Sorry, I thought you said 144. Gretas gonna love it.Read sec 21 of the Judgement.
Sorry, I thought you said 144. Gretas gonna love it.Read sec 21 of the Judgement.

Nope. I'm satisfied with what I have read thanks. 144 is pretty succinct. Greta will be thrilled. I'm sure she sends her thanks.Gotta read the whole thing

It was irrelevant, we aren't at War, we aren't occupied by a foreign rogue state and need to mount a resistance and those committing the crimes could not be described as combatants.
Therefore it remains the case that "Nothing can justify attacking military assets or people and businesses operating lawfully?"
we aren't occupied by a foreign rogue state

correct. There was no justification for their actions.So is it still "Nothing can justify attacking military assets or people and businesses operating lawfully",

what are you satisfied with? Do you know?Nope. I'm satisfied with what I have read thanks. 144 is pretty succinct. Greta will be thrilled. I'm sure she sends her thanks.

correct. There was no justification for their actions.

There may not be a legal defence in law, but committing a lesser offence in order to prevent a more serious offence is justifiable.You are throwing in a lot of straw men.
This is how I would break it down:
The defendants admitted that they intentionally damaged the property.
The judge instructed the jury that these actions met the standard for the crime of criminal damage.
The judge instructed the jury that the defendants had no legal defence under English law.
However, the jury failed to reach a verdict. We need to look logically at the possible reasons why this happened.
Presumably, the jury accepted the defendants' admissions that they carried out those actions.
Presumably, the jury accepted the judge's guidance that none of the defences they put forward were legal under English law.
So, the only logical conclusion is that the jury must have based their decision on matters that had no legal basis.
In UK law, committing a lesser crime to prevent a more major crime is not explicitly allowed as a general legal principle, but it may be justified

If you create a scenario that is different from the facts then it’s irrelevant. My statement was based on the undisputed facts,You're talking there about specific people doing specific actions in specific circumstances.
Please deal with your statement that "Nothing can justify attacking military assets or people and businesses operating lawfully".
"Nothing" is absolute. There cannot be one single exception if it is to remain nothing.
Trying at this point to limit what you said to one specific scenario doesn't work.
You said "nothing". Providing one example of something you don't think was justifiable is not proof that nothing is justifiable.

In your opinion. But you were neither judge nor jury.Therefore nothing can justify their attacks.

Undeclared war maybe.We were not at war, we still aren’t