When Brits exercise power, always watch for the #BigLie.

Here the Chief Justice of England & Wales, Lady Carr, sets out the Big Lie used to suppress Palestine Action.

These people are not idiots. They are clever people, highly educated, and trained for years. Decades of preparation is needed to master the #BigLie as thoroughly as Lady Carr of Walton-on-the-hill.

Colonial #genocide won't just support itself. It needs fine legal minds to falsify history on its behalf.

#uklegal #ukpol

#ChiefJustice's #PantsOnFire!

The ban on #PalestineAction was upheld by Lady Chief Justice of England & Wales, Lady Carr. She said #suffragettes didn't use violence.

She is Lady Carr of Walton-on-the-hill, a village in Surrey.

This is the site of Pinfold Manor, a house which in Feb 1913 was blown up by 2 suffragette bombs. It was owned by the Chancellor, David #LloydGeorge. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinfold_Manor#History

She might as well be called Lady Carr of Suffragette Bombs.

#uklegal #lies #liars #BigLie

The story of #PinfoldManor is not obscure. It is told at two Wikipedia articles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinfold_Manor & https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walton-on-the-Hill. The manor was for sale In 2010, when the #DailyTelegraph carried an article on its history: https://archive.is/lj3yY.

Carr was ennobled in November 2023. If she did no homework before chosing her name, then she is an idiot. If she did check, she couldn't have missed the #suffragette bomb story.

So I am calling Lady Carr a #liar. Blatant, #PantsOnFire LIAR.

RESIGN!

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Gemma4:26b

@2legged A large, multi-story brick house stands under a bright blue sky with wispy clouds. The building features multiple gables, tall brick chimneys, and numerous white-framed windows. A glass-walled conservatory with white framing is attached to the right side of the structure. A gravel path runs in the foreground, bordered by green grass and various shrubs and bushes. Bare trees are visible in the background behind the house.

A screenshot of a news article from The Telegraph website featuring a photograph of a large brick house. The headline reads, "Property in Surrey: Surrey: The house the suffragettes bombed," with the subheadline, "Pinfold Manor in the leafiest of Surrey suburbs has an explosive past." The byline is "By Keith Miller" and the date is "15 April 2010 • 5:00pm." The central image shows a multi-story brick house with white-framed windows, gables, a chimney, and a glass conservatory, set against a background of trees and a blue sky. A navigation bar at the top lists "UK news Politics World Donald Trump Health news Defence Science Education Environmen," and a caption below the photo reads, "All it's cracked up to be: Pinfold Manor, Surrey."

🌱 Energy used: 0.776 Wh

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Gemma4:26b

@2legged A black and white photograph of a large, multi-story house with multiple gables and chimneys. The house features several windows with light-colored frames and is positioned behind a low hedge. A dark, grassy area is in the foreground, and trees are visible in the background. The text at the bottom left reads "Mr. Lloyd George's House" and the text at the bottom right reads "Walton-on-the-".

A screenshot of a digital document titled "^ History" featuring an edit icon in the top right corner. The first paragraph states, "Shortly after 6a 6am on 19 February 1913, the almost completed house was bombed by militant suffragettes from the Women's Social and Political Union. Two bombs were planted: one failed to explode, but the detonation of the second bomb caused significant damage to the house. The bombers were not identified, but Sylvia Pankhurst named Emily Davison in her memoirs, and it has been suggested that Norah Smyth or Olive Hockin may also have been involved." The second paragraph reads, "That evening, Emmeline Pankhurst claimed responsibility at a public meeting at Cory Hall, Cardiff, saying: "We have blown up the Chancellor of the Exchequer's house ... to wake him up". up". After this admission, she was arrested for the first time. She was tried at the Old Bailey in April 1913 on charges of conspiracy to commit property damage, convicted, and sentenced to three years of penal service. She was held at Holloway Prison, but released after starting a hunger strike." The third paragraph continues, "The house was repaired, and Lloyd George moved in. He relocated around 1919, first moving to The Firs (now Upper Court) near Cobham, and then from 1921 he resided at Bron-y-de Churt with his secretary and mistress, later his second wife, Frances Stevenson." Stevenson." The final paragraph reads, "Pinfold Manor became a Grade II listed building in January 1990.[1] It was on sale in 2010 priced at £2.5 million.[2]"

🌱 Energy used: 1.680 Wh