Australia

Summer books 2025: the best titles of the year so far

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Charts   来源:Economy  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"The government must now crack on and get these welcome but long overdue measures in place as quickly as possible," she said.

"The government must now crack on and get these welcome but long overdue measures in place as quickly as possible," she said.

In the two weeks since the attack, residents, police, politicians and experts have been discussing how future incidents of this nature can be avoided.called for tougher laws around crossbows, and Leeds Central and Headingley MP Alex Sobel said he supported more security around the Otley Run pub crawl.

Summer books 2025: the best titles of the year so far

But what about the ideology behind Lawrence's manifesto?Dr Anna Kruglova, a lecturer in terrorism studies from the University of Salford, says we need to be concerned about a rise in "misogynistic violence"."We should be mindful of this phenomenon being again on the rise," she says.

Summer books 2025: the best titles of the year so far

"It is a random attack in the sense that it can happen anywhere. You have disenfranchised, upset and hateful people. So unfortunately it could have happened in any corner of the UK or elsewhere."But it's hard to estimate the level of threat. It's not an organised phenomenon. It's a lone-wolf attack. It's not something that is inspired by a particular organisation."

Summer books 2025: the best titles of the year so far

Dr Kruglova studies the "manosphere", a term used to describe online communities that promote anti-feminism, misogyny and hateful ideas about women, trans and non-binary people.

She says: "The manosphere is not an organised movement. That's kind of a loose group of people who are hating women and some of them, not all of them, will be willing to take this further and become violent.Several other videos repeated

Other videos Jack was served on his feed included clips with threats in the comments about “euthanizing” Rishi Sunak and racist remarks about him.Messages such as “vote Reform UK” were shared repeatedly in the comments of many videos, much more than those I saw in support of any other party. TikTok users have begun to notice the comments, with many calling the posters “Reform bots”, suggesting they could be fake, automated accounts.

I contacted some of the commenters who had photos and names on their profiles, and they told me they were real people based in the UK with no official affiliation to Reform UK and with no encouragement or instruction from the party. But others were anonymous with no profile image and numerical usernames - common hallmarks of fake accounts - and they did not respond to my messages.Whether they are real people or not, their comments can create the impression that their preferred party has greater support.

copyright © 2016 powered by FolkMusicInsider   sitemap