Not sure which is the best bit of this tweet - that she accuses a man who makes his living letting strangers speak on his radio show of being "anti-free speech", or the fact she thinks James O'Brien is a socialist.
Some career highlights:
In January 2019 she stated that Kenya exports flowers to the EU under WTO terms, which was proven to be a big fat lie.
In May 2019, on the @BBCPolitics Live show, despite pushing the idea the UK could trade with the EU using World Trade Organization (WTO( terms, she was unable to name any countries that trade solely with the EU using WTO terms.
After the 2019 election, Jenkyns was elected Vice-Chair of the “party within a party” - the pro-very hard Brexit European Research Group, replacing Steve Baker, who became the Chair.
In February 2020, Jenkyns defended her decision to provide a character reference for the court case of a Conservative Party activist who made violent threats to Labour MP Yvette Cooper, who was subsequently jailed.
'Freedom of speech should not be restricted lightly', by Alison Assiter, Professor of feminist theory at the University of the West of England, & Miriam David, Professor emerita of sociology of education at the UCL.
Although debates about freedom of speech are not new, the form they take now seems to be more vindictive than hitherto. Two recent case cases illustrate the point. Earlier this month, the sociology professor David Miller had been sacked by the University of Bristol.
The official reason was that his lectures about Israel, Jews & Zionism “did not meet the standards of behaviour we expect from our staff”. His disciplinary hearing included an investigation by a Queen’s Counsel who found Miller’s comments “did not constitute unlawful speech”.
British Sociological Association @britsoci statement on Freedom of Speech in Universities.
Here's the BSA's statement on what is basically the very troubling oxymoronic intention of the partisan UK Government to intervene in academic free speech:
Freedom of speech is currently the subject of intense debate within universities and learned societies, and especially in relation to the announcement in the May 2021 Queen’s Speech of the Freedom of Speech (Universities) Bill.
The Bill, which is approaching its third reading in the House of Commons, proposes “to make provision in relation to freedom of speech and academic freedom in higher education institutions and in students’ unions; and for connected purposes.”
"People who are fully vaccinated against #Covid19 are far less likely to infect others, despite the arrival of the delta variant... Findings refute the idea that vaccines no longer do much to prevent the spread of the coronavirus."
Imho, Neil Oliver IS very stupid, deeply immoral, profoundly narcissistic, & dangerously irresponsible: he increasingly resembles a paranoid drug-addled conspiracy theorist, spouting cod science, rejecting enlightenment values & sounding like a poundland Alex Jones from Infowars.
Every anti-vax nutjob, ever New World Order conspiracy theorist, every gullible fool, every vulture capitalist, every grifting maniplulator, ever fake, shit-stirring troll account & every nihilistic clown in Britain will lap up Coast Guy's rambling, paranoid, delusional bullshit.
I've received a lot of criticism for my appraisal of Oliver. Fair enough - if you dish it out, you have to be prepared to take it. Which I am. I try to avoid personal 'ad hominin' attacks, but sometimes I get angry & lose my shit, as I suspect we all do from time to time.
In 1971, along with Sandy Lieberson, David Puttnam had the audacity to bid for the rights to the book ‘Inside the Third Reich’ by Albert Speer.
Rank outsiders in pursuit of the rights, the publisher agreed that we might at least travel to Heidelberg to make their case in person.
"Albert Speer, Hitler’s former Architect & Armaments Minister had walked out of Spandau prison five years earlier, having served twenty years for war crimes – he patiently listened for several hours as we took him through our reasons for wanting to make the film".
"To our amazement, he agreed that if a movie was to be made, it should be produced by & for a younger generation. That was the start of an adventure which took us and our screenwriter Andrew Birkin on numerous occasions back & forth to Heidelberg."
It's been argued that neoliberalism originated as much in opposition to fascism as to socialism – a point that Foucault addresses in detail in his analysis of ordoliberalism in his lectures on biopolitics...
'Opposition to fascism did not lead to a uniform view of the role of the state, liberty or sovereignty, & from its inception in the 1920s, neoliberalism has a complex & uneasy relationship with other movements on the political right, in particular conservatism & libertarianism.'
At the Walter Lippmann Colloquium in 1938 – the starting point of European neoliberalism for Foucault – differences were aired that became more significant over time. The majority of those present sided with Hayek in calling for the reinvention of liberalism.