Oakham Castle - Rutland!

Rutland: Visiting Oakham Castle – the Land of Large Horse Shoes! (29.10.2025)

Judge Kai-Lin, Judge Gee, and Judge Mei-An!

This place is publicly accessible – free of charge – and the staff are very helpful, knowledgeable, and friendly. As we are staying in the Rutland area – we decided to visit the Castle after I saw a so-called “Auditor” who compromised the “good will” of the institute by deliberately igniting a pointless conflict about flying a drone over the property (Audiotrs inflict a type of “rhetorical terrorism” – whereby they blame their bad behaviour upon those they inflict it upon). We felt that we should visit the site, behave properly and with civility, and defend the good culture of England. These Auditing thugs are making money out of YouTube (most are unemployed and are working on the dole) by following a movement which emerged out of the political far-right in the US. Indeed, Rutland is the only place we have visited that is so democratic that we were allowed to “sit” in the Judges Seat whilst the Magistrate’s Court was not in session. We were told this was allowed as the Court “belongs to the people” who pay for it through taxation.

I think there has been a fortified castle on the site since the Normal Conquest of 1066 – or just after. Today, there is an entrance – and the relatively small building used as a local Court, as well as the ruins of a moat (motte) and an artificial hillock (which we walked up). There is a tradition of important visitors providing a large (ornate) horse-shoe to commemorate the visit. This grew out of the habit of donating real horse-shoes – which developed into a new protocol when most people stopped riding horses as a general means of conveyance.

Both myself and Gee raise our children in a scientific manner – so that experience equals development and progression. The more they can experience in a constructive manner will lead to their brain operating in an optimum manner – whilst their bodies inhabit the physical world in a peaceful and dynamic orientation that benefits all and sundry. We explained that those accused of breaking the law (not always just or correct) – are arrested by the police and processed by the Courts before being either found innocent and released – or found guilty and given fines, non-custodial sentences, or various terms of imprisonment, etc. We then showed the two children the cell adjacent to the Courtroom – and they were shocked by its austere nature. We explained that when the State acts against the individual – all rights and privileges available in everyday life are suspended and/or withdrawn. This was an important part of today’s proceeding’s – as we later visited Rutland Museum on behalf of the Buddhist-Marxism Alliance (UK) – to photograph and film the only remaining “mobile” gallows still in existence in the UK. Our report on this part of today’s journey will be published on the BMA (UK) website.

Oakham Castle – The Cell – Serving the Magistrate’s Court!