Scotland passed a new hAte sPeeCH law last week that made "misgendering" a "trans" person illegal.
JK Rowling went mega-viral with her attempt to test the law, daring Scotland to place her under arrest for her thought crimes.
But it seems like JK Rowling wasn't the only one testing Scotland's hate speech law.
The police in Scotland "can't cope" with the extreme number of reports of "hate crimes," with more than 8,000 coming in a week.
To put that in perspective, that's greater than the number of hate crimes handled in any entire year prior.
According to initial estimates, Police Scotland received around 8,000 complaints under the law in the first seven days of its implementation, which according to analysis by The Telegraph, would surpass the total number of crimes reported annually (416,000) if the trends continue.
Either the people of Scotland are very keen on reporting their neighbors to the Ministry of Truth, or else they're trolling the wokescolds with everything they've got!
Regardless, with such a flood of complaints, Scotland won't be able to really enforce the law.
The chairman of the Scottish Police Federation David Threadgold warned that the man-power hours required to deal with such a large number of complaints will impact the police force's ability to deal with actual crimes, with the force already failing to solve a growing number of crimes like sexual assault, shoplifting, and car theft. Scotland has also been plagued by a drug epidemic, with the small nation having the highest drug-related deaths per capita in all of Europe.
"Police Scotland have gone public and said that on every occasion, reports of hate crime will be investigated," he said, explaining: "That creates a situation where we simply cannot cope at the moment. Officers have been brought back in to do overtime shifts and the management of that is simply unsustainable
They've already made it policy. They HAVE to investigate every report of a hate crime. Sadly, that's going to require taking cops away from investigating REAL crime.
Every time a fake woman gets his feelings hurt when he's called "sir" or "buddy," serious police man hours and Scottish tax dollars have to be spent parsing the details and determining the seriousness of the crime.
(What a great time to be a murderer in Scotland, eh?)
Meanwhile, despite the onslaught of reports to police during the first week, there is little support for the draconian speech codes, which come with a penalty of up to seven years in prison. A survey last week found that just 21 per cent of the public supported the law, while 45 per cent were in favour of abolishing the legislation.
I find it absolutely wild that there isn't a majority in favor of abolishing this law.
Even so, it's unpopular, unenforceable, and makes Scotland less safe.
Good job, wokies!
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