On Sunday, I summarized new reports about the anti-immigration protests and unrest that erupted after three young girls were murdered at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in northwest England last week.
However, I want to go back and focus on the victims of the Southport stabbing, as the response of the elite media and the United Kingdom’s political elite have made choices that seem to be upending the rule of law that all citizens and institutions within a country, state, or community are accountable to the same laws,
You know…like the one first established in England by the Magna Carta.
To begin with, I tried to locate an in-depth summary of the victims, Elsie Dot Stancombe, Bebe King, and nine-year-old Alice Dasilva Aguiar. It was a challenge, as their names have been lost in an avalanche of reports attacking the far right”.
The heartbreak for the loss of little girls, who should have been safe in a children’s dance class, is palpable.
Jean Stevenson said Elsie Dot Stancombe was “absolutely the sweetest child you could ever wish to meet”.Ms Stevenson said she had been teaching Elsie to sew, and remembered her delight at being able to make her own top.”I thought I could go on giving her lessons and passing my skills on,” Ms Stevenson said as she laid flowers close to where Elsie was killed….Ms Stevenson was one of the thousands of people who have laid flowers or attended vigils since the attack.She said: “It’s true what they say about the Southport community: a very close knit community, a very family-orientated area.”Stuff like this just doesn’t happen here.”
It does now, thanks to poor political choices based on racialist policies and social justice.
I am trying to imagine being a parent, family friend, or community member where an attack like this would occur…and it is too painful.
But what did the press choose to do at that point? Humanize the attacker.
The teenager accused of murdering three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance event once starred as Doctor Who in a BBC Children in Need advert, it can be revealed.Footage unearthed by MailOnline shows Axel Rudakubana, then aged 11, emerging from the Tardis in David Tennant’s trademark trenchcoat and tie – before urging the nation to help children by getting involved in fundraising.
Meanwhile, during the anti-immigration protests, the Muslim migrants brought machetes to people demonstrating because of their anger over the murder of the little girls.
So what does the uber-woke new Labor Party Prime Minister do in response? Rescind the rule of law, and make the Muslims a protected class.
Practitioners of Islam don’t drink alcohol, which may help explain why pubs were targeted in the next phase of violence.
And the mobs are also smashing up cars. Next, they will likely burn them…as they have done in Paris.
If a country decides it’s not going to apply the rule of law to protect one group of citizens, those citizens will begin to take matters into their own hands.
I will say this about the new prime minister. He is an over-achiever.
Sir Keir Starmer has come under fire for ‘dithering and delaying’ over his response to the riots and for failing to recall MPs to Parliament.The Prime Minister finally held an emergency COBRA meeting with Cabinet ministers, police bosses and prison chiefs on Monday to discuss a strategy for tackling the unrest.But senior Tories questioned why he had not done so until six days after violence first broke out in Southport following the mass stabbing of children at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class.Robert Jenrick, a frontrunner in the Tory leadership contest, told the Mail: ‘Sir Keir has dithered and delayed for six days of growing lawlessness before convening COBRA and treating this security emergency with the seriousness it needed.
I suspect the situation will get worse before it improves. But there is some good news: It’s bringing the Irish people together.
In an unlikely alliance on the streets of Belfast, crowds of people carrying Union flags and tricolours stood side by side with anti-immigrant protesters from Dublin.The “astonishing” scenes unfolded at the gates of City Hall on Saturday as the usually opposing sides came together in their opposition to an anti-racism rally.The anti-immigration protesters were separated from the anti-racism rally participants by police. Some chanted “Islam out”, with clashes later breaking out in parts of Belfast.But at numerous occasions during the anti-Islamic protest, Union flags were unfurled beside individuals carrying tricolours and the four provinces flags.
Woke politicians and their press minions can push narratives, but the consequences of negating the rule of law in the name of social justice are clear to see thanks to “X” and brave citizens reporting from the UK.
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