@celtic_ma1888@AngryJock1 Stupid cow ,snp & police covered up over 300 under the age of 13 been raped ...snp gave them rape alarms ..ya f-cking bam
Belfast is burning.
But not because of one man.
Or one political party.
Or one attack.
Yesterday was simply the straw that broke the British people’s backs.
How many women and girls have been raped? How many innocent people have been stabbed in the street? How many extremist attacks have been planned or carried out?
How many British citizens have suffered at the hands of violent criminals who crossed our borders illegally and were welcomed with open arms by the government?
And how many times were legitimate concerns raised about open border policies, mass uncontrolled migration, strained infrastructure, and the swathes of violent attacks being perpetrated by illegal migrants?
But concerns were ignored.
Politicians turned a blind eye.
And a majority of the British population was branded “racist” and “far-Right” for daring to state the obvious.
So, yes. Violence is never the answer.
But we need to stop pretending that we don’t understand how it got to this point, nor that the foundation of people’s rage and disquiet is entirely legitimate.
When Black Lives Matter protests turned violent, when buildings were burnt and riots erupted, we condemned it.
But we also sought to understand why it reached that point, and the decades of racial injustice that had built the foundation of the movement.
So why is the same grace not being extended now?
It isn’t racist to be outraged that an 18 year old boy was stabbed in the street then killed by police because he was falsely accused of “racism”.
It isn’t wrong to be outraged that an innocent man was nearly beheaded in the middle of the street.
It isn’t extremist to be outraged that tens of thousands of little girls have been raped and brutalised by Pakistani-Muslim grooming gangs.
It isn’t anti-immigration to oppose mass uncontrolled illegal migration.
Belfast is burning.
But we shouldn’t be surprised.