Aim High

This one made me smile…

Davison, 19, a former milkman’s assistant, is accused of being one of the founders of the Aryan Strike Force, an online far right group set up by his father, Ian.

The aim of the group was to carry out ‘ops’ and topple the Government, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

Good grief. Still, full marks for ambition, I suppose, despite managing to make the Jihadi nutters look competent in comparison.

‘Nicky Davison was involved with other people, including his father, Ian Davison, who called themselves the Aryan Strike Force,’ prosecutor Andrew Edis said.

‘He was associated with a group who were prepared to do what they called ‘ops’, in other words, paramilitary activity, and were in the early stages of preparation.’

Ooooeer, scary. So what were they preparing?

The teenager’s 41-year-old father has already admitted six charges, including producing ricin, one of the world’s deadliest substances.

Ah, ricin. I wonder if this will turn out at some future point to be like that other ricin plot? You know, the one where there was no plot and no ricin?

“The Aryan Strike Force was in essence a website to which people interested in its aims subscribed,’” Mr Edis said.

“But its purpose was to form a group which would be ready to act.”

“It was set up to advance the aims of white supremacy in these islands and fight what they call ‘Zog’, which means Zionist Occupied Government.”

As opposed, one assumes, the planet Zog upon which they evidently resided.

Anyway, when you read through, it becomes clear just why this deluded twat is up before the beak. He has been found in possession of literature that, if followed, could be used to commit acts of terrorism – not, Mr Edis tells us, that he did, he just might.

Mr Edis said that in total these two manuals numbered thousands of pages.

‘These manuals tell the reader how to make letter bombs, how to make explosives, how to make detonators, how to make bombs, how to make grenades, how to make silencers and how to make poisons,’ he said.

So is possession of such material a criminal offence?

If you were able to read all these documents, you would be able to set about preparing or committing an act of terrorism.

Okay, so assuming he could read them, did he?

The prosecution do not allege that this defendant committed an act of terrorism.

Right, so despite being a deluded fool, led astray by an equally idiotic father, what has he actually done, here?

These charges are aimed at young man who seems to be preparing himself, reading and getting himself informed and equipped to do something.

Priceless! He seems to be preparing himself to do something.

Words fail me, they really do. 

7 Comments

  1. So anyone with access to this information is liable for prosecution? Like anyone with internet access? Anyone who could walk into a cyber cafe? Anyone who can walk and might be able to read in fact. When do they arrest Brown and Balls? Not to mention Tone.

  2. Welcome to the brave new world of NuLab, it is called thought crime, to think is commit a crime!

  3. So, assuming it is true that “Rebellion is the right of every citizen, and sometimes his duty”, where does that leave us?

    Does not EVERY person have a right – nay, a DUTY – to seek the removal of a tyrannical regime?

    Those Germans who opposed Hitler, especially those who tried to do something about it (well pre-Stauffenberg) are now lauded – usually posthumously – as humanitarian heroes.

    Maybe there is a difference between seeking the removal of a Hitler or Stalin, and seeking the removal of Brown.

    But who decides what differences are unacceptable, and where the line is drawn – other than those in power?

    So IS there any difference between the regimes?

  4. Such people are more pitiful than anything else.

    What happened to the venerable British tradition of laughing long and hard at such nincompoops?

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