Britain | Hot protest summer

Britain’s draconian approach to pro-Gaza activism is likely to backfire

Heavy-handed use of anti-terror laws may amplify provocateurs

Crowds watch Kneecap, a band, performing at the Glastonbury Festival
Photograph: Alamy
|4 min read

IN EARLY 1977 the Sex Pistols were mostly known, if at all, for having sworn on television. Then came the punk band’s second single, “God Save the Queen”, with such lyrics as “The fascist regime” and “She ain’t no human being”. MPs boiled with outrage; tabloids screamed treason. In forcing the BBC to ban all airplay, they only increased the song’s allure. The record sold 150,000 copies a day, reaching number two during the week of Queen Elizabeth II’s Silver Jubilee, its place in the charts marked with a blank line.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The Gaza-Streisand effect ”

From the July 5th 2025 edition

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