The real scandal isn't what this Islamist said - it's that he can say it, publicly, and get away with it.
We need to stop treating these incidents as isolated outrages and start recognising them as symptoms of a system that has completely lost its bearings. A preacher in Manchester advocates sex slavery - and instead of immediate arrest, trial, and national condemnation, the response is silence. Deafening silence.
Why? Because he wraps it in religious language. And in Britain today, that's the ultimate shield. We've built a hierarchy of victimhood, and at the top sits radical Islam - immune from criticism, protected by police, media, and government alike.
Now flip the script.
Imagine a white Christian standing in a public square saying anywhere near the same thing - advocating the capture and rape of non-Christian women during wartime. He'd be arrested before the sentence finished leaving his mouth. Rightly so.
But when it's done under the banner of Islam? It's tolerated. Explained away. Tiptoed around by institutions terrified of being labelled "Islamophobic."
This isn't multiculturalism. It's moral collapse. It's the creation of a two-tier legal system - one for native Britons, and one for those who claim divine exemption from British law.
So yes, what the preacher said is barbaric. But the deeper rot lies in the response. Or rather, the lack of one. Because it tells us something terrifying:
In modern Britain, there are certain ideologies so feared that even rape apologism is safer than criticism.
Until that changes, we don't live in a free country. We live in a hostage state - where truth is gagged, and evil walks free.