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Imported doctor or engineer harasses and assaults two British women, and a white oppressor male showed up to defend them, even though the African tried to assault the defender.
DIEversity is our strength.
Muslims as a community have largely refused to denounce the rape and grooming gangs that systematically targeted British girls for years. The video captures the evasion, deflection and outright refusal that has become the standard response whenever this subject is raised.
This silence is not accidental. It reflects attitudes embedded in the culture and ideology that many of these communities bring with them. Non-Muslim girls have repeatedly been described by perpetrators as “white slags,” “kuffar whores” and fair game. The same mindset that produced the Rotherham, Rochdale, Oxford and Telford scandals continues to produce denial and protection of the guilty rather than condemnation.
British girls were drugged, raped, trafficked and passed around while community leaders, mosques and prominent Muslim voices stayed quiet or actively discouraged reporting. The few who did speak out were often marginalised or attacked. That pattern of collective silence and tribal loyalty over justice has allowed the problem to fester and repeat in new forms.
The political class and media compounded the failure by refusing to name the ethnic and religious dimension for fear of “racism.” The result was thousands of British children sacrificed on the altar of multiculturalism. When the perpetrators’ own communities refuse to denounce the crimes, it confirms that the problem is not a few bad apples. It is a cultural and ideological issue that mass migration from certain regions imported on a large scale.
Britain cannot fix what it refuses to name. Genuine integration requires communities to reject these attitudes outright and without qualification. Refusal to do so should carry consequences — loss of public funding, exclusion from influence, and removal of those who defend or minimise the crimes. The victims deserved better than silence then. They deserve justice and protection now. No more excuses. No more tribal loyalty over the safety of British children.
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James Caspian, a psychotherapist, was told by Bath Spa University that he could not research a rise in trans people detransitioning because it was “not politically correct”
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Reality is not bigotry.
Speak the truth.
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A young Jewish girl kidnapped by Palestinian terrorists on October 7. The video shows the raw reality of what happened that day. Human rights organisations stayed silent. Women’s rights groups stayed silent. The United Nations stayed silent. Many of them still are.
This is not an accident or an oversight. It is deliberate selective outrage. The same bodies that rush to condemn Israel for defending itself had nothing to say when Hamas terrorists dragged Jewish girls and women from their homes, murdered them, and subjected many to sexual violence and kidnapping. The victims were Jewish, so their suffering did not fit the approved narrative. The perpetrators were Palestinian terrorists, so their crimes were downplayed or ignored.
Britain has seen the same double standard closer to home. Grooming gangs systematically raped and trafficked thousands of British girls while authorities and activists tiptoed around the ethnicity and religion of the abusers for fear of “racism” accusations. The same pattern of protecting certain groups while abandoning the victims repeats itself. International organisations that claim to care about women and children showed their true priorities on October 7 and in the months that followed.
There is no excuse for this silence. Kidnapping and raping girls is not resistance. It is barbarism. The organisations that stayed quiet revealed they are not neutral defenders of human rights. They are political actors who apply different rules depending on who the victim and perpetrator are. Jewish girls do not count. Israeli women do not count. Their pain is inconvenient.
The truth must be spoken without apology. Hamas and its supporters committed atrocities that day that shocked the civilised world. The refusal of so many supposed human rights bodies to condemn those crimes outright shows how corrupted those institutions have become. Victims deserve justice and recognition, not political filtering. The silence was shameful then. It remains shameful now.