Hate speech without hate: Britain and the United States

Gilad Atzmon is fighting a battle for free speech in England. Here’s why it matters in the United States. Atzmon was prohibited by a local council, Islington, made up almost entirely of Labour Party members, from playing the saxophone with his band the Blockheads. The ban followed a complaint from a far right Zionist, who in his own social media posts frequently disparaged and threatened the Labour Party and its leader as anti Semitic. 

Read More

An open Christmas Greeting to a few Labour Politicians

Dear MP Jeremy Corbyn, MP Chris Williamson, Cllr Richard Watts and members of the Islington Council.

I would like to wish you all a merry Christmas and a happy new year.

I want to assure you that during the holiday I will not respond to the biased and unprovoked punitive ban that you imposed on me, and to the shame you have brought upon yourselves and your party. I want to allow you sufficient time to rethink your unreasonable actions. I do want to assure you that this story is not going to go away.

As soon as 2019 settles in, I along with the very active movement that has supported me in recent weeks, will push for answers.

Read More

Islington Council vs. Gilad Atzmon-UK Column News

Exploring Islington Council’s unlawful ruling. A council that is on the brink of financial collapse was willing to spend tens of thousand of tax payers money hiring one of Britain’s most expensive law firms just to stop me playing saxophone with the Blockheads 4 days ahead of Christmas. Why? Because one ultra rightwing Pro Israeli activist complained that he would feel uncomfortable with me on stage. I guess that this sums up what British Labour 2018 is. Let’s hope they improve in 2019 but I don’t hold my breath.

Read More

Gilad Atzmon on Kevin Barrett's Truth Jihad talking about the Islington "Blockhead Ban"

Kevin Barrett: Gilad Atzmon is one of Europe's greatest saxophonists—and probably the hardest working one. He also may be the "most censored thinker" in the Western world. Everywhere he goes, Zionists (and occasionally anti-Zionists) clamor to have him banned. Now the censors may have gone too far. After the Islington (London) council banned him from performing with The Blockheads based on a single complaint from an angry Zionist, a wave of support for Gilad, and for free speech, has been washing across the world.

Read More

British Labour? Labour Zionism more likely

Although some of us still harbor hopes for  Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour party has not exactly been a happy collective. Labour can look like a treacherous herd spitting poison and stabbing each other in the back, claiming allegiance to values that are supposed to be universal but which are not specified or displayed. Bruke might have said that for evil to triumph all that is needed is a few Labourites to accomplish what they do best: Being compromised. The following may shatter any hopes you still clung to for a  Labour transition. I apologise in advance.

Read More

The Blockheads are outraged at the ruling by Islington Council

The Blockheads were approached yesterday by the Jewish News newspaper in regard to the recent outrageous Islington Council’s decision to ban me from playing with the band this Friday because one right wing pro Israeli campaigner threatened that he may give his ticket away if I am on stage.

Following is Mick Gallagher’s statement for and on behalf of THE BLOCKHEADS:

Read More

To be Remembered

What attracts world leaders to that wall? Is it possible that our world leaders are all (somehow) so attracted to walls that they do not even mind  being caught on camera in such an intimate moment with that one particular wall?  And if not, how do we explain the fact that so many of our world leaders are caught so close to that wall with their eyes closed? 

Read More