Politics
“Heartbreaking yet hopeful”: Jess Asato reviews ‘LOLLIPOP’

Molly Brown (Posy Sterling) with her children Ava (Tegan-Mia Stanley Rhoads) and Leo (Luke Howitt)
4 min read
Daisy-May Hudson’s film shines a spotlight on the predicament facing mothers after incarceration
Directed and written by filmmaker Daisy-May Hudson, Lollipop follows Molly, a young woman who has recently served four months in prison and had her two children placed in care.
This heartbreaking yet hopeful film sheds light on the catch-22 women face after incarceration. Molly (Posy Sterling) has no money, is deemed as having made herself intentionally homeless, and faces huge barriers convincing children’s social care she can safely care for her children. Yet the housing system won’t let her apply for a home that would accommodate her family because she’s classed as a single woman while her children are in care. Molly is told bluntly: “We can’t send them home with you if you don’t have a home to go to.” She can’t get a home without her children – and can’t get her children back without a home.
While foster carers are fantastic in many instances, we know that the outcomes of children removed from their birth families remain unequal. Whether that’s poorer GSCE results, mental health, homelessness or lack of employment, the risks of reuniting a child with their mother after prison must be balanced with the trauma which results in removal. As Molly says, “You think it’s fair… that I can’t look after my children because I’ve got no money and then you’re going to go and pay someone else to look after them for me. So, riddle me that one.”
Molly is constantly told she has to be held accountable for the issues she faces: homelessness, going to prison, domestic abuse and poor mental health. But the perpetrator of the domestic abuse is unseen, which so often happens – Molly, a victim, is punished for her own abuse. Countering the accusation that her children are suffering, she says: “I’ve done my time, OK? You can’t punish me for the rest of my life.” The system, lacking compassion and common sense, fails to recognise the impact on the children who wish to live with their mother. You end up wanting to shout, “Just do the right thing!”
Molly, a victim, is punished for her own abuse
But Molly’s love for her children and the support of an amazing friend Amina (Idil Ahmed) keeps her going. Even then, there is no therapy available for Molly before her family court hearing. How can we demand that women who have lived through so much trauma address it when we can’t even provide them with the tools to do so?
The government’s introduction of a presumption to suspend short custodial sentences of 12 months or less, unless an offender has breached a court order, will overwhelmingly benefit women. Of women who serve custodial sentences, 16 per cent serve less than 12 months, compared to four per cent of men. Sentences should be suspended for all pregnant women, and housing options should be made available where women leaving prison could be safely reunited with their children.
The film’s depiction of the reality faced by women fighting to keep their heads above water after being released from prison has already won an award for the performance of its lead actor Posy Sterling. Her portrayal of Molly has now also been nominated for a rising star award at the Baftas this February.
I was honoured to host a screening of Lollipop in Parliament recently in partnership with Birth Companions, a wonderful charity which works with mothers facing disadvantage. The lived experience advisers on the panel said this film had finally made them feel heard – now we must change the system so it hears them as well.
Jess Asato is Labour MP for Lowestoft
LOLLIPOP
Written & directed by: Daisy-May Hudson
Broadcaster: BBC iPlayer
Politics
Louis Theroux’s Inside the Manosphere asks all the wrong questions
Over the past week or so, you could be forgiven for thinking you’d stepped into a time machine and been transported back to March 2025. Cast your mind back: Adolescence had just dropped on Netflix, and a moral panic was starting to set in about white working-class boys. Lurking in the background of the four-part series, which follows the arrest of a teenage boy accused of stabbing his female classmate to death, was the pernicious influence of Andrew Tate and the so-called manosphere in which he operates. Blaming the worst of all crimes on this self-proclaimed ‘misogynist’ influencer went down a storm at the time.
The Guardian hailed Adolescence as the ‘closest thing to TV perfection in decades’, while the Independent described its exploration of the ‘pernicious influence of the manosphere’ as ‘harrowing but compelling’. UK prime minister Keir Starmer wanted it to be shown in every British secondary school.
Exactly one year on, Louis Theroux’s latest documentary has once again put the manosphere under the microscope. The current moment feels like déjà-vu or, as Tate might say, a ‘glitch in the matrix’, because Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere also provides a superficial insight into a complex problem.
That hasn’t stopped critics from falling over themselves to praise the zany documentarian’s deep dive into the online world of hypermasculine content creators. Bragging about ‘one-way’ monogamy and the importance of material wealth above all else, these rage-baiting clowns have also sent celebrities into a tizzy. Everyone from Simon Cowell’s wife to Made in Chelsea’s Spencer Matthews – the same Spencer Matthews who gained notoriety as the bad-boy womaniser on the reality show – took to Instagram shortly after the credits rolled to issue a casting call for ‘better role models’ in society.
While documentaries like Inside the Manosphere offer celebrities an opportunity to declare to the world which way their moral compass points and to atone for past sins, they ultimately fail to grapple with why figures like Tate have such a hold on young boys.
Theroux does, at one point, attempt to unpack what motivates the main protagonists in this machismo movement. But he doesn’t get very far. Delving into the difficult ‘origin story’ of controversial streamer HSTikkyTokky (real name Harrison Sullivan), Theroux observes that ‘carrying the wounds of childhood can project trauma into the wider world’. Sullivan, we learn, was abandoned by his father.
It is to some extent understandable that Theroux ducked the question of why so many men find the ‘manosphere’ compelling. Honest answers may prove radioactive. But it is surely the most important question, and certainly would have led to far more interesting conversations, rather than shallow psychologising about the ‘wounds of childhood’.
For starters, what did the advent of the pill mean for gender relations? Did the #MeToo movement go too far? How about wokeism in general? Unintended consequences lurk everywhere, from sexual ethics to feminism.
And you don’t have to search hard to find them. The contradictions inherent in being a modern man are easily found on dating apps, where women routinely specify that they are seeking a ‘real man’ who is both ‘emotionally aware’ and ‘assertive’. It should be possible to traverse this thorny terrain without endorsing misogyny. In fact, dodging the hard questions in favour of platitudes will only reinforce the masculinity crisis.
The Tates of this world have gone where others fear to tread. That they have gone too far, and ended up in a sexist abyss, should not prevent the rest of us from asking whether the long assault on manhood has been a good thing. The old Louis Theroux would have asked these questions, and given us a much better documentary as a result.
Adam Chapman is a writer and editor.
Politics
“Doomsday” strike by Pakistan hits Kabul rehab centre
A senior Taliban official has said that Pakistan killed 408 people in an airstrike which targeted a drug rehab clinic in Kabul. The strike landed at 9pm on 16 March, allegedly wounded over 200, in addition to those killed. A Pakistani official said they had only targeted ‘military’ and ‘terrorist’ infrastructure.
Taliban spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat posted on X:
The Pakistani military regime carried out an airstrike at approximately 9:00 PM this evening on the Omid Addiction Treatment Hospital, a 2,000-bed facility dedicated to the treatment of drug addiction. As a result of the attack, large sections of the hospital have been destroyed, and there are serious concerns about a high number of casualties.
Unfortunately, the death toll has so far reached 400, while around 250 others have been reported injured. Rescue teams are currently at the scene working to control the fire and recover the remaining bodies of the victims.
The information minister of Pakistan, Attaullah Tarar, shared the following details:
✅ 17 March 2026
✅ Pakistan’s Armed Forces successfully carried out precision airstrikes on the night of 16 March as a part of Operation Ghazab Lil Haq, targeting Afghan Taliban regime terrorism sponsoring military installations in Kabul and Nangarhar.
✅ Technical support… pic.twitter.com/b8YJkGC0cv
— Attaullah Tarar (@TararAttaullah) March 16, 2026
Doomsday scenes
He and his 25 roommates had gathered in their dormitory after prayers when the attack occurred. He was the only survivor among them.
many young people under treatment lived in large containers on the campus and very few survived the strike…It was extremely terrifying. Those who survived were the ones whose rooms were not destroyed and were fortunate. But the places where the bombs were dropped, everyone there was killed.
Now we have come again … there are still bodies under the rubble.
Border tensions between the two countries, building for several months, have turned into a hot war.
Afghanistan-Pakistan border war
Fighting between the formerly US-occupied nation and Pakistan (itself a US partner) kicked off in February. At the time, the Canary reported how Pakistani officials were already calling the confrontation an ‘open war’ back in late February.
In an explainer Reuters said:
Allies-turned-foes Pakistan and Afghanistan’s worst fighting in years erupted last month, with Pakistani air strikes inside Afghanistan that Islamabad said targeted militant strongholds.
Afghanistan called the strikes a violation of its sovereignty that targeted civilians, and launched retaliatory operations.
Over the last three weeks, both countries have launched air and drone strikes against each other and also engaged in ground firing across their 2,600-km (1,600-mile) border, with each claiming to have inflicted heavy damage and killed hundreds of opposition troops, without providing evidence.
Featured image via X/Canary
Politics
DWP shitting on disabled claimants again
The Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) Pat McFadden couldn’t pass up the opportunity to demonise disabled benefit claimants whilst giving a speech announcing the Youth Employment Grant.
McFadden was at Walthamstow Forest College announcing that the DWP would give businesses 3 grand to trap kids in shit jobs. But he, of course, couldn’t resist being a dick about disabled people on unemployment benefits, too.
Whilst talking about youth unemployment, he segwayed into those who’d been found unfit for work. Or as the Labour-run DWP have rebranded it, those who receive the Universal Credit health element, yknow, for their poor health.
DWP demonising young disabled people, again
McFadden said:
A young person under 25 on the health element of Universal Credit is now less likely to get a job than someone over 55 on the same benefit.
Think about that in terms of the long-term consequences for people’s lives.
A 20-year-old on incapacity benefit is more likely to turn thirty and still be claiming than to have held a steady job for a year.
Around 65% of 20-year-olds claiming incapacity benefits 10 years ago are still claiming them today.
And perhaps worst of all, a young unemployed person is over 70% more likely to die prematurely than their peers.
To be clear, he’s talking about disabled people here. He’s not talking about people choosing not to work, but those who are either too sick to or would find working too challenging in the ableist society we live in.
The 20-year-old is less likely to get a job because they can’t work. The reason people are still claiming the benefit 10 years later is that they are still as, or even more, disabled than they were 10 years ago. Anybody too sick to work shouldn’t be expected to “have held a steady job”.
And to bring in the death rate is just absurd from a department that’s responsible for god knows how many disabled people’s deaths.
Spin as always
He carried on:
All of this should tell us that this debate cannot simply be concerned with monthly income levels. It has to be about opportunity and chances in life.
The question we should ask is not just “what are you entitled to” but “how do we help you change your life.”
Our ambition should be to empower people to change their story.
This, of course, is bullshit because both questions should come into play. But only in the respect of how the DWP can support disabled people, not force them into work.
What follows next is a spectacular crash course in subtly saying too many are claiming benefits who shouldn’t be, whilst making it sound like you want to help them all:
The OBR forecast is for over 2m more people to come on to long term sickness and disability benefits over the coming years. The variety of conditions has widened. There are more young people with long term health conditions. And we have an old system dealing with new circumstances.
I recently spoke to the Timms Review steering group and met with Alan Milburn.
My message to both was the same: take this chance to advocate radical and powerful change. Enable people to change their lives. Develop a system for the conditions we see today not those of yesteryear. Always remember our obligations to support those who need it and put empowerment and work at the heart of your reports.
The levels of bullshit are off the charts. In one breath, he’s saying conditions have changed and must be accounted for, and then at the same time, that the “change” will be forcing these people into work. Whilst making it sound like they just want to support and help disabled people.
Both of the reports McFadden mentioned are actively working to make it harder for disabled people to claim benefits. The Timms review comes after PIP cuts to make it harder to qualify were squashed by campaigners and MPs. The Milburn review will basically find ways to force kids into work. Milburn previously authored a report that called for the DWP to cut benefits except for those with ‘severe disabilities’.
DWP talking about those who can’t work, when they decide who can’t work
It’s all well and good to say, ‘always remember our obligations to support those who need it’. But when you finish that sentence with ‘and put empowerment and work at the heart of your reports, ‘ you’re making it very clear that only the people you deem to be disabled enough will get support.
Because that’s what needs to be remembered here, it’s not medical professionals who are deciding who can and can’t work because of their health. But a corrupt system whose main aim is to save money.
To claim you will support those who can’t work when you get to decide who fits that ever narrowing criterion is beyond cruel.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Travelodge change security policy after outrage
Travelodge has finally mandated ID checks for all replacement room keys this week. The policy change comes after widespread outrage over over the sexual assault of a solo female guest. As the Canary reported previously:
a woman was sexually assaulted after making a solo booking at the hotel – only for staff to give her attacker a key to her room. The perpetrator of the sexual assault, Kyran Smith, told staff he was her boyfriend and needed another key card. Despite not being present on the booking, the hotel gave him that key which enabled his abuse.
The budget hotel chain only implemented the security overhaul after a survivor and 100 MPs shamed the brand for its safeguarding failures.
A woman was sexually assaulted in a Travelodge. Staff gave her attacker the key to her room after he pretended to be her boyfriend. She was offered £30 in compensation. Appalling.
Along with 100 Labour colleagues, I’ve written to Travelodge’s CEO & asked to meet. pic.twitter.com/1pxjVqZvn3
— Anneliese Midgley MP (@anneliese_midge) March 8, 2026
Travelodge put profit before basic safety
Smith is now serving 7.5 years in prison, but is that really the end of the story? No, not when the hotel’s role in this assault remains a point of national outrage:
‘How can you be sure if you are a woman and you’re going to stay at one of their hotels that you will be safe?’
Labour MP Jen Craft told #BBCBrealfast more than 100 MPs have demanded a meeting with the boss of Travelodge after a woman was sexually assaulted in her hotel bed by a… pic.twitter.com/MZqztwW5dd
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) March 9, 2026
The company’s new policy finally requires staff to verify the identity of anyone asking for a room key. This is either going to be through the booking reference, or through direct contact with the person within the room. Travelodge have also claimed to have “intensified” staff training on safeguarding processes across their UK hotels. But we need to ask why it took a life-changing trauma and a fucking PR nightmare for a huge corporation to implement the most basic level of security? Guest safety should be a fundamental right, not a reactive damage-control measure.
The measly cost of human trauma
Travelodge’s initial response to this fuck up was a measly £30 voucher offered to the survivor. Literally just a refund on the cost of staying the evening. That’s it. They treated a brutal sexual assault like a minor customer service complaint, or a shitty cold breakfast. The company since admitted this offer was “inappropriate” and guest safety is now their “priority”.
How the hell was it not before? If safety were a priority, they would never have facilitated the invasion of what should have been a private room.
Over 100 MPs co-signed a letter to the CEO demanding immediate accountability. Anneliese Midgley said the chain played an “intrinsic role” in the abuse. The survivor herself has been the driving force for these changes stating:
I don’t want this to happen to anyone else. It’s not just about me, it’s about making sure hotels are safe for everyone.
Corporate greed consistently prioritises the ease of check-in over human life. A shitty £30 voucher shows exactly how the corporation quantifies the trauma of women. It reflects a disgusting culture where corporate liability and profit margins matter more than people. They only move when the political and public pressure becomes a threat to their profit margins.
Industry standards are no excuse for rape
Travelodge initially tried to hide behind the claim this it followed ‘industry standard security procedures’. This suggests the entire budget hotel industry is currently failing to protect women. All of them. We cannot allow “standard procedure” to be used as an excuse for corporate negligence. Travelodge’s chief executive Jo Boyden stated on:
We have done an internal review of our room access security policies and have made some immediate changes to ensure that an additional or replacement room key is only issued with explicit permission from the person, or people, staying in the room.
This has been rolled out to all of our hotels, supported by training for our 12,000 customer-facing colleagues.
The CEO went on to say that safety of guests was the most important thing and that the company has commissioned an independent review of its room security measures. The Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner Eleanor Lyons called this case a “stark reminder” that criminals exploit “weaknesses in hotel security”.
‘They offered me a complimentary breakfast, it was nothing in comparison to the trauma and fear’
As MPs meet Travelodge over concerns about security, Emma Jackson told #BBCBreakfast about a recent ‘frightening’ experience a stranger used a key card to enter her hotel room, as… pic.twitter.com/Eg3VPWdpMe
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) March 14, 2026
As the Canary reported, sexual offenses increased 511% in the last 20 years. In 2024 alone 71,227 rapes were recorded by police and yet only 2.7% of them resulted in charge. Politicians are right to demand total transparency from the board regarding these new training modules. We need to see a complete overhaul of how hotel security functions. Now.
Women should not have to live in fear for their lives in a room they have paid for. The fact a man can simply lay claim to a woman’s personal space is sickening.
Will Travelodge actually change it’s internal culture, or is this more corporate window dressing? We will not feel safe until we see these policies enforced by law across the entire sector.
Featured image via Travelodge.com
Politics
Israeli settlers assault Palestinians in West Bank
Israeli terrorists euphemistically known as ‘settlers’ invaded and terrorised a West Bank village on Sunday 15 March 2026. The ethno-supremacist land thieves attacked Khirbet Humsa, rounded up families and then beat and sexually assaulted children and women in front of their bound families and neighbours. A father was also “severely” sexually assaulted and beaten in front of his family.
Once they were done, the settlers pretended to pour petrol over their victims, terrifying them that they would suffer the same fate as a horrifically-burned Palestinian youth in Ramallah a day earlier.
During the hour-long attack, the ‘settlers’ stripped and beat children, particularly girls, in front of their children and threatened to kill them and rape the families’ women. The invaders also assaulted two women, one Portuguese and one from the US, who were in the village as human rights activists. The father who was sexually attacked was bound, stripped and beaten before the terrorists attacked his genitals with clubs.
As the Canary’s Charlie Jaay reported from the West Bank:
The settlers also blindfolded activists, beat up one Palestinian man with rocks, and sexually assaulted another person. Activists were asked if they wanted their fingers cut and their rings were stolen as well as their passports, phones and money.
After the attack, because the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) blocked their access to the property, it took three hours for the first ambulance to arrive for the injured.
Israeli atrocities
The UK’s ‘mainstream’ media have completely ignored the attack – but Israeli paper Haaretz published details. One young woman told the paper:
I woke up to the settlers’ shouts. They slapped me and dragged us outside, bound us, tore off my head covering, and ripped some of my clothes. They pulled the girls out and beat them, even the little ones. They mocked us and celebrated our humiliation.
A 74-year-old victim said:
Three of them beat me hard on the head, hands and stomach. The other smashed the security cameras, the router and the lights. I started to lose consciousness.
They poured water on me, and during this time one settler stole the watch from my hand. I was sure they were going to rape me
Another, unable to walk unaided after the attack and still bearing marks from bindings, was slashed with a knife:
They came to my home, and I tried to escape, but they caught me. They cut me with a knife above the wrist and bound my hands and feet with a zip tie. They poured cold water on us and threw us to the ground while we were bound, then piled us on top of each other inside the structure, men, women and children.
The US human rights activist said:
I woke up… to my friend screaming at us to get up before immediately being swarmed and trapped in the tent by about six masked Israeli settlers armed with heavy wooden sticks. They immediately beat the three of us to the ground, smashing our faces with their fists and clubs. They zip-tied our hands and feet and were yelling things like, ‘We are going to kill you!’
Others ransacked our bags, stealing our wallets and passports. One asked me for my phone, and every time I said I didn’t know where it was – because the whole tent was a mess and I couldn’t move – he hit me in the face.
Sexual assault
She also confirmed the sexual assault on the male victim, who asked the paper not to share full details of what the terrorists had done to him:
They pulled down the Palestinian man’s pants, poured water all over him and brutally beat him into the dirt. All he could do was curl into a fetal position and scream when they beat him with their clubs. It was one of the worst things I’ve ever seen.
They kept hitting and kicking all of us, but the Palestinians were receiving the most brutal blows. I lay there shaking, with my hands over my face to protect my face. [One elderly victim] was curled up in the fetal position, zip-tied, with a bleeding gash on his swollen cheek. He looked unconscious. In a whisper you could hear the kids praying. It was one of the few things that pulled me through the horror.
They screamed at us to remove our rings, saying, ‘I will break your fingers if you don’t take them off faster,’ and they kept hitting my face while I struggled to remove mine with my hands zip-tied. Every so often they asked our names and where we were from.
At first I thought [the water they poured over us] was gasoline, and the thought of being burned alive in the tent with the Palestinian family flooded my mind. Someone ripped my jacket open with a knife, aggressively cutting from my left armpit to my hip. One settler started messing with my belt, and I screamed because I thought they were going to rape me.
One of the ‘settlers’ did not even bother to mask his face. One Palestinian victim said:
He spoke in Arabic [in front of everyone including the children] and threatened that we should leave. Otherwise they would return, burn the houses, kill the children, and rape the women.
At least six people were hospitalised by the attack. After the attackers left with the village’s livestock, Israeli soldiers arrived and prevented the village’s men pursuing them:
When the army arrived, they detained us. That gave the settlers time to get away with the herd. About an hour and a half later an ambulance arrived. The army detained us so the healthy men couldn’t pursue the settlers.
Routine violence
‘Settlers’ have murdered eleven Palestinians in the West Bank since Israel began its illegal war on Iran. In 2025, the racist mobs murdered 240 people in the West Bank, including 55 children. Sexual violence by Israeli settlers and military against their Palestinian victims is common. Thousands held without charge in Israeli torture camps face daily beatings and sexual torture.
The Israeli regime is currently ignoring well over 2,000 extradition requests for alleged and convicted paedophiles. In April 2025 Shoshana Strook, the daughter of Israel’s far-right settlements minister fled to police and asked them to protect her, accusing both her parents and one of her brothers of raping her as a child, over a period of years, and filming the rapes.
Strook was found dead at her home on Sunday 15 March, a couple of days after appointing a lawyer to pursue justice. The authorities claim she died by suicide, but Strook had posted shortly before her death that:
If they tell you I committed suicide, don’t believe it. If they tell you I was involved in an accident, don’t believe it.
Israeli psychotherapist and trauma expert Dr Anat Gur, head of the Bar-Ilan University trauma therapy program, has said that she believes organised child rape in Israel is widespread:
Organized child rape is one of the most horrific things I’ve encountered. It’s likely much more widespread than we think. It’s happening in places we least expect.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Hegseth humiliates himself in bizarre rant to press
US ‘secretary of war’ Pete Hegseth has self-owned – and self-humiliated – in an abject, whining rant at the US press corps.
Hegseth’s frustration has clearly been growing at the failure of the US to subdue the Iranian government or prevent its heavy retaliation on US bases and Israeli military and intelligence installations. So he lashed out at the media, claiming that criticising him and his boss is the same as insulting US military service people.
The man often called ‘Kegseth’ for his alleged public inebriation, a torture fan who bears a white supremacist tattoo, did spend time in the US military before becoming a TV presenter and then ‘war’ dude. However, it’s very doubtful that he knows anything about flying a jet for 36 hours, beyond hoping to use it to beat reporters with.
If he wasn’t sending soldiers, sailors and air personnel to mass murder schoolgirls, risk death themselves and put the whole world in danger on behalf of the Epstein cartel, his performance would be funny:
But his boss is targeting journalists too. Trump has suggested that media reports of US failure and Iranian resistance are treason and should be punishable by death. Meanwhile the CIA is reportedly preparing a criminal case against right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson for daring to speak to Iranians before Trump’s “Operation Epstein Distraction“.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Labour is playing AI roulette with our kids’ lives
The UK government is rolling out an AI-empowered predictive policing system to predict the “likelihood” of criminal offences among adolescents. Open Rights Group is warning of the risks and limitations of using AI to determine the “most likely offenders.”
In conversation with the Canary, Mariano delli Santi of Open Rights Group explained that these systems are likely to single out children in care and alert authorities to targeted interventions. This means so-called predictive data models will be used to target vulnerable children.
AI is racist because it mimics society
Delli Santi said:
They say they want to help, that they will use this system to target children who are at risk of criminality, with support and therefore to prevent them from becoming criminals. However the way artificial intelligence and predictive policing works, tells us that this may not be everything in this story.
These systems will inevitably reflect society’s prejudices and stereotypes, making them inherently racist and classist, revealing problematic outcomes of predictive policing in practice.
The system, delli Santi explains, risks reproducing:
bias and stereotypes at scale. Black people, migrant people, poor people, people from geographic areas which have been historically over policed are more likely to be identified as at risk of committing a crime.
AI, as we’ve all come to discover, is massively racist. As the Canary has previously reported, 4/5 of people misidentified by facial recognition are Black.
Harvesting NHS data
Beyond bias, the unethical sourcing of data is another concern delli Santi identifies. The government wants to pull data from the NHS, police, Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), and the Department for Education. So anything you tell your doctor could be used to box children into the ‘future criminal’ category. Consequently, AI-driven predictive policing may use NHS records for risk calculation.
Commenting on this Delli Santi tells the Canary:
When you go to your doctor, you expect to be able to tell them what you need to tell them, in order to receive medical treatment and you trust them to not use this data in a way that you will not expect.
If however the government starts to grab data from your general practitioner from your schools…in order to predict whether your child is going to commit a crime or not, this relationship of trust is going to be broken. People will go to their doctor and will have less trust and will think more carefully about what they’re going to disclose and reveal to them or not.
His warning is clear:
Predictive policing is a dangerous thing that has no place in a democratic society.
The government are hellbent on pushing through this policy which will criminalise your kids. However, Open Rights Group is campaigning to introduce a ban on predictive policing. You can join the campaign here.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump claims it’s ‘unfair’ of Iran to defend itself from illegal war
Donald Trump has claimed it’s a “little unfair” that a predominantly brown, Muslim country has decided to actually fight back against US colonialism.
The US and Israel started the war in Iran with illegal and unprovoked attacks. Yet now, it seems that shit got a little too real for him.
I AM LOST FOR WORDS…
“It’s Little Unfair” of Iran to Fight Back.
-Donald Trump pic.twitter.com/S3dm4fvw9M— Earth Hippy 🌎🕊️💚 (@hippyygoat) March 16, 2026
You had no right to bomb and murder nearly 200 little girls in the name of freeing Iranian women. I guess if they don’t reach adulthood, they can’t be “oppressed by the regime”.
“They have no right to be doing what they’re doing” is a crazy statement when you attack someone. https://t.co/ApHFP5jObI
— Gissur Simonarson (@GissiSim) March 17, 2026
Who’s going to bomb the US to free all the women that Trump’s regime is subjugating?
Bro got too used to attacking children and unarmed populations in open air prisons. Cant cope when someone can fight back https://t.co/eP03qQMI20
— Bajii (@bajiipliss) March 17, 2026
This is the type of video you watch four times just to make sure you’re not losing your mind.
The reality is, the president of the most powerful country in the world does not give a shit about Black and Brown people.
I guess Trump and his paedo friends are not used to people fighting back.
Trump: old habits die hard
And in a rare moment of lucidity, Trump admitted he went to war with Iran “out of habit”.
He added that Israel is a great ally, which, of course, is another reason the US should start an illegal war. Israel says jump and Trump asks how high.
Unreal. Trump says he went to war with Iran “out of habit,” adding “which is not a good thing to do.”
Rare moment of lucidity, I guess 😏pic.twitter.com/sniR2htmpJ
— Arnaud Bertrand (@RnaudBertrand) March 17, 2026
Imagine bombing school children out of habit? Does he have the same excuse for hanging out with Epstein for all those years?
Trump also talked about “violent and vicious people” who have “destroyed the country. At least bro is self-aware.
“violent and vicious,” “horrible people” who have “destroyed the country.”
Every accusation is a confession. https://t.co/8SQkwiJm7d
— David Marsden (@DvdMrsdn) March 17, 2026
This is the same guy who tried to insult Governor Gavin Newsom’s intelligence, whilst accidentally calling him the “President of the United States”.
US colonialism
Countries, including occupied territories (ahem, Gaza, the Golan Heights, Southern Lebanon), have the right to self-defence under international law.
Article 51 of the United Nations Charter establishes the right to self-defence as a “fundamental exception to the prohibition on the use of force between states”. Specifically, armed attacks justify recourse to self-defence.
The US has the strongest military in the world and Israel is the only state (albeit illegal) in the Middle East with nuclear weapons. Iran has neither of these, which is why the way it fights back may not make sense through conventional frameworks.
As Dr Narges Bajoghli wrote on Instagram:
Iran is targeting Gulf security architecture. For decades, the U.S. built a regional order where Gulf states host American bases, buy American weapons, and maintain stability that keeps oil flowing on U.S. terms.
Iran’s strategy dismantles that.Strike the infrastructure. Make the bases vulnerable. Force Gulf states to question whether American security guarantees are worth the risk of being Iranian targets. Fracture the regional consensus that enabled U.S. dominance.
She added:
So they’re turning that weapon back on the global economy. Threaten shipping lanes. Target refineries in allied states.
Make oil prices spike. Create economic pain that translates to political pressure on governments waging war.
Iran is hitting the US, Israel, and countries in which the US has military bases or infrastructure, where it hurts, and Trump underestimated their willingness to do so.
Maybe if more countries fought back against the US and Israel, the world would be less fucked up.
Featured image via X/AF Post
Politics
Wild Justice wins High Court ruling on Dartmoor overgrazing
The High Court has ruled that the Dartmoor Commoners’ Council (DCC) has mismanaged Dartmoor commons. DCC did nothing to assess or prevent overgrazing, resulting in the deterioration of important wildlife areas.
Environmental campaign group Wild Justice brought the claim. It argued that DCC had failed to meet its legal responsibilities towards the conservation of the commons.
The High Court judgment on 17 March ruled that DCC has failed in its legal duty under the Dartmoor Commons Act 1985 to assess the number of animals which should be allowed to graze on Dartmoor.
Dartmoor commons is an open area of land which covers more than two-thirds of Dartmoor National Park, spanning just under 36,000 hectares.
The Dartmoor Commons Act grants certain rights over the land to some 850 landowners, known as ‘commoners’. These include grazing rights and the rights to keep sheep, cattle and ponies.
Monitoring overgrazing on Dartmoor
The Dartmoor Commons Act also contains statutory responsibilities that DCC has to ensure the conservation of the commons. Wild Justice argued DCC failed to meet these responsibilities, alongside general duties under wildlife laws and regulations.
In a July 2025 High Court hearing, Wild Justice successfully argued that DCC failed to make periodic assessments of whether Dartmoor was becoming overstocked. This contravened section 4 of the Dartmoor Commons Act.
In his judgment, Justice Mould found:
Assessment of the number of animals that may properly be depastured on the commons at any given time necessarily implies both quantitative and qualitative analysis. The question for the Defendant is whether stocking levels exceed the capacity of the commons properly to accommodate them.
In order to address that question, among the matters which the Defendant needs to interrogate are the numbers of livestock which commoners are entitled to depasture on the commons, the numbers that are actually depastured in reliance on rights of common, the areas of common in respect of which those rights are enjoyed and exercised, seasonal variations, and so on.
In 2023, the government published an assessment of Dartmoor commons (the Fursdon Review). It found that Dartmoor was “not in a good state”.
In assessing a number of Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) on the commons, the Fursdon Review found that many of them were in unfavourable condition. It also noted that Natural England had identified reducing stock numbers as a way to tackle overgrazing and return these areas to a more favourable condition.
Wild Justice began its legal claim in July 2024, when the group sent a pre-action protocol to DCC. It detailed alleged issues with DCC’s management of the commons, citing the Fursdon Review.
From DCC’s response it was clear that it had not taken any steps to control livestock. This led to Wild Justice filing a judicial review challenge in August 2024.
In February 2025, the challenge got the green light to proceed to the High Court, with two further grounds gaining permission in April.
Bob Elliot, CEO of Wild Justice, said:
This judgment shows that the Dartmoor Commoners’ Council failed to do the most basic of work needed in order to understand how many animals the Dartmoor Commons can sustain. When such an important landscape is already in very poor ecological condition, this simply isn’t good enough.
The Dartmoor Commoners’ Council must now carry out the proper assessment required by law and ensure that Dartmoor is managed in a way that allows nature to recover. We will be scrutinising that assessment and, importantly, how DCC acts upon it in areas where overgrazing is apparent.
Senior environmental solicitor Carol Day, of Leigh Day, was a member of the legal team representing Wild Justice. She said:
Wild Justice is obviously pleased that the judge has found that Dartmoor Commoners’ Council has failed in its statutory duty to properly assess the number of livestock grazing on Dartmoor. It has been clear for years that overgrazing is one of the major issues leading to the ecological decline of Dartmoor’s important wildlife habitats.
Wild Justice ‘s legal challenge means the DCC must now comply with its minimum legal duties as the regulator of grazing levels on the commons. The DCC must now urgently carry out a qualitative and quantitative assessment of the number of livestock on the commons so that it can consider whether it must take steps to reduce that number.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
The Iran war and the toxic fallout
The toxic fallout of the unprovoked, illegal US-Israeli war against Iran will haunt the region for generations. The Conflict and Environment Observatory (CEO) says the pollution produced by military strikes could have terrible long-term effects.
We’ve just updated our overview of environmentally damaging incidents in the Israeli-US war against #Iran. We’ve identified more than 300 incidents and remotely assessed 232 for harm.
Read more about these incidents and trends here: https://t.co/brloxSPBqE #IranWar #Iran 1/5 pic.twitter.com/1xH6isVkOJ
— Conflict and Environment Observatory (CEOBS) (@ceobs_org) March 10, 2026
Iran was offering unprecedented concessions in negotiations at the time of the first strike on 28 February. The Pentagon has since stated there was no imminent threat from Iran while the UN’s atomic watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has said there is no evidence Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.
The Conflict and Environment Observatory reported:
As of the 10th March 2026, we have identified over 300 incidents, 232 of which have been assessed for their environmental risk. The results are mapped below, showing incidents in Iran, Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, Jordan, Cyprus, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Azerbaijan. By far the commonest facility type is a ‘Military Object’.
The CEO added:
Of those the most impacted sub-type is ‘Airbases’. Away from military sites, incidents cover a range of facility types, with different pollution profiles, from hospitals, to tyre storage sites, to oil refineries. As the conflict proceeds, we are seeing more attacks on civilian and dual use infrastructure.
CEO listed different kinds of physical, economic and social damage which are likely to have long-term effects, including:
- Pollution from military sites and materiel
- Marine pollution
- Fossil energy infrastructure incidents
- Nuclear facilities
- Desalination plants
- Weakened environmental governance
We examine risks to the region’s terrestrial and marine environments. Attacks on naval and merchant shipping have the potential to cause serious pollution threats to sensitive habitats in the #PersianGulf. 3/5 pic.twitter.com/Xo1W3xIi0m
— Conflict and Environment Observatory (CEOBS) (@ceobs_org) March 10, 2026
The CEO said they would continue to assess damage reports via social and traditional media:
We have seen a continuation — since our 3 day assessment — of pollution incidents that are placing people and ecosystems at risk of acute and long-term harm, and trends that could lead to substantial environmental damage as the war continues
Black rain over Tehran
In an earlier report published on 9 March, CEO assessed the effects of oil production sites being hit in Tehran, underlining the human cost:
Belligerents argue that attacks on oil facilities are militarily legitimate but in Tehran the civilian impact has been huge.
Israeli strikes on oil infrastructure between 7 and 8 March resulted “in a major environmental incident.”
Footage showed thick plumes of black toxic smoke and large fires burning at several facilities. This toxic mix of pollutants subsequently rained out over the city and entered drainage systems, raising concerns about possible surface and groundwater contamination.
With a population of more than nine million, the incident raises serious acute and long-term health concerns for Tehran’s residents.
The environmental impact of Israel’s genocide in Gaza is already being felt as congenital disabilities increase. The toxic legacy of the illegal Anglo-American invasion of Iraq is still unfolding, particularly in Fallujah where invading US forces weaponised depleted uranium and white phosphrous in November 2004 – which the Americans later admitted to.
The use of depleted uranium in the war on Iraq in 2003 has led to exposure of the local population to radioactive uranium dust. This could potentially explain the significant rise in cancer and congenital malformations documented in Fallujah after 2003.
Iran has snubbed US offers to negotiate citing the protection of its sovereignty and territorial integrity as its immediate priorities. The initial strike on Iran occurred amidst Oman-brokered negotiations which the mediating force at the time said had “advanced, substantially.”
Without an end to the war in sight, and with continuing US and Israeli aggression, the toxic potential of another forever war will mount. And a mix of US hubris and Israeli ambition will impose that burden on the people of the region.
Featured image via the Canary
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