a common first name, in part owing to Philip being one of Christ’s disciples, usually a short route to popularity (excepting Judas). Interestingly, it was also a favourite in south-west Wales. It had been adopted as a surname across Cornwall by the early 1500s, although by the 1600s confined mainly to mid and west Cornwall. This was because a vernacular version Philp emerged in east Cornwall in the late 1500s and became a separate and common name there.

Unlike Philp, Philip began to receive a suffixed -s in the 1630s. By the mid-1700s this process was complete. Philip was now Philips or Phillips. By 1861, when there were 424 households in Cornwall headed by a Phillips, the distribution of the surname reflected Cornwall’s population geography, with most living in the Central Mining District of Camborne-Redruth and a secondary concentration at St Austell.

https://bernarddeacon.com/2024/08/06/cornwalls-top-20-surnames-the-countdown-begins/

#familyHistory #Phillips #Philp

Cornwall’s population history: an overview

By the 11th century the evidence suggests Cornwall was an under-populated peripheral territory of the British Isles. However, its population grew a lot faster than that of England in the centuries …

Cornish studies resources
UK home secretary may tighten restrictions on protests

James Cleverly considering longer notice periods for large demonstrations in England and Wales, says minister

The Guardian

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/02/uk-passport-images-database-could-be-used-to-catch-shoplifters

Passport images are extracted by the State under compulsion. No picture: you cannot leave the country. We all implicitly consented, because it was not unreasonable.

It becomes unreasonable when the Government breaches the terms of consent & its scope.

They do that on Ministerial whim. Chris #Philp wakes up one morning & says to Mrs Philp "we'll use it to combat er..shoplifting". The #EnglishNationalists think they own you, as much as they own your #data
Kick them out.

UK passport images database could be used to catch shoplifters

Civil liberty campaigners warn Chris Philp’s plans to integrate databases are an ‘Orwellian nightmare’

The Guardian

Not being keen on #Immigration, #Philp on #Peston says the economy can be fixed if we get more British people to do the necessary jobs. He then goes on to say, "Unemployment is at its lowest point ever since Labour was in power."

PHILP HELPS TO RUN THE COUNTRY

PHILP IS A FUCKING IDIOT

#CMBD

Coronation arrests show protest is now a privilege – not a right

The  big story of the coronation weekend fell to new depths when the Tory government tried desperately to justify its punitive Public Order Act in response to an Urgent Question in the House of Com…

Vox Political