There is much talk of treason in relation to the reprehensible but inconsequential Nathan Gill, or Chinese spies on LinkedIn, or what have you. But as Prince Albert II vetoes the legalisation of abortion in Monaco, our own King Charles III is known to be concerned that the Treason Act 1351 made it treasonable to “compass or imagine” the death of the monarch, such as by assisting his suicide, while the Treason Act 1702 and the Treason Act (Ireland) 1703 made it treasonable to attempt to hinder the Succession to the Throne in accordance with the 1689 Bill of Rights and the 1701 Act of Settlement, to which both assisted suicide and formally decriminalised abortion may be said to be potential threats. His Majesty knows what to do.
I have depression, but that does not mean that the doctor should give me something to kill myself, never mind suggest it to me. Something very similar may and must be said to those with gender dysphoria. Part of resisting the first atrocity is reversing the second. Yet the NHS is funding the experimental testing of puberty blockers on children, some as young as 10 and drawn from care homes with the “parental” consent of the local authority, after the original experiment on sheep had had to be abandoned because the blockers had caused impaired memory, altered behaviour, enlarged amygdala, and lasting brain damage even once the treatment had stopped. What say you, Wes Streeting?
These are very dark times.
ReplyDeleteJohn 1:5.
Delete