Thursday 12 September 2013

Michael Le Vell And The Spanish Inquisition

Mary Malone writes:
So another one has got away in a show trial gone wrong. Luckily there was a jury and the accuser was simply unbelievable.
Mr. Le Vell can count himself lucky too, that he does not live in Spain. There, under the Law Against Gender Violence, special tribunals sit in judgement of men accused of abusing women. There, it's jail first, questions later. There is an assumption of guilt against the defendant. The Court assumes that the woman, the victim, is telling the truth. The man, the presumed abuser, must prove his innocence.
The Spanish Gender Inquisition acts on denunciations, however spurious, and men are thrown into jail, a hundred thousand or so each year. The Inquisition also has civil powers and can prohibit a man from living at home or ever seeing his children again.
The State encourages women to denounce men. Like in England, there are financial incentives to make a denunciation.
The Spanish State is deliberately destroying the family, the last stronghold of autonomous society. Millions of lives, men, women children, parents, grandparents are ruined.
Women are isolated, made dependent on the State, dragged into the world of wage labour. Forming a family becomes fraught with danger for both men and women; childrearing is outsourced to nurseries, childbearing is outsourced to women in poorer countries.
Michael Lee Vell is lucky not to have been tried in Spain. Here a young girl's imagination took a life of its own, encouraged by those who should have known better, making it impossible for her to back down. In Spain, her word would have been taken as gospel.
No doubt, the next Labour Government will be introducing a FeminoFascist reign of terror here before long.

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