Dark Days Ahead
It's going to be a long five years.
It's going to be a long five years.
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Things are going pretty badly in England at the moment. | |
| We are a country occupied by a technically valid but spiritually alien government. | |
| And boy does it show. | |
| Starmer's Labour Party won their landslide in a year of phenomenally low voter turnout. | |
| Only 60% of the entire electorate voted, the second lowest in a UK election since 1885. | |
| Only 2001 was lower with 59%. | |
| Starmer only won 34% of this 60% of the turnout. | |
| This means that Starmer's reign hangs on a mere 20% of the entire electorate. | |
| And of the so-called popular vote, Labour received a devastatingly low 9.7 million out of the 48 million registered voters, which is half a million votes fewer than Jeremy Corbyn won in 2019. | |
| In 2024, it wasn't that Labour won, it's that the Conservatives lost. | |
| The collapse of their vote delivered up to Starma his 412 seat government. | |
| And this complete lack of legitimacy shows, as we are less than a month into the Starmer regime, and things are, I suppose we could generously say, chaotic. | |
| At the time of recording, there have been constant riots after a second generation Rwandan immigrant murdered three children at a dance school in what appears to be a targeted attack in the sleepy English town of Southport. | |
| The pain and outrage of this brought forth a well of feeling that has been bubbling under the surface for a long time. | |
| The pervasive feeling that mass immigration is making England unsafe. | |
| One predominant aspect of this is from Islamic immigration, as for decades now, the English have suffered from social conflict, widespread grooming gangs and repeated terror attacks from an unchecked minority of this community. | |
| After putting an end to the disorder, instead of attempting to empathise with and mollify the English, who have never voted for immigration, but have persistently voted for parties who promised to reduce immigration, Starma has acted like an angry tyrant who is enraged by this uppity underclass and has set himself firmly against the people who have been traumatised by this event. | |
| He declared the people who are concerned about this far-right, which in liberal parlance means evil, beyond the pale, or unworthy of moral consideration. | |
| He then declared that he would prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law. | |
| Starmer's machine-man delivery of the statement essentially rendered the concerned parents of this country enemies of the state, and he conversely committed to protecting mosques, showing that the Muslim community were in fact his favoured clients in this dispute. | |
| This of course did nothing to calm tempers, and riots continued over the weekend in outrage towards what appeared to be Starma's partiality towards foreign communities against the legitimate concerns of the English community, which Starmer's messaging implied was illegitimate and racist. | |
| Because let's be very clear about this. | |
| It's not protest. | |
| It's not legitimate. | |
| It's crime. | |
| In response to these riots, Starmer made another statement in which he reiterated his threats against the English community, that they would feel the full force of the law and would be hunted down. | |
| And meanwhile, his Labour government would commit £30 million of your money to state protection of mosques. | |
| In his exact words. | |
| I guarantee you will regret taking part in this disorder, whether directly or those whipping up this action online and then running away themselves. | |
| Starmer was clearly incensed and appears to have decided to take these outpourings of grief as a personal attack on himself, his government, and his entire moral system. | |
| If this was allowed to stand, then all of liberalism becomes invalid, I suppose. | |
| And so, Starmer has taken the most hardline actions he can. | |
| Concurrent to this, the Muslim community, understandably afraid for the integrity of their mosques and emboldened by Starma's support, fielded what has been termed the MDL, the Muslim Defence League. | |
| This took the form of large numbers of armed, black-clad, Palestine-waving pseudo-paramilitaries who took to the streets to hunt down English lads and beat them senseless. | |
| Videos from Middlesbrough, Birmingham and elsewhere emerged on social media which showed these Muslim gangs arbitrarily beating Englishmen in the street. | |
| The police were absent from these riots and the government did not acknowledge them. | |
| Needless to say, this reinforced people's belief that there is a two-tier system of government and policing in this country, where the state has chosen protected client groups to receive different treatment to the majority native population. | |
| Starmer and his government denied that there was a two-tier system of policing in England, but the reality is right in front of our eyes. | |
| There's no two-tier policing. | |
| There is policing without fear or favour. | |
| We can see what they do and how they have behaved in the face of potential and actual violence in the past, be it at the Battley Grammar School protest, the pro-Palestine protest, or the Black Lives Matter riots. | |
| We can see that they are afraid of these communities and so treat them with a light touch. | |
| The English riots continued this week, and Starmer called another Cobra meeting. | |
| The result of this meeting was a third statement, in which he tripled down on his aggressive posturing, describing the police as a standing army against the English rioters, though he did decline to call them far-right this time. | |
| We'll have a standing army of specialist officers, public duty officers, so that we'll have enough officers to deal with this where we need them. | |
| At this point, it seems that the energy and outrage had all but petered out. | |
| The riots had become sporadic, the protests far less frequent. | |
| So it came as a bit of a surprise to hear that on the morning of Wednesday, the 7th of August, it was announced that we should expect 30 or more far-right riots that evening. | |
| This was something of a surprise because there appeared to be no chatter in the grassroots networks about it. | |
| Nobody seemed to be aware of further protests. | |
| Nobody knew who was organising any protests. | |
| We had only learned about this from the mainstream media. | |
| Then it was announced again by the media that in fact we ought to expect 100 new far-right demonstrations across the country. | |
| Again, everyone wondered where this was coming from. | |
| But the media even provided us a handy map to let us know where the far-right would be protesting. | |
| We were to expect far-right protests in some of the most left-wing and diverse areas of the country. | |
| How odd. | |
| Evening came and these far-right protests actually failed to materialize. | |
| It seems though that quite a large number of the left-wing coalition did turn out onto the streets though. | |
| Leftist renter mobs, Muslim community leaders armed with swords, and the urban inner-city youth who didn't really know why they were on the streets but clearly understood that the media was giving them directions of some kind. | |
| The far-right almost entirely failed to turn out. | |
| and in the absence of an actual enemy to fight the diverse youth of Croydon decided to attack the police and smash the place up. | |
| To hammer home that this is a two-tier system of policing the Metropolitan Police did make sure to publish a statement informing everyone that this was actually nothing to do with the counter-protest and it was just quote pure antisocial behavior. | |
| which apparently is just completely normal and we shouldn't worry about it. | |
| Guardian journals took to the streets, excitedly filming the large gathering of the globalists' clients, and everyone seems to have gone home before sunset. | |
| One man who apparently went to one of the demonstrations demanded that the throats of his enemies be slit. | |
| They are disgusting knocking barrels and we need to cut all their throats and get rid of the road! | |
| He is apparently a Labour counsellor and I assume that he's angling for a promotion. | |
| But before the evening was even over, we were already being treated to the next day's newspaper headlines. | |
| All of the major papers ran what were essentially the same headline, with exactly the same picture to deliver the same message. | |
| Britain was united against the far right. | |
| From the Daily Express to the Daily Mail to the Times, they all joined The Guardian in agreeing that anti-hate marchers faced down the evil far right. | |
| Naturally, this had the stink of government coordination about it, and that fact was simply admitted by Hope Not Hate's Nick Lowells when he posted, quote, yes, the list was a hoax, but just look at the front pages of today's papers. | |
| An anti-racist message is being transmitted to millions of homes this morning. | |
| This, I believe, is the result of Starmer's third Cobra meeting, where someone has clearly given him a dressing down and told him to use the subversive means available to get a grip on all of this. | |
| Starmer even made it sound like the evening's protests were actually his idea in the first place. | |
| Yes, last night was much better than was expected, but we are not going to give up on our efforts here. | |
| That's why it's very important that I continue my discussions, coordinating with law enforcement, with police leaders, to make sure we've got the right officers in the right place to keep pushing on the criminal justice response. | |
| I was very keen that we're able to demonstrate that if you're involved in disorder, within days you'll be in the criminal justice system and some people starting long terms of imprisonment. | |
| That needs to continue, and so that is my sole focus. | |
| The globalist liberals are currently posting all over Twitter to thank goodness that this is all over. | |
| Britain has come together again and everything is fine. | |
| But who exactly did come together? | |
| The Muslim community, who came out to chant The Communists, who came out to chant We are black, white Muslims, and we're choose our gay! | |
| We are black white muslims and we're choose our gay! | |
| We are black white muslims! | |
| Black white Muslims! | |
| Black white muslims! | |
| And the urban youth, who got bored and smashed up their own high streets. | |
| Notably absent from the people coming together were the normal English folk of Britain, the ones Starmer is currently doing his best night and day to prosecute. | |
| So far, we've seen disenfranchised teenagers, middle-aged mums, and pensioners put away for standing up against immigration, and I'm sure we'll see many more prosecutions to come. | |
| Once again, the brittleness of Starma's regime is revealed in their own actions. | |
| They don't have a moral mandate from the people. | |
| They don't really know what to do about the problems we face, and they don't even seem interested in solving them. | |
| And this apparent restoration to the status quo will only last until the next diverse atrocity that is visited upon us, which I suspect will not be in the very distant future. | |
| So what should we make of all of this? | |
| First, of course, I do not support violent protests and riots. | |
| I do not think you should get involved. | |
| However, I'm just an observer to all of this, and my input counts for naught. | |
| But I think I can explain why people are reacting this way. | |
| But I want you to not misinterpret this as an endorsement. | |
| I think the problem stems ultimately from the lack of grace shown to the English community from the British state. | |
| People have not been happy with the levels of immigration for a long time, and recent polls show that this dissatisfaction has only been growing. | |
| YouGov polling suggests that a majority of people of all political persuasions blame recent immigration policy as the source of the riots. | |
| And I think that this is because mass immigration is making people feel dispossessed of their own country. | |
| There's a reason why they're chanting, we want our country back. | |
| This is meant to be their country, England, the land of the English. | |
| And we see foreign colonies that are nearly at du jour self-governing status at this point, all over the land. | |
| This is not acceptable, and yet it has been brought about as a matter of policy, because the newcomers often do not accept the moral authority of the British state. | |
| We know the authorities are afraid, because they regularly put out what can easily be described as hostage videos, in which the police are surrounded by these foreign communities and give a submissive speech while looking scared and deflated. | |
| And so the British state panders to them as a way of keeping them pacified and on side while simultaneously cracking down hard on the English community. | |
| The one-sided favour of the police and justice system has been widely noticed by the English and they are not happy with it because it violates one of their most sacredly held beliefs that justice should be impartial and based on the behaviour of the criminal, not their words, but their actions. | |
| Instead now, we have a police force that claims to police without fear or favour when in reality they are deeply afraid of these new communities and show them endless charity while scorning the English community and persecuting them for the things that they say. | |
| This cannot go on forever and it's all come to a head recently and Starmer's reaction was to turn his cold, mechanical, bureaucratic face towards the English and tell them that their concerns did not matter. | |
| This puts the English community in a very dark place. | |
| I don't really see where we can go from here. | |
| We have been betrayed by the political class who imported millions of strangers to become favoured minority communities, whilst the English are given little to no redress of their just grievances. | |
| Various public figures of immigrant descent have made posts describing how they now join us in feeling afraid being in England and are thinking about returning to their countries of origin. | |
| That's simply something the English can't do. | |
| This is our country of origin. | |
| We have nowhere else to go. | |
| So we are left to feel alone and afraid in our own country, abandoned by the authorities under the looming threat that an atrocity like the one that took place in Southport and sparked this whole conflagration could be committed against us at any time and in any place. | |
| We don't feel safe because we aren't safe. | |
| Our children aren't safe. | |
| Our towns and cities aren't safe and there is no end in sight. | |
| We have to live in a state of perpetual tension because the dangers which have been imported into this country as a matter of policy are imposed upon us regardless of how we have voted. | |
| And what's more, nobody in a position of authority is even willing to hear out the concerns. | |
| They are totally blinded by ideology and have declared a de facto war on their own constituents. | |
| We have been left to the wolves and told that we deserve this fate and they're not even interested in hearing our side of the story. | |
| We are not represented in our own government. | |
| As I said, I do not support any kind of violence. | |
| I believe in a democratic solution. | |
| And actually there might be some light on the horizon. | |
| I don't believe Starmer is capable of winning another election now. |