My whole ARC speech is here.👇
Why the culture of white guilt that we immerse our children in, has caused our civilisational collapse.
https://t.co/IJjsTaRnyu
I am getting v tired of these leftist white men demanding that I adhere to what they think a black woman should tweet.
Some ethnats are more rude, some less so than these guys. Yet these leftists take the moral high ground.
It is performative - Truth is, some ethnats with whom I disagree profoundly, do not condescend to me in this way.
Life is complex, as is racism. And one vicious racism is the way ethnics are forced to copy the white leftist in his thinking- white supremacy at its best.
To hell with the truth. To hell with the fact that KB lives in London and if she were the slightest bit interested in that march, she would have been there - perhaps even spoken at it.
Forget what’s true. Instead seize the chance you have to smash her and her decades of succeeding with ethnic kids in ways not one of you has ever managed to do.
Racism is complex. Look inwards people.
Your white guilt blinds you to your appalling behaviour.
Who are our judges? I mean really… who are these people? Who do they think they are? 😡
Children cry out for discipline in schools. Now they cry out for justice in the streets.
The adults have left the room.😩 https://t.co/RgqeGp4Msy
Let’s have a think about what’s happening in Makerfield.
This by election is costing taxpayers £226,208. And it’s happening because a Labour MP chose to step aside to make room for Andy Burnham’s leadership ambitions. He admitted that himself.
But here’s some more interesting figures.
If Burnham wins, he’ll have to resign as Greater Manchester Mayor too. That triggers another election costing taxpayers around £4.7 million.
So in total, nearly £5 million of public money could be spent not on improving services, fixing roads, supporting communities or helping struggling families, but on political career ambitions.
People are struggling with bills, crime, NHS waiting lists and communities being ignored. Yet Westminster politics still seems focused on who climbs the ladder next.
That’s what frustrates people. Not democracy. Political games made to look like democracy.
How many more lies Zack?
Not a "spokesman for the British Red Cross" Never 'worked for Minustry of Justice' No accreditation from ANLP or National Council of Hypnotherapy.
Now failed to pay council tax https://t.co/QMqdcS4fvX
n 2004, a journalist named Asieh Amini came across a story from a small town in northern Iran.
A 16-year-old girl named Atefeh Sahaaleh had been publicly hanged.
The official charge: "acts incompatible with chastity."
The reality, which Amini uncovered through careful, dangerous investigation: Atefeh had been repeatedly raped by a neighbor and other men beginning when she was nine years old. She had been neglected by her family and paid to keep silent — money she used simply to survive. At 13, Iran's morality police arrested her. A judge sentenced her to one hundred lashes. Under Iranian law, a woman could be sentenced to lashings three times — the fourth offense carried the death penalty.
She was 16 when they hanged her.
Amini wrote the story. Her newspaper refused to publish it. Another paper refused as well. A women's publication finally agreed to run an edited version.
She kept going.
Born in 1973 in the Mazandaran province of northern Iran — one of four sisters who spent their childhood painting, reading, and playing outdoors — Amini had built her career as a journalist through the brief flowering of press freedom following President Khatami's election in 1997, editing a women's affairs newspaper called Zan until hardline clerics shut it down in 1999. She had known the Iranian state's capacity for silencing voices. She had not yet known the full depth of what it was capable of doing to girls.
After Atefeh, she knew.
Case after case began reaching her. Leyla — a 19-year-old with diminished mental capacity, herself a victim of child rape, facing execution. The judge in her case told Amini plainly that Leyla was a threat to family life because of her "sexual availability." Amini enlisted human rights lawyer Shadi Sadr, published Leyla's story, drew international attention, and helped get her out of prison and into the care of a women's organization in Tehran.
One life at a time. One story at a time. Against a legal system that had no interest in being exposed.
In 2006, Amini discovered that despite a government moratorium on stoning — a directive issued in 2002 that carried no binding legal force — a man and woman had been stoned to death in Mashhad for adultery. The judge claimed he answered only to Sharia law. The Ministry of Justice denied the stoning had happened. State media attacked Amini's credibility.
That October, Amini and Sadr co-founded the Stop Stoning Forever (SSF) campaign — systematically documenting stonings occurring across Iran and sharing their findings through colleagues abroad who could publish without fear of arrest.
The state took notice.
In March 2007, Amini was among 33 women arrested during a silent sit-in at a Tehran courthouse. During interrogation she realized — with the specific clarity of someone who had been investigating surveillance — that the police had been investigating her for some time. She was released after five days. Her phones, she was certain, were tapped. Her movements tracked.
She kept reporting.
The sustained pressure of the work eventually took its physical toll — stress-induced symptoms that included headaches, vision problems, and muscle paralysis forced her to step back briefly while her partners reorganized the campaign from outside Iran.
She recovered. She continued.
In 2009, following the disputed reelection of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Amini was among the demonstrators beaten in the protests that swept Iran. She continued reporting — under pseudonyms, in the chaos. Then came the warning: police were questioning prisoners about her. She needed to leave.
She had been invited to a poetry festival in Sweden.
She took her daughter Ava and she went.
They did not come back.
Amini settled eventually in Norway, supported by the International Cities of Refuge Network — a program that protects writers facing state persecution. From exile, she continued her advocacy, published two books of Norwegian-language poetry, and kept doing what she had always done: making sure that the stories of girls and women the Iranian state wanted silenced were heard by the world instead.
She was awarded the Human Rights Watch Hellmann/Hammett Award in 2009 — the same year she fled. The Oxfam Novib/PEN Award in 2012. The Ord i Grenseland prize in 2014.
Asieh Amini picked up a pen in a country that punished women for existing outside the law's narrow definitions — and she used it, at enormous personal cost, to push against every wall that pen could reach.
The girl from Mazandaran who dreamed of becoming a painter and writer became something rarer and harder:
A witness who refused to look away.
And a voice that — no matter how many times the state tried to silence it — kept finding new ways to be heard.
The Pakistani Rape Gangs were documented in Birmingham in 1991. A council steering group ordered the removal of the ethnic dimension and copies of the report were then destroyed.
It was not until twenty years later that Rotherham become a national scandal.
Just how many little White girls would have been saved if the same pattern documented in Birmingham had not been covered up?
@Alexandr4Denman Non stun slaughter is banned in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Slovenia, Switzerland, Iceland, and the regions of Flanders and Wallonia in Belgium. New Zealand has also never permitted the slaughter of animals without stunning. So why cant we ban it here
🚨STARMER LET PAEDOS OFF WITH WARNING LETTERS WHILE KIDS SUFFERED - BLOOD ON HIS HANDS‼️
EXCLUSIVE Express bombshell: As CPS boss, Keir Starmer helped draft & roll out "paedophile Asbos" - weak warning notices handed to thousands of suspected child abusers instead of real charges.
- Over 13,000 issued since 2008
- Rochdale case: Evidence for dozens of rapes... but only a couple got pathetic letters
- Tragic victim Georgie Boxall (17) died from overdose after abuser ignored TWO warnings - her mum says Starmer has blood on his hands
- Whistleblower Maggie Oliver: They dished them out "like confetti" to make cases "go away"
No proof these letters ever stopped predators. Grooming gangs thrived, kids paid the price.
Starmer's defence? "Mischaracterisation." But survivors call it incompetence & lack of compassion. His position is untenable.
Complete failure. Time for accountability.
STARMER MUST RESIGN‼️
#StarmerOut #GroomingGangs