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Micky
6a1db412d4cde10508d986f2cf5525a8d75f1b9f866f006b5e188da34c6adc77
Pleb Extraordinaire

💯. Those teenage girls tricked all the celebrities and politicians into meeting them on that island!

Those were the days...

🤣 They are missing a trick there aren't they!

Perhaps they can helicopter Beyoncé in for a show on one of the Skyscrapers when they go for lunch?

June 15th

Happy Magna Carta Day! 🇬🇧📜🇨🇶

On this day in 1215, King John was reluctantly forced to seal the Magna Carta at Runnymede — laying the foundation for constitutional limits on monarchy and planting seeds of modern democracy, rule of law, and individual rights.

Not bad for a medieval peace treaty that didn’t even last the year.

Still...it echoes in time and shapes the world (to some degree at least) today.

Yes, small saplings of freedom decided to take root on some small rain-sodden islands in the North Atlantic....

The original Magna Carta (sealed June 15, 1215) was a peace deal between King John and rebel barons who were furious over his abuses of power — like heavy taxes, arbitrary arrests, and failed military campaigns (sound familiar...?)

But:

John never intended to follow it. He only agreed under pressure, essentially at sword-point.

Just weeks later, he wrote to the Pope, who was his ally, claiming the charter was invalid.

Pope Innocent III annulled it in August 1215, calling it “not only shameful and base but also illegal and unjust.”

This triggered the First Barons’ War, as the rebels rose up again, now with French support.

⚔️ What happened next?

1216: King John died unexpectedly (dysentery, age 49). His 9-year-old son, Henry III, was crowned.

The regent, William Marshal, reissued a revised Magna Carta in 1216 and again in 1217 to win back baronial support and stabilize the kingdom.

This stripped some more radical clauses but kept the core idea: even the king is bound by law.

🌱 How this sowed deeper seeds of freedom:

■ Repeated reissues: The Magna Carta was reissued multiple times over the next century — notably in 1225 and 1297 — each time embedding it deeper into English legal tradition.

■ Clause 39 became iconic:

"No free man shall be seized or imprisoned... except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land."

An early basis for due process and habeas corpus.

■ Model Parliament (1295): Under Edward I, barons, clergy, and commoners were all summoned — an early move toward representative government.

■ Sir Edward Coke (1600s): Quoted Magna Carta in defending parliamentary rights against royal power — it became a legal symbol of liberty.

■ It influenced later revolutions such as:

▪︎ English Civil War & Glorious Revolution

▪︎ U.S. Constitution & Bill of Rights

🔁 Irony & Legacy:

The original Magna Carta was a failed peace treaty between elite landowners and a tyrant king. But over time, people reinterpreted it — lifting it out of its feudal context and turning it into a symbol of liberty, justice, and constitutional limits.

So, while it died quickly in 1215, its afterlife lasts over 800 years.

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Happy Peasants Revolt Weekend⚒️🔥⚔️

Today also marks the Death of Wat Tyler, a prominent figure in The Peasants Revolt of 1381.

Though the revolt was crushed, the revolt terrified the ruling class . It was one of the first large-scale uprisings where commoners demanded:

- The end of serfdom

- Fairer taxes

- Better treatment from landlords and local officials

While most immediate gains were reversed, over the next century, serfdom in England gradually declined, and the memory of 1381 echoed in future challenges to authority.

A young king, a murdered rebel leader, and burning palaces — it was one of medieval England’s most explosive moments which sent a ripples across much of Europe in the decades that followed.

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Therefore, whenever June 15th comes to pass, those of us in the Anglosphere, Commonwealth or indeed anyone anywhere who can draw inspiration from such events, may be inclined to reflect on where we have come from, where we are and where our trajectory may be taking us.

Whilst on a standalone basis, these were indeed failures; they nonetheless helped change the course of history, and offer a small token of hope to some whom aspire for a fairer, decentralised, more autonomous future today.

So if you are feeling a little rebellious today....remember....you might have the blood 🩸 of rebels flowing through your veins!!!

Im not sure we can have "good quality speech (Signal)" without some degree of "bad quality speech (noise)". Arguably one man's trash is another man's treasure too.

One challenge is it may well become like x / twitters "freedom of speech, not reach" policy if it went the financial route.

Which I'm not sure if this is the best overall outcome for all either, even if there are benefits.

Would a better strategy be to allow functionality for folk to amplify and attenuate signal / noise in some way i.e. via

Communities / Groups?

Those good at picking up Signal might help others find it also. Perhaps with a small entry fee or credibility qualification into a Community.

Sorry - I feel like I'm offering more problems than solutions. Something like this probably requires a fair degree of prudence. Though I like what you are driving at in many ways.

Some degree of bad actors has to be allowed I think for it to flourish. The OG Bitcoiners / Cypherpunks were arguably 'bad actors' once upon a time.