Is Trans Protester a Member of Britain’s Wokest Family?

Riz Possnett, the trans protester who glued herself to floor of the Oxford Union debating chamber earlier this week, is the daughter of an Extinction Rebellion protestor and a town hall chief who introduced a four day working week. Oh, and she went to a £40,000 a year private school. The Mail has more.

Most middle-class parents would be mortified if their offspring got into Oxford University only to become notorious for staging a stunt that disrupted Britain’s most prestigious debating society.

But not so the family of Riz Possnett, who glued their hand to the floor of the Oxford Union this week in protest at a speech by Professor Kathleen Stock.

The 20-year-old’s father Robert Possnett is a member of Extinction Rebellion who has been arrested numerous times for joining eco protests – and was a fanatical Remainer.

Meanwhile, Riz’s mother Liz Watts is the town hall bigwig whom the Daily Mail recently exposed for introducing a four-day week while secretly writing a PhD on the controversial experiment.

Together their devotion to some of modern Britain’s most fashionable causes has seen them dubbed the nation’s wokest family.

One local source lamented: “They are clearly Britain’s looniest Left family, with brains replaced by the social media bandwagons.”

Riz’s father seems to have previously been less radical, serving in the Army for seven years until 1985.

According to his LinkedIn profile, he reached the rank of Lance Corporal as a “patrol commander” in the Parachute Regiment.

Mr. Possnett did a degree in philosophy at the University of North London followed by a masters in the “idea of toleration” at York.

He delivered aid to Mostar in Bosnia in 1995 and later returned to the Balkans, working on aid programmes and consultancy.

His partner Ms. Watts was there at the same time, working for the Office of the High Representative, created to oversee the peace agreement ending the Bosnian war.

However, the couple, who both worked for the Refugee Council in the late 1990s, returned to England briefly when she gave birth to a girl.

In recent years Mr Possnett has worked for a climate tech firm called Crowley Carbon.

He and his family live in a sprawling six-bedroom bungalow in a Suffolk village, which they bought for £362,000 but is now estimated to be worth as much as £855,000.

In their driveway is a white MG electric car, even though Mr Possnett boasted in 2019 that he had “given my car away” and insisted “electric cars are not the answer”.

Satellite images on Google Maps also reveal a large open-air swimming pool in their back garden.

Now 61, he describes himself as an “Extinction Rebellion activist” online. He opposed Brexit – but in December 2021, told fellow Remainers: “If you’re tweeting about Brexit rather than the climate and ecological emergency, then you are part of the problem rather than the solution.”

Mr Possnett was at Parliament Square for the launch of Extinction Rebellion in October 2018. The next year he handed himself in to Cambridge police, asking to be charged with ‘criminal damage to the planet’.

And during the 2019 election campaign, he and three others dressed as bees and glued themselves to a Brexit Party bus in Grimsby.

In February that year he was ‘very proud’ to be arrested for disrupting a council meeting and was later found guilty of disorder.

Then in August 2021 he sprayed red paint on the doors of London’s Guildhall building.

And after a protest where he was locked up overnight, he wrote that he had ‘never been more proud’ then when his daughter called him ‘incredible’ for being arrested.

This week he also described himself as a “proud dad” when eco-activist Riz posted a snap of their protest at the Oxford Union.

Riz attended Hockerill Anglo-European College, Hertfordshire, where boarding fees will be £15,564 a year from September, and Li Po Chun United World College in Hong Kong, which charges overseas students £40,341 a year.

Worth reading in full.

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TheBasicMind
2 years ago

Hertfordshire, where boarding fees will be £15,564 a year from September”

I think that should say per Term.

JohnK
2 years ago

“Worth reading in full”… or not, as the case may be. Spot the opportunism in that family.

Roy Everett
2 years ago
Reply to  JohnK

“Opportunism” is the key word these days in the technology sector as well as the “public service”. Three years ago if you were in the right place at the right time with the right skills you could get two to three times your normal salary in IT by working on contracts for “an important urgent new medical product” which turned out to be Track’N’Trace. Currently the same opportunities are open to young, mortgage-repaying software developers to contract into “an important urgent new energy product” which turns out to be part of NetZero, specifically how to use AI to magically transform 30 GW of generated grid power into 60 GW of consumed power in order to recharge electric cars. This is part of an eight-year project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers, which are to be put in phials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers caused by Climate Change.

LaptopMaestro
LaptopMaestro
2 years ago

They need a good collective kicking.

Mogwai
2 years ago
Reply to  LaptopMaestro

I’d like to blast them with a water cannon at close range whilst they’re superglued and can’t escape. For the indoor ones I’d empty a jar of honey on their heads ( tomato soup just won’t cut it ) and let a load of bees loose. Or ants…Depends on where I am on the ‘psychopathic scale’ at the time. It’d be a better deterrent then a slap on the wrist from the complicit pigs. More suffering = more effective deterrent, as far as I’m concerned.

huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Mogs, I would be delighted if you would allow me to assist.

Peter W
Peter W
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Okay, so she glued her hands to the floor; carry on the debate, empty the hall, switch off the lights and lock the doors. Perhaps she assumes “they” will help her. Leave her to wet herself overnight – give her some tough love.
I assume she is self-imrisoning so no one else is responsible for her actions or ignoring her.

prod_squadron
prod_squadron
2 years ago

The Mail and Telegraph publish click-bait articles on woke issues whilst at the same toeing the line on pronouns. I can’t bear “they” and “their”.

DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  prod_squadron

Agreed. GB News does the same. There’s no compulsion in law to use these incorrect pronouns, so one suspects OFCOM and IPSO have put out some sort of diktat. As someone who ditched the Telegraph in favour of Daily Wire after Philip Johnston suddenly wrote an article attacking people who hadn’t had the jab (contradicting everything he’d written before) I can at least read articles on there without any use of nonsensical pronouns.

Moreover, Daily Wire made the film ‘What is a Woman?’ which Elon Musk allowed to stream on Twitter yesterday, firing staff members who tried to stop it. There might be issues with DW’s writing (a lot of room for improvement), but there’s some great video content.

NeilParkin
2 years ago

Apples don’t fall far from the trees…

Mogwai
2 years ago

Because this film’s screening at Cambridge Uni was cancelled, due the facts flying in the face of the popular narrative that the planet is overpopulated and in imminent danger of self-destruction, it makes me want to go and watch it. Has anybody else seen it yet? ”YET again the disproportionate power of cancel-culture warriors has threatened the credibility of Cambridge University. Yet again a small but vociferous group of students has stymied an event, the screening of a documentary, just because they did not like the assumed message.  The film Birthgap argues that the world’s population is in dangerous decline, a view diametrically opposed to the popular narrative. Quoting world bank data, it says that 70 per cent of the world’s people live in countries already below the population tipping point and, with birth rates falling, there will not be enough younger people to sustain businesses and pay taxes to support health care and the elderly. Birthgap – Childless World, was produced by Stephen J Shaw, a data analyst and president of birthgap.org. He spent seven years on the project, travelling the world interviewing hundreds of people; this is a serious work that was screened at New York’s Chelsea Film… Read more »

Hester
Hester
2 years ago

why don’t they protest in China? that would demonstrate their commitment to the planet and diversity.
Easy to be courageous when there is no risk.

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago

I’d leave her there, just stuck and turn the lights out.Then leave a sign that says, “Just stuck”

gedhurst
gedhurst
2 years ago

Wokism and Net Zero are just class warfare in disguise.