Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Blocks on access to our Church and State website hit a whole new level. And we still cannot get emails through to close colleagues no matter how many times we resend them (WITH UPDATE 31/3/2019)

I am truly appalled by the unlawful violation of the Heavey's basic right to send and receive email without interference. I would be most grateful for anything you may be able to do by way of taking measures to correct this gross abuse.
- An American professor to then Home Office Minister Lynne Featherstone in 2010

Our Church and State website has no less than 52 Nobel Laureates on it; for details, see this blog's sidebar under "Church and State" (updated today).
Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms formulates what is the core of free speech. "Everyone has the right to freedom of expression." In an important interpretation of this article, the European Court of Human Rights in Handyside v. UK (1976) indicated that this "freedom of expression" should be construed as follows. It "is applicable not only to 'information' or 'ideas' that are favourably received, or regarded as inoffensive, or as a matter of indifference, but also to those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any sector of the population". Such are the demands of that pluralism, tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is no "democratic society" (see Cliteur, 2010).



So far this month we have had an unprecedented 143 blocks on access to our Church and State website, and we still cannot get emails through to close colleagues no matter how many times we resend them. On 17 March, I posted Enough is enough: Declan is updating his complaint to the United Nations last year (WITH UPDATE 17/3/2019). The post reveals Declan's draft cover letter to the High Commissioner for Human Rights under Article 19 (freedom of expression) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. We subsequently had an unprecedented escalation of 68 blocks on access to Church and State in one week last week. The previous record for these blocks in one week had been 52 blocks at the end of April 2017 that kicked off with our focus on the Danish Cartoon Crisis.

Last week
- Sunday 17/3: 11 blocks
- Monday 18/3: 12 blocks
- Tuesday 19/3: 13 blocks
- Wednesday 20/3: 6 blocks
- Thursday 21/3: 6 blocks
- Friday 22/3: 9 blocks
- Saturday 23/3: 11 blocks[1]

This week
- Sunday 24/3: 15 blocks
- Monday 25/3: 19 blocks[2]
- Tuesday 26/3: 3 blocks (as at 9.28am)
________________________
1. 68 blocks: New record for one week
2. 19 blocks: New record for one day

The previous record for one day was a record-equalling 13 blocks last week, which has already been surpassed twice this week.



On 21 February, 68 Nobel Laureates out of those Declan has emailed since 3 January had not seen their email.

Emails resent to Nobel Laureates

21 February: 25 emails resent, 21 unread (4 read)
22 February: 27 emails resent, 23 unread (4 read)
25 February: 46 emails resent, 43 unread (3 read)
26 February: 2 emails resent, 2 phone calls, 1 unread (1 read)
1 March: 5 emails resent, 5 unread (0 read)
2 March: 5 emails resent, 4 unread (1 read)
3 March: 8 emails resent, 5 unread (3 read)
4 March: 8 emails resent, 6 unread (2 read)
5 March: 11 emails resent, 10 unread (1 read)
6 March: 8 emails resent, 7 unread (1 read)
7 March: 10 emails resent, 10 unread (0 read)
8 March: 10 emails resent, 9 unread (1 read)

Totals: 165 emails resent, 2 phone calls, 144 unread (21 read)

No Nobel laureate who is recorded as having read Declan's email has been resent an email to date.

The above statistics do not include an email to a Nobel Laureate on 4 March confirming his listing as an Honorary Associate that went unread. This was the third time that this has happened this year.

On 6 January, the three out of eight emails to professors that were not read were to Nobel laureates. What a coincidence!

30 December 2018: Our emails now are getting through to no one, not to Nobel laureates or even our closest colleagues. Declan will keep trying to get through to Nobel laureates with the use of his mobile phone (WITH UPDATE 26/3/2019)



Update Summation 31 March 2019

Last week
- Sunday 24/3: 15 blocks
- Monday 25/3: 19 blocks[1]
- Tuesday 26/3: 5 blocks
- Wednesday 27/3: 12 blocks
- Thursday 28/3: 12 blocks
- Friday 29/3: 17 blocks
- Saturday 30/3: 10 blocks[2]
This week
- Sunday 31/3: 3 blocks[3]
________________________
1. 19 blocks: New record for one day
2. 90 blocks: New record for one week
3. 199 blocks: New record for one month

1,772 blocks on access to our Church and State website since 26 July 2016 (89 blocks 2016; 871 blocks 2017; 516 blocks 2018; 296 blocks 2019); 53 blocks in May 2018 that included 6 blocks on 8 May, the same day as Declan's updated complaint to the United Nations; 53 blocks last month; a record-breaking 199 blocks this month that includes Facebook's 57th block against our Church and State website since 1 December 2015; a record-breaking 90 blocks last week that included a record-breaking 19 blocks in one day on 25 March; 3 blocks so far today (as of 31 March at 6.35pm).

89 blocks 2016
871 blocks 2017
516 blocks 2018
- January 2018: 55 blocks
- February 2018: 45 blocks
- March 2018: 59 blocks
- April 2018: 42 blocks
- May 2018: 53 blocks
- June 2018: 38 blocks
- July 2018: 31 blocks
- August 2018: 28 blocks
- September 2018: 34 blocks
- October 2018: 42 blocks
- November 2018: 43 blocks
- December 2018: 46 blocks
296 blocks 2019
- January 2019: 44 blocks
- February 2019: 53 blocks
- March 2019: 199 blocks (new record)

27 June 2019: SITE BLOCKS: The blocks on access to our Church and State website continue unabated (WITH UPDATE 31/3/2019: re 1,772nd block since 26 July 2016)



From My Picks:

29 March (newer post): St Mungo's: Draft paragraph 36 of Declan's updated complaint to the United Nations under Article 19 (freedom of expression) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights regarding the Mayor of London-commissioned charity

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan


'Let me recommend an important web site churchandstate.org.uk. Operating out of London this well-designed and exciting web site covers church-state, population, climate change and other issues. Check it out.' Edd Doerr, President, Americans for Religious Liberty

http://churchandstate.org.uk/about/