"When I was a Revolutionary Marxist, we were all in favour of as much immigration as possible. It wasn’t because we liked immigrants, but because we didn’t like Britain. We saw immigrants - from anywhere - as allies against the staid, settled, conservative society that our country still was at the end of the Sixties. Also, we liked to feel oh, so superior to the bewildered people - usually in the poorest parts of Britain - who found their neighbourhoods suddenly transformed into supposedly "vibrant communities". If they dared to express the mildest objections, we called them bigots.
When we graduated and began to earn serious money, we generally headed for expensive London enclaves and became extremely choosy about where our children went to school, a choice we happily denied the urban poor, the ones we sneered at as "racists". What did we know, or care, of the great silent revolution which even then was beginning to transform the lives of the British poor?
To us, it meant patriotism and tradition could always be derided as "racist". And it also meant cheap servants for the rich new middle-class, for the first time since 1939, as well as cheap restaurants and - later on - cheap builders and plumbers working off the books. It wasn’t our wages that were depressed, or our work that was priced out of the market. Immigrants didn’t do the sort of jobs we did.
They were no threat to us. The only threat might have come from the aggrieved British people, but we could always stifle their protests by suggesting that they were modern-day fascists. I have learned since what a spiteful, self-righteous, snobbish and arrogant person I was (and most of my revolutionary comrades were, too)."
Peter Hitchens
Migrants could trigger tuberculosis outbreak and 'hundreds of deaths', health chiefs warn in first-of-its-kind future pandemic threat report https://t.co/trbP2AWCO7
Así ha progresado la opinión sincronizada:
- “Zapatero es inocente”.
- “Las joyas son de su tía”.
- “Bueno, son suyas pero no valen nada”.
- “Sí, valen un dineral pero la culpa es de Trump”.
- “¡Ha prescrito, no debe ser juzgado!”
Having your wife, brother and political mentor all appear in court to answer allegations of corruption – within a few weeks – isn’t a great look.
And yet that’s exactly the position Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s socialist PM, finds himself in, eight years after he first took up the position.
All deny the charges they face.
@memphisbarker
Find out more about the scandal that could bring Sánchez down 👇
https://t.co/LYwC8wPc8W
I had to read this three times before I could believe it was real.
Rotherham. A small town in northern England.
For sixteen years, at least 1,400 children — some as young as eleven — were raped, gang-raped, and trafficked between cities by organized groups of men.
Eleven years old.
Petrol was poured on them so they would stay quiet.
Their families were threatened with death.
Photos were taken and used as blackmail.
The police knew.
The council knew.
The social workers knew.
For sixteen years, not one of them moved.
Why?
Because officers were afraid of being called racist if they acted on what they were seeing.
That was the whole reason.
While children were being sold, adults were protecting their own reputations.
That is the moment something in you breaks.
And here is the part that makes it worse.
The TV networks did not report it. The papers did not chase it.
When the journalist Andrew Norfolk finally broke the story, even he thought maybe 150 girls had been hurt.
The real number was 1,400.
He was staggered.
This should have been the biggest story of the decade. It was not.
The networks looked away. The advertisers preferred safer topics.
The cover-up did not end when the report was published — it continued in the silence of every newsroom that refused to chase it.
Then Elon Musk bought X.
The advertisers fled.
The press declared the platform finished.
X almost did not survive.
But it did.
And on X, the names of those towns started trending.
Rotherham.
Telford.
Rochdale.
Oldham.
Towns the country had been told to forget.
Britain understands itself differently today.
Not because the politicians confessed.
Not because the broadcasters apologized.
Because one platform refused to let it stay buried.
X almost did not survive.
1,400 children almost stayed forgotten.
That is worth saying out loud.
For the record, no migrants homes were burnt down in Belfast or elsewhere. They were Irish people's homes, stolen from them by traitorous politicians and given to uninvited migrants.
Every building & piece of land on the island of Ireland belongs to the Irish, and nobody else.
BREAKING NEWS: Australia's public broadcaster ABC News just accused @elonmusk of ''inciting racial tension'' in Belfast because he did not censor footage showing a Sudanese refugee attempting to behead someone.
They're angrier at Elon than at the stabber.
Epping Forest District Council says all residents at the Bell Hotel in Epping, which has been used by the Home Office to house asylum seekers and saw protests last year after an Ethiopian migrant sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl, have been removed from the property.
As a Japanese watching the UK right now, I have one simple question.
A Sudanese asylum seeker just tried to behead a local man in Belfast. The victim lost an eye.
This comes after years of grooming gangs raping thousands of British girls — gangs that police and councils deliberately ignored because they were afraid of being called racist.
In Japan, even one case like this would have triggered national outrage and immediate policy reversal.
But in Britain, the conversation is still about “not being far-right.”
British people, at what point does protecting your own children become more important than protecting your reputation?
We genuinely do not understand this.
El Tribunal Supremo informa desfavorablemente al indulto del exfiscal general del Estado Álvaro García Ortiz al no apreciar razones de justicia, equidad o utilidad pública
📄 Nota informativa: https://t.co/ctxhDKihnj
Absolutamente increíble. Lo que hoy ha hecho Barcelona se recordará mucho tiempo. La Sagrada Familia, Gaudí y los que durante 140 años han creído en ello, lo merecían.