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This article was originally published on Big League Politics - Free Speech. You can read the original article HERE
Over the last month, the United Kingdom has been hit hard by a wave of protests following the gruesome stabbing murder of three little girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, England on July 29, 2024.
Axel Rudakubana, a 17-year-old male and the son of Rwandan nationals, murdered these young girls in cold blood. Protests immediately popped off the next day in Southport and spread across the UK.
The frustration expressed by protesters represents a general hostility towards the overwhelming wave of non-white immigration that has landed on Albion’s shores in the last 70 years.
As a result of these protests, the regime of Prime Minister Keir Starmer has started to arrest people for making posts on social media that explain uncomfortable truths about the troubling demographic situation in the UK and the harsh realities of non-white crime.
Before the Southport protests kicked off, X user ~~datahazard~~ noted on March 5, that “3300 people [were] arrested in Britain last year for saying naughty words online.”
X owner Elon Musk was surprised by these revelations which he responded to in a tweet in disbelief saying, “3300?”
~~datahazard~~ then responded with an even more revealing analysis of these prosecutions, by posting a bar chart noting that “Over 50,000 Brits in the past decade have been charged with Illegal Words or Writing (Race/Religion subset)”
In another post, he provided further context to the level of “hate speech” policing in the UK by posting a graph of the prosecution of individuals who used so-called “illegal words or writing” prior to Keir Starmer’s assumption of the Prime Minister position. He outlined the following:
The UK increased the number of Illegal Words or Writing cases it brings while achieving an ever higher conviction rate:
– 64% Convicted in 2012 (2425 of 3773)
– 79% Convicted in 2023 (4682 of 5964)
That’s 61,100 cases & 45,000 convictions from 2012-2023, not including those who faced Summary Judgement.
Including Summary Judgements would increase these numbers by an additional 35,100 proceedings & 27,400 convictions — combined, nearly 100,000 cases brought in total.
And, remember, everything in this graph is from before the current regime.
Since the Southport protests kicked off, the Starmer government has continued the trend of going after people who simply engage in peaceful speech. Jordan Parlour, a 28 year-old male, was recently accused of allegedly using threatening words or behavior in several posts from August 1 to August 5. On top of that, Cheshire Police arrested a woman for allegedly posting “inaccurate information on social media” about the Southport murderer. Authorities contended that her posts had the purpose of stirring up “racial hatred and false communications.”
Overall, things aren’t looking so well in the UK. Like its counterparts in the Anglosphere, the UK has been hit hard by mass migration and the multicultural political cult. It doesn’t help that it has a severe dearth of free speech freedoms. Americans, despite the problems the US is facing at the moment, should be thankful they still enjoy nominal freedoms such as the 1st and 2nd amendments.
If we didn’t have these civil liberties in place, the US would be in a similar situation to the UK if not worse.
This article was originally published by Big League Politics - Free Speech. We only curate news from sources that align with the core values of our intended conservative audience. If you like the news you read here we encourage you to utilize the original sources for even more great news and opinions you can trust!
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