The British Establishment has a simple rule:
The problem is never the problem. The problem is people who dare to point out the problem.
Grooming gangs, illegal immigration, terrorism, men in women's prisons, Net Zero.
Same playbook every time: "racist", "denier", "Nazi".
You'd think when you're calling a beloved children's author a Nazi, you'd maybe stop and pause. But no.
Another part of the rule is that no matter how right the "bad" people turn out to be, they remain tainted by having been right.
Feminists like JK Rowling were vilified for opposing puberty blockers being given to children. The government rowed back on the policy. But the women who spoke out against it are still considered bigots.
Grooming gangs turned out to be racist anti-white hate crimes. If this had been done by an invading army, it would be rightly treated as a war crime. But the people who covered it up and ignored it are still the "good" people and the people who complained about it are still the "bad" people.
The same is true of illegal immigration. Islamism. Net Zero.
And this is why the country is screwed. Because we live in a society where the golden rule is that you must tolerate the intolerable or you'll be made a pariah for caring about the safety of British women and girls, for wanting a cohesive society, for wanting a strong economy.
I've had enough of this and my sense is so have the British people. We won't keep quiet anymore. Call us all the names you want. It doesn't work anymore.
I'm struggling with this Khawaji business.
Your family leaves a hell hole Pakistan to give you a new life in a Christian country.
You have great success playing sports and become a multi millionaire.
But you want everyone associated with you to respect the religion you came from?
You came to a Christian country.
Make your wife convert to your religion.
Make your teammates ban 🍸 because it is against your religion.
Then retire a rich man and complain about the country & system that gave you all that.
Becoming a father changed my perspective on many things. In many ways, it actually makes it harder for me to understand some people.
Like the two terrorists from Bondi Beach, who turned out to be father and son.
How can you look your newborn son in the eyes and see this totally innocent being whom it is your responsibility to raise, protect and guide, and watch them crawl, take their first steps, say their first word, and then guide them into a murder-suicide?
These people are not like us.