this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2024
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Summary

Elon Musk labeled Britain a “tyrannical police state” on X, criticized Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s leadership, and questioned the imprisonment of far-right activist Tommy Robinson.

Musk’s comments coincide with his role as a key adviser to Trump, raising concerns in the U.K. about its relationship with the incoming administration.

Musk also criticized Starmer’s policies, including increased farm inheritance taxes, and boosted far-right content on X.

This follows similar clashes with other U.S. allies, including Germany and Australia, over their domestic policies.

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[–] steeznson@lemmy.world 61 points 2 days ago (1 children)

He's got such a hate boner for Kier Starmer that I'm kind of intrigued. Starmer is the most boring, beaurocratic politician you can find. I can't understand what's triggered this latest Musk mania.

[–] Ross_audio@lemmy.world 76 points 2 days ago (2 children)

He's a prosecutor who apparently can't be bought.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/feb/13/tax-authorities-should-prosecute-evaders-keir-starmer

That's far more dangerous to a billionaire than a firebrand.

If Starner only delivers a non-corrupt legal system it'll be an incredible win for the Country. But I do think he needs 10 years in office so he should focus on actually winning the next election.

[–] EnderMB@lemmy.world 1 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

Saying he can't be bought when he had to explain a metric fuck-ton of gifts he received from donors, from Arsenal season tickets to an insane amount on glasses, and multiple tickets to Taylor Swift, indicates a man that can very easily be bought.

In theory, a Sir that is known for being a chief prosecutor should be the hardest person to buy...but that's the joy of politics I guess.

IMO Kier is a bit of a bellend, but a vast improvement on the shower of cunts in the Tory party. What I would love to see him implement is a true UK constitution to ensure that any wrongdoing in office results in criminal proceedings. Those in politics should be held to the highest standard, and if you're caught taking bribes, selling access to friends, or abusing lower workers while in office you should be banned from holding office AND see jail time.

[–] Ross_audio@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

It remains to be seen what he's actually done to benefit anyone who gave him anything.

And he stopped accepting them once he entered the office. We found out because he told us about it all and the mistake of accepting some gifts a bit too late.

With the only arguable benefits being publicity for the brand it's not nothing but it really is daft the perspective tricks that have been played with that particular molehill. It's the press that actually gave the gifters the benefits, not any actions by Starner himself.

Being given something isn't proof of being bought. Acting for the person who gave you something is.

I predict that as the COVID era corruption comes to light his previous job will result in him prosecuting and recovering quite a lot of public money. Sadly I don't think he will get a result of jail time for anyone. The laws just aren't in place for that and he can't get them made retrospectively.

A UK constitution would be very interesting. But I'd just settle for some actual laws specifically against corruption rather than relying on MPs following conventions and being honourable.

The shocking thing is that hundreds of millions of pounds worth of corruption through the "fast lane" wasn't illegal to do. We'll only be able to recoup from the companies who actually didn't deliver their contracts.

Yes, truth is terrifying to a liar. Justice is terrifying to a fraud.