British Islamism is flexing its muscles more and more openly as it rises to power

If there has been a more shameful day in recent British history, I’m struggling to recall it tonight.

As unrest flared around the Aston Villa stadium, with pro-Israel protesters herded into a caged basketball court by police for their own safety, we witnessed nothing less than the forces of Islamism exerting a stranglehold on our police, our government and our country.

How must Sir Keir Starmer have felt after vowing to do all he could to reverse the ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans, only to have been humiliated at the hands of the mob? Last month, the Prime Minister declared that the chant “from the river to the sea” was unequivocally antisemitic. What would he say about “death, death to the IDF” as it rang off the pavements of Birmingham?


Behold the future …

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Why is Ofcom trying to censor Americans?

When Preston Byrne received a demand from Ofcom for £20,000 last month, he printed it off, put it through the shredder and turned it into bedding for his pet hamster.

The lawyer, who is representing US messageboard 4chan in its legal wrangling with Ofcom, even publicly poked fun at Britain’s communications quango, telling it that his hamster – Mr Whiskers – said the letter ‘smelled of failure’.

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Migrants given asylum despite being accused of sexual offences, whistleblower claims

Migrants who have been accused of sex offences and other crimes are being granted asylum anyway, a whistleblower has claimed.

A senior caseworker has told The Telegraph that Home Office staff can approve claims from asylum seekers charged with crimes, as long as the offence for which they are being prosecuted does not merit a prison sentence of 12 months or more.

She cited a case where she said she was disciplined after refusing to approve an Afghan man’s application because he had been arrested several times for indecently exposing himself in a children’s play area.

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Are UK Police Taking Orders Directly From the Mosques?

Anyone who has visited the UK’s capital recently will know that the right to protest is alive and kicking. No matter how inflammatory the language, the Metropolitan Police are seemingly loath to intervene when it comes to the Islamic cause du jour. Back in June 2023, MET Chief Sir Mark Rowley insisted his force ‘cannot legally stop’ pro-Palestine protests. In November 2023, Rowley went further and defied government pressure to ban a pro-Palestine march, which was controversially scheduled for Armistice Day. Even after the synagogue attack earlier this month, the police refused an outright ban. Instead, in a statement on X, the MET urged the group to “do the responsible thing and delay or cancel their plans.” Starmer himself would go no further than imploring the protestors to “respect the grief of British Jews”.

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Rochdale grooming ringleader banned from returning to Britain

Adil Khan – Rapes Children for Allah His Cult’s Idol

A Rochdale grooming gang leader faces a lifetime ban from Britain after secretly leaving the country.

Adil Khan, a “vile” child rapist who impregnated a 13-year-old, has been subjected to a Home Office deportation order that bars him from ever returning to the UK.

The convicted paedophile left Britain after fighting deportation for nearly a decade, claiming that removing him would breach his human rights by depriving his teenage son of a “role model”.

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THE INEVITABLE RACE WAR

It was really the rarest and quite honestly scariest of scenes.

What kicked it off was UKIP, the right-wing UK Independence Party, announcing a planned march in Whitechapel, a borough in the Tower Hamlets. The party’s announcement proclaimed it as one in a series of events to “reclaim Whitechapel from the Islamists.”

London Metropolitan Police almost instantly caved, banning UKIP from marching. They cited a “realistic prospect for serious disorder.”

And who would cause that disorder? The Met wouldn’t say, but everybody knew.

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How migrants stall deportation by claiming they were slaves abroad

Within weeks of Shabana Mahmood becoming home secretary, her team realised that there was a serious loophole in the immigration system. A 25-year-old Eritrean man who entered the UK in a small boat and was due to be the first migrant sent back to France under the government’s flagship “one in, one out” scheme, had managed to halt his deportation flight by invoking an unexpected piece of legislation.

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These Fractured Isles: Britain’s Drift Towards Civil War

The first shot of the American Civil War was the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbour on April 12th 1861. Of course, no serious historian begins the tale there. Wars of brothers do not erupt in a single day. Beneath the first cannonade lay a generation of corrosion – of trust, wealth and truth. Civil wars begin not with gunpowder but with people ceasing to believe in the same story.

The United Kingdom, our confection of islands and illusions, now trembles on a similar fault line. The question that once belonged to the margins – could Britain experience civil war? – has migrated, awkwardly, to the mainstream.

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Britain Is Failing to Keep Its People Safe

Deng Chol Majek had been in the UK for less than three months when he murdered hotel worker Rhiannon Whyte. Almost exactly a year ago, he stabbed the 27-year-old mother 23 times with a screwdriver while she waited for a train at Bescot Stadium station, Walsall. After throwing Whyte’s phone into the river, Majek left her for dead. He then went to buy some beers and returned to the Park Inn Hotel, where Whyte was employed and which had been turned into an asylum centre. One witness described him as “drinking, smoking and just chatting amongst his group of friends … having a good time.”

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Why are councillors in London running for office in Bangladesh?

Tower Hamlets

The east-London borough of Tower Hamlets has long been a byword for the failure of multiculturalism in the UK, with the area’s large Bangladeshi Muslim population increasingly voting along ethno-religious lines.

Reports on Friday that members of the local council are seeking election in Bangladesh are therefore, to put it mildly, not a good look. According to the Standard, three Tower Hamlets councillors have won the endorsement of the Bangladeshi National Party to fight the 2026 elections, slated for February. The Westminster government has described it as ‘unacceptable’, but so far the councillors are unrepentant. A spokesperson for Tower Hamlets council has insisted that the councillors have broken no law, in England or Bangladesh.


Meanwhile in Minnesota

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It’s time to declare a national emergency over violent crime by migrants

Despite what the BBC would have you believe, people are right to be fearful of the consequences of our open borders

How could any decent human being possibly object to mass immigration? That, it would seem, is the mystery puzzling the BBC. Yes, even after all these years. Because earlier this week it sent reporters to Buxton in Derbyshire to ask residents the following question: why are you people all saying you’ll vote Reform, when practically everyone in your town is white British?

Buxton, noted the BBC’s reporters, has experienced “very little” immigration, is a good 250 miles from Dover (“where the small boats arrive”), and has “no hotels housing asylum seekers”. Yet almost everyone they spoke to, apart from some wonderfully compassionate teenagers at a local school, viewed the small boats, and mass immigration in general, as a major source of concern. How baffling. If you work for the BBC, anyway.

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The Uxbridge killing is the final straw

His name was Wayne Broadhurst. He was 49 years old. He reportedly worked as a refuse collector. He was by all accounts well liked in his local town. And yesterday his life was ended in the most savage manner imaginable. He was stabbed to death as he walked his dog on a brisk, bright Tuesday afternoon. The suspect is a 22-year-old Afghan national, who came to Britain on the back of a lorry in 2020 and was subsequently granted asylum.

The attack took place in chill, suburban Uxbridge, a part of outer London I know well. A 45-year-old man and his 14-year-old son were also stabbed.

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Some Dare Call It Treason

The UK Labour Party’s feckless response to CCP espionage.

High treason, a crime so often alleged in our public discourse and so seldom proven in an actual court of law, is now more of a metaphorical device than a felony. It is passing strange that the law of treason should have fallen into such a marked state of decay, considering its location in the very pith and heartwood of the ancient, sprawling, gnarled tree that is our common law tradition. Indeed, the Treason Act of 1351 (25 Edw. 3 Stat. 5. c. 2) is counted among the oldest parliamentary acts still in effect, with only the Statute of Marlborough (1267), the Statute of Westminster (1275), the Quia Emptores (1290), and the iconic Magna Carta predating it. “The objects of the laws are rights and wrongs,” as every good student of Blackstone knows, and what greater wrong is there than to compass, or to effectuate, the murder of your sovereign, or to adhere to your sovereign’s enemies by giving them aid and comfort? And what greater right is there on the part of the sovereign than to have such treachery punished, and punished severely?

Smells awful like Canada’s Liberal Party.

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More migrant hotels will radicalise Middle England

For years, a commonly invoked argument against those who support continued high immigration into the UK has been that they rarely choose to live in diverse areas. They are hypocrites, it is claimed. Soon, however, this argument will be much harder to make. That’s because, according to newly published Home Office documents, more than 90% of councils across the UK will be housing asylum seekers by the end of the year, up from 82% earlier this summer.

As part of efforts to phase out the use of migrant hotels, the Labour government plans to relocate an additional 40,000 asylum seekers to areas including London and the South and East of England. Current provisions can accommodate 46,640 individuals, yet a total of 66,000 remain in need of “dispersal accommodation” — a mix of houses, flats, and bedsits.

(Incognito)

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