YouTube is MASSIVELY SUPPRESSING my interview with Sammy Woodhouse, who led the Rape Gang Inquiry!
Less than 10% of the views our recent videos have got.
X seems to be the only safe place.
Please do share this out far and wide to people you know to help combat the censorship.
Many people won't read the report unless they hear a little about it first. The only way to break through is with you sharing this.
Shame on YouTube. Disgusting.
@iamzferrell@HumbleFlow I'm sorry, I didn't realize you were this slow. These aren't average girls. They preyed on specific girls from poor and broken families. Often in foster care.... good grief.
One of the darkest aspects of this is that these girls came from the lower classes, the north, the working class, the industrial towns and cities. Their grandparents and ancestors were coal miners, factory workers, soldiers, servants to the upper classes. To show their thanks to generations of loyal Brits who did backbreaking toil for their country and the crown, their daughters were given as sex slaves to foreign invaders. A genocide of native people. The crimes of the complicit modern UK government put it up there with Ceausescu’s Romania and Pol Pot.
El Salvador’s CECOT — the world’s most brutal prison.
Tens of thousands of high-ranking gang members packed like animals, no luxuries, no contact with the outside world, total control.
This is what happens when a country decides enough is enough.
While the West coddles murderers, rapists, and gangbangers with human rights, hot meals, and early release, El Salvador locks them away like the vermin they are.
The result? Crime has plummeted.
Britain and America need CECOT-style prisons. No mercy for the merciless. End the soft touch. Restore order.
In 1968, while teenage Red Guards beat their professors to death with clubs in Beijing courtyards, Jean-Paul Sartre sat in Paris calling Mao's Cultural Revolution a model of revolutionary democracy. The most celebrated intellectual in France looked at a country burning its own libraries and saw liberation. He sold the Maoist newspaper La Cause du Peuple on French street corners himself, holding it aloft like a sacrament.
Consider what he was endorsing. Between 1966 and 1976, the Cultural Revolution killed somewhere between 500,000 and two million people. Schools shut down across the entire country. Students dragged teachers onto stages, hung placards around their necks, forced them to kneel on broken glass, then murdered them. The historian Bian Zhongyun, vice-principal of a girls' school in Beijing, died on August 5, 1966, beaten by her own students with nail-studded clubs. Sartre called this the people governing themselves.
You should understand why a man this intelligent got it this wrong. Sartre believed knowledge served power, that truth was whatever the revolution required, that the individual existed to be dissolved into the collective will. So when Mao abolished the distinction between teacher and student, between expert and mob, Sartre cheered. He had spent decades arguing that bourgeois reason was a class weapon. Here was a regime taking him at his word and clubbing the reasoners to death.
This is what economic illiteracy buys you. A university, a price, a contract, and a peasant's grain stockpile all carry knowledge that no central planner can seize or replicate. Mises explained the calculation problem in 1920. Hayek explained dispersed knowledge in 1945. Sartre had access to both and chose the dunce cap of the collective instead, then handed out its propaganda on the Rue de Rennes.
He died in 1980, mourned by 50,000 followers, never having retracted a word about Mao. The professors of Beijing got no such funeral. They got a ditch, and a philosopher in Paris explaining that their murder was freedom.
@Jabel_Sound5@FoodProfessor So there isn't a single parcel of land anywhere near the towns where another grocer could open? If that is the case, you are in an incredibly small town that likely cant accommodate three.