Correct. The article said it was from 1989 and I did as well.
Yes. But you posted it to make a point, you claimed that it said "In summary, there is no protection of free speech in the UK."
The part you quoted actually concluded that "the United Kingdom, without [a protection for free speech akin to a first amendment], does not suffer significantly less rights of free speech than the United States."
So although in theory what you said is correct, in practice there's little difference to our freedoms. That's what the article
you posted concludes.
So you posted it to make a point, you even quoted the part of the article which says in practice it makes no significant difference and when I pointed that out you're now just saying the article is out of date. You're the one who posted it, dude.
Now, obviously without a first amendment one could argue that our government
could impose greater restrictions. But so could yours. Amendments can be changed - they're literally called amendments. You may have heard of the Eighteenth Amendment. Is that still in effect?
Sure, around that time stamp they were talking about his heinous policy of reducing winter heating money to pensioners
I don't know what I think about that. It's certainly unpopular, although has been misrepresented by some people with a certain agenda. They're not talking about scrapping this benefit, they're just talking about stopping the payment for pensioners who are above a certain threshold in terms of income. I don't think in principle that's a bad policy - if you're a millionaire pensioner then you don't need any more handouts. Exactly where the line should be is more debatable.
there is existing controversy over his unpopular censorship policies.
The Telegraph is a highly Conservative-biased paper. It's literally nicknamed the "Tory-graph" in the UK (Tory being a common name for the Conservative party).
It's another example of you citing incredibly biased sources which back up what you want to believe.