One thing you know about Tim Burton within a few minutes of talking with him: he has a sense of humor. He also has a keen desire to protect Western freedoms against Islamic encroachment. Those 2 qualities led him to, prankishly, put in a job application at Tell Mama, an organization well-funded to hunt out instances of Islamophobia - an organization convicted of fabricating such cases and hugely inflating the numbers.
It's the brief post script to his application that led to Tim's being charged with religiously aggravated harassment. He wrote that he didn't really think Tell Mama would be interested in hiring him, as friends told him he was truthful and honest. In a later email, he referred to "mendacious grievance-mongering taqiyya artists" at Tell Mama.
Tell Mama's not appreciating the comment would have meant nothing, had the so-called justice system been fair.
After all,
the same justice system has let a rapist go free because his wife could not speak English!!!
And the same so-called justice system has turned thousands of blind eyes to "grooming gangs" (another term is rape gangs) targeting vulnerable indigenous British girls and very young women. There have been 1400 victims in just one city, Rotherham.
So how could the police take the charge against Tim seriously?
One answer: how could they not?
Fiyaz Mughal, head of Tell Mama, advises the police regarding allegations of Islamophobia, so the police took his being offended seriously indeed.
There was
no threat, no incitement to violence.
But only those unaware of the British so-called justice system would jump to the assumption that the police would laugh Fiyaz Mugdal out of the police precincts.
Tim Burton is not Islamic. The justice system, as far as it knows, has nothing to fear from him - but likely has a lot to fear from Tell Mama.
This is the second time Tim has been charged. The first time the judge threw the case out. Not the second time.
And now Tim Burton has drained his resources in the very expensive 4-day trial
which led to his being found guilty and sentenced to 12 weeks in prison. (He only had to serve 6 weeks.)
Those against him receive massive government funding - utterly unlike him.
Below are 2 interviews. The first is from before Tim's sentencing, before his stay in prison. The second is from now. Tim tells his story. He's determined to continue his fight for freedom of speech. He also calls for help in paying for the appeal.
- TIM AWAITS SENTENCING -
HE ALREADY KNOWS HE WILL APPEAL
1:01:34
- TIM IS APPEALING -
HE NEEDS HELP to WIN BACK
FREEDOM OF SPEECH