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20 commenti

  1. StGuthlac2025 on

    Achieved nothing with it apart from some potential life long health problems.

  2. Deadliftdeadlife on

    Good on the uk justice system for not caving on this

    You shouldn’t let potential terrorists force the government to do anything through stuff like this

  3. GwimlinHowJones on

    Dear Hunger Strikers.  Eat a dick.  Yours etc., HM Gov. 

  4. foodieshoes on

    You may not agree with it, but I’d rather have people of conviction like this in the UK that stand up for what they believe in than the servile, quick-to-mock crowd who seemingly have done nothing with their lives, so project their own mediocrity on others who do act.

  5. They are complaining about the potential time on remand before going to court. As far as I’m aware , they would be out on bail if they hadn’t made it clear there was a serious risk they would commit further offences if were allowed.

  6. IncorrigibleBrit on

    Glad that those involved can now begin receiving nutrition again – but the whole situation just baffled me.

    These people (allegedly) attacked defence infrastructure, stated that they would commit similar offences if given bail, and so got remanded into custody. That is the standard approach when the courts are concerned further offences might be committed on bail.

    They then decide that they will start starving themselves due to the consequences of their own (alleged) actions – and the public and government are meant to care?

  7. Spamgrenade on

    You guys realise that hunger strikes are more for protest and media exposure than for leverage to get out of prison or whatever? I mean, think about it. If it ever worked, just once then the entire prison population would try it on.

  8. Top_Mud4664 on

    Best part of this is that the public couldn’t give less of a shit.

  9. sylezjusz on

    Irrespective of their case, a year of pre-trial remand in custody? How is this allowed in a civilised country?

  10. SMuRG_Teh_WuRGG on

    It’s good they ended their hunger strike. Because lets face it, hunger protest does not work. It has happened before in Ireland during the troubles and those protestors starved to death and it never changed anything. Protests generally do not work.

  11. Own_Yam4456 on

    Wasn’t their “hunger strike” more like a glorified intermittent fast?

  12. Helios_AI on

    Turns out what they were really hungry for, is attention.

    Hunger strikes only work if you are someone that the establishment cares about, which is simply not the case for most of the population.

  13. BlastFurnaceIV on

    I wish people would be more outraged at the Israeli weapons made on British soil to kill kids and support an occupation, than those going on Hunger strike for trying to stop them

  14. OGDSound on

    Turns out you can’t stroke your own ego if you’re not alive anymore.

  15. Giant_Enemy_Cliche on

    Right wingers here immediately spreading the sledgehammer attack narrative without any of the context revealed by the ongoing trial.

    > The policewoman attacked by a sledgehammer” has been the constant refrain of the government against Palestine Action. A couple of days before the judicial review of the proscription in England, and despite fierce reporting restrictions on the trial, the prosecution released to the media highly edited video footage from the current trial in Woolwich Crown Court of six activists accused of the attack inside Elbit Systems’ Filton factory on August 6 2024.

    >While that video has fuelled tens of thousands of Zionist troll posts on social media, the remarkable thing is that it is almost impossible to establish what it shows.

    >In fact, had it been put out without the prosecution narrative, nobody would have discerned that is what they were looking at. It shows chaotic fast-moving footage from bodycams.

    >The first sledgehammer seen is plainly in the hands of a security guard – as testimony in the trial, ignored by the MSM, has explained.

    >Here are some key facts:

    >- Every single prosecution witness who gave evidence about the melee was obliged to change their statement when confronted by the defence with video evidence which contradicted it. This included much more video than was released by the prosecution.
    – The prosecution produced a misleading account of the number and location of CCTV cameras in the factory. They were obliged to present a new map showing more cameras.
    – The video evidence was left in or given into the hands of Elbit. A search of Elbit’s premises in November 2025 found the USB sticks of video in their Metropolitan Police evidence bags in Elbit’s safe.

    https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2025/12/the-filton-trial/

    Lots of quotes from the examination and cross examination in here but no one will read it because they’re desperate to believe these young people trying to stop a genocide are actually evil.

  16. nacnud_uk on

    And it helped them how? It’s a mental illness, for sure. Surely if you care about a cause, then you want to stay alive and “fight that cause”, not actually die. Your enemy can only be thankful if you die; one less thing for them to worry about.

    I really don’t get starving yourself to death. It seems like the opposite of the thing. I don’t even know what their cause is / was, but I do know that I don’t find any value in killing yourself.

  17. Beginning-Seat5221 on

    >The activists have been in prison for more than a year as they wait to be tried, breaking the UK’s six-month pre-trial detention limit.

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