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Who Will be First Up Against the Wall if Civil Unrest Breaks Out?

by Toby Young
26 May 2022 12:30 PM

In my Spectator column this week, I have speculated about who is likely to suffer most in the event of a breakdown of law and order this summer. My conclusion is that it is not middle-class pantywaists like me, but the muggers, car thieves and burglars who prey on middle-class property owners during normal time.

The educated bourgeoisie has developed an irrational fear of civilisational collapse, having been taught by books and films like The Road and Mad Max that gangs of marauding thugs will rule the roost in a post-apocalyptic universe. We’re told again and again that the moment law and order breaks down, our nice, leafy neighbourhoods will be transformed into Hobbesian hellholes. If bespectacled soy-boys like me aren’t killed for foolishly trying to defend our homes, the best we can hope for is to become indentured labourers while our wives and daughters are carried off on motorcycles.

But as I discovered during the disorder of 11 years ago, it is not middle-class property owners who have the most to fear from the breakdown of society, but the propertyless. This revelation hit me during a long day in August 2011 that began with a trip to Ealing Broadway, the site of the worst rioting the night before. It’s about a two-mile walk from my house, and as I made my way along the Uxbridge Road I could see exactly where the rioters had got to the previous evening, like a tideline in the urban landscape. On one side of the line it looked as it always does – the usual hotchpotch of restaurants, coffee shops and newsagents along the main road, with quiet residential streets behind – whereas on the other there were broken shop windows, burnt-out cars and upended bins, as if the area had been engulfed by some terrible destructive storm. That line was about half a mile from my house.

By the time I got to the Broadway it was too late to help with the clean-up, so I decided to wander back via a street of Victorian semi-detached houses just like my own. Had the sea of rioters flowed exclusively along the main thoroughfares or been diverted along residential streets? They’d been diverted. Everywhere I looked, householders were boarding up their windows, sweeping broken glass off their front steps or standing by their damaged cars, waiting for tow trucks.

I asked one man what had happened and he said a pack of feral youths had tried to break into his home at around midnight. He’d locked his wife and young child in the garden shed for their own safety and then done his best to keep out the mob as they tried to break down his front door and smash their way in through his front window. ‘Didn’t you call the police?’ I asked. ‘Yes, of course,’ he said. More than 12 hours later, they still hadn’t turned up.

I hurried home, convinced the riots would reach my street that night and desperately trying to think of ways to protect my wife and children. I asked the head of the local Neighbourhood Watch group to convene an emergency meeting and, not surprisingly, it was well-attended. There were about 30 of us, nearly all men, and we agreed we wouldn’t risk anything to protect our cars. If lawless youths wanted to smash them up or set them on fire, so be it. But if they tried to break into our homes, we would act. We agreed that the householder being targeted would set off his burglar alarm and the rest of us would come running to help, using whatever weapons we had to hand – cricket bats, hammers, iron bars.

Worth reading in full.

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120 Comments
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Claphamanian
Claphamanian
1 year ago

What makes doctors and nurses members of a community? Can you get a second opinion from a member of a group that thinks the same way?

Using medical professionals of the NHS like priests to deliver a catechism to the congregant opens the possibility of irretrievably damaging that profession’s credibility.

The ‘on-message’ communicators have been deployed to administer ‘anaesthetic to the community’ in these recent race riots. I once heard a nurse declare that anyone who is a racist should be denied healthcare. It has been suggested at the highest level in response to these riots that a racist should be turned away from hospital. An off-message person faces not only de-banking but de-NHS-ing.

8
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago
Reply to  Claphamanian

As Ronald Reagan said to the doctors when he was shot: “I sure hope you guys are Republican”.

Mark Steyn was denied healthcare in a hospital in America because of his conservative views.

4
0
Norfolk-Sceptic
Norfolk-Sceptic
1 year ago
Reply to  Claphamanian

“Thus, the WHO publication states, “Health professionals wear many hats in society – one of which is a trusted community voice.”

In the UK, that time has already passed.

They are agents of the state.

I know better estate agents: they kept me up-to-date.

Last edited 1 year ago by Norfolk-Sceptic
2
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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

Every time there’s a mass stabbing of children in Britain, Ireland or Continental Europe the immediate default reaction is “we must stop the (mythical) “Far Right” taking advantage of this and crack down on social media.”

Last edited 1 year ago by Lockdown Sceptic
10
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varmint
varmint
1 year ago

Many people think that scientists in white coats are busy all day studying the climate with barely time to make a cheese roll, and then they run off to government with their findings, and the government then have no choice but to “act now”. —–In reality ofcourse it is government who decided to throw hundreds of billions of taxpayers’ money at any and all who could be remotely classed as a scientist, and who would present “studies” from everything to pigs farting a semi tone higher to frogs bursting wide open all entirely due to our use of fossil fuels. ——–But with no empirical evidence.

11
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Andrew Green
Andrew Green
1 year ago

My understanding is that there are about 420ppm of carbon dioxide (C02) in the atmosphere, or 0.04%. That can also be expressed as 1 molecule of C02 to about 2,400 molecules of everything else. Presumably that is why it is referred to as a trace gas.

Humanity produces an estimated 3 – 4% of global C02 emmisions so for every molecule that we, the whole human race, produce there are around 60 – 80 thousand molecules of everything else.

Given the immense forces at play with the climate, e.g. the continents (comprising mountain ranges, plains, deserts, forests, the ice caps etc), the seas and oceans (70% of the earths surface), the earth’s trajectory around the sun (which changes in long term cycles) and the behaviour of the sun itself, it seems to me to be utterly absurd that the contribution of humanity’s C02 to the atmosphere of 1 to 60-80k can possibly have any impact on our climate whatsoever.

But fret not the Brits will save the day! Our atmospheric contribution of C02, at 1% of human emissions, stands at a heroically muscular 1 molecule in around 6 – 8 million!

In 1841 Charles Mackay published his book “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds”. Today’s obsession with ‘controlling’ the climate would surely be included in any update.

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Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago

Michie The B1tchie in photo ,a proper Communist , moved to the WHO to carry on nudging !!

5
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago

Herefordshire Sky yesterday afternoon ! Climate Change in full view 😳

3C02F5E1-FE01-4DF6-B4A0-7B95A3569C70
2
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sskinner
sskinner
1 year ago
Reply to  Freddy Boy

It was a nice day, eventually, and hot. You’re not suggesting that the contrails are something else are you?

2
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago
Reply to  sskinner

Don’t be daft I’ve just had a new front door 😉👍

2
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago

Can The Panel shed some light on the following questions , WHY is Iz-lamb the Religion of choice to be constantly protected by HMG , WHY does HMG seem to think that Iz-lamb is / or would be easier to live with than us the indigenous ?????

7
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Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago
Reply to  Freddy Boy

ANYONE ??

1
0
Howard Arnaud
Howard Arnaud
1 year ago
Reply to  Freddy Boy

Hi Freddy. I’ll have a go if no-one else will.

The case for mass immigration is that we’re not having enough babies and that we need to import more people who are going to generate the wealth that pays for people’s pensions.

Thanks to various geopolitical issues, like Tony Blair’s reckless Iraq war, poking our noses into Afghanistan, and Cameron’s interference in Libya, a lot of the new arrivals are from Islamic countries.

Blair actually believed that these arrivals would become secularised, and that in turn this would lead to the secularisation of the whole Islamic world, complete fool that he is.

It’s a typical fault of the Left, seeing the world as they’d like it to be rather than how it actually is.

If you add to that factors like sensible Islamic countries like Morocco and Algeria making it hot for their troublemakers so that they emigrate to France and Belgium, you can see how it can only lead to trouble for the West generally.

A big irony is that a lot of the arrivals are pretty secular to begin with, but when they find out that life in the West isn’t a bed of roses, they become easy to radicalise.

As for HMG, there’s a deeply embedded post-colonial guilt syndrome built into our establishment, despite the fact that we never colonised any Islamic countries, in the real sense that we never attempted to settle white people there. Plus they’re just too frit to take radical Islamists on.

HTH

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Howard Arnaud
Howard Arnaud
1 year ago

Foreshadowed, as always, in H.G.Wells’s The Shape of Things to Come (1933).

From Book the Fifth, The Modern State in Control of Life, Section 4 Changes in the Control of Behaviour

Education as we understand it to-day began about the middle of the twentieth century. It had only the slenderest continuity with the education of the preceding age, just as the education of Christendom had only the slenderest continuity with the education of the pagan world. Reading, writing, and counting were taught in all three systems, but beyond that the very objectives were different. Modern education began as propaganda after the time of De Windt (*), as the propaganda of the Modern State. It sought to establish a new complete ideology and a new spirit which would induce the individual to devote himself and to shape all his activities to one definite purpose, to the attainment and maintenance of a progressive world-socialism, using an efficient monetary system as its normal medium of relationship.

This seemed, and was, a gigantic undertaking. It faced colossal obstacles in ordinary human nature. But it was supremely necessary if human civilization was to continue. The alternative was a relapse through chaotic barbarism to animal casualness and final extinction. Thought and behaviour patterns had to be shaped therefore to subserve this objective, to the relative disregard of any other conceivable purpose. The Modern State became the whole duty of man. This propaganda passed necessarily into a training for public service and a universal public education. The Modern State Fellowship was a trained body pledged to impose its own type of training upon all the world. It proposed to be the New Humanity. It would accept no compromises. It made the whole educational framework militant. No other type of school and no other system of teaching was tolerated for more than half a century. Never before was man so directed and disciplined.

(*) Gustave de Windt is the original behavioural psychologist who gives the World State the keys to controlling the population.

As they say in the DS, worth reading in full.

Last edited 1 year ago by Howard Arnaud
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sskinner
sskinner
1 year ago
Reply to  Howard Arnaud

Thank you Howard. This sentence jumped out for me: “The alternative was a relapse through chaotic barbarism to animal casualness and final extinction.”
Interestingly some of the worst barbarians have been well educated – Bin Laden, A. H., Pol Pot, and some of the best people have been self taught. Slightly related – I recall an individual asserting the need to people to be controlled otherwise there would be chaos, or something like that. He gave an example of an orchestra which he said ‘would play all over the place if the conductor wasn’t there’. Obviously this person has never played in an orchestra. I was a free-lance musician for 20 odd years and the first professional orchestra I played in I was instructed not to look at the conductor, because he wasn’t that good and it would fall apart if we did. My feeling is it is the learning of a profession that can temper and provide focus for the individual, but this is a much larger topic than my comment can cover here.

3
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Howard Arnaud
Howard Arnaud
1 year ago
Reply to  sskinner

Clearly the work is of its time. The first part deals with what led up to the Great War, and it was widely thought that unconstrained individualism, allied to technological advance and the extension of capitalism, leading to competition between nations, was the root cause. Not only that, but the problems hadn’t gone away, so it had already become clear that a catastrophic second world war would be unavoidable, hence the “relapse through chaotic barbarism to animal casualness and final extinction” in the aftermath idea.

It’s the proposed solution through the establishment of a socialistic World State which is the alarming thing from today’s perspective. You can find all the current developments in the pages of the book: technocratic government by “experts”, control of population through pandemics, elimination of national identities and religions, and a limit on the global population.

With Wells it’s never entirely clear whether he was writing a blueprint, a warning, or a satire, or actually all three at the same time, but the flawed nature of the highly educated experts is one of the themes.

4
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transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago

Of course the teaching profession will also be used as a “trusted messenger”:

UK children to be taught how to spot extremist content and fake news online | Education | The Guardian

“Children will be taught how to spot extremist content and misinformation online under planned changes to the school curriculum, the education secretary said.
Bridget Phillipson said she was launching a review of the curriculum in primary and secondary schools to embed critical thinking across multiple subjects and arm children against “putrid conspiracy theories”.”

3
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sskinner
sskinner
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

What if they ended up pointing out the Guardian and the BBC?

7
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Atticus
Atticus
1 year ago
Reply to  sskinner

Sadly, though they would not would they, they would not be allowed to think quite that critically. Any individual standing out from the crowd would be very quickly ostracised. Just imagine Lord of the Flies …

3
0
dxb
dxb
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

The effect of this hinges in what is meant by “critical thinking”: if it means that children will be taught to look at the evidence, evaluate it and come to an independent conclusion, all well and good; if, as seems more likely, they are taught to look at the media and adopt the “consensus” view, down the hill we go.

5
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transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  dxb

Very well put

2
0
RTSC
RTSC
1 year ago

The flaw in their scheme is that a very great number of people who don’t believe the Climate Change bollocks, since the Covid Tyranny, also don’t believe a word their low-information doctors say either.

If you switch off the MSM you won’t have to listen to their moronic nudges. And if you ignore the legacy Print Dinosaurs, you won’t have to read them either.

5
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  RTSC

I was talking to a retired GP last week and the subject of the riots came up. According to the ex GP…”it’s amazing really, the person organising the riots is lying on a sunbed in Cyprus.”

For a moment I was lost for words and then I understood. My reply … “you are away with the faeries” ended the conversation. Over the last couple of years that I have known this guy I have come to the conclusion that he is actually bloody thick. He spouts all the covid crap, all the vaccine crap and last week was pushing the shingles vaccine bollox. Two of the group, graduates and retired teachers both, proudly announced that they had recently rolled their sleeves up for the shingles gunk. Actually they are boosted to the hilt and I am surprised they are still with us.

A microbiologist colleague recently advised I take a PCR test as I had been plagued with a horrible cough for over six weeks. The response began with F and ended with Off. Crude I know but these idiots, the intelligent stupid as we call them, really do get me down.

7
0
sskinner
sskinner
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I think this extract from the film Brazil seems almost apt?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4KFNhxibec

0
0
Steven Robinson
Steven Robinson
1 year ago

What is wrong with the NHS? Malcolm Kendrick’s brilliant analysis made the same point as Gary Sidley when arguing that doctors are no longer trusted to use their own professional judgements when deciding what is best for a patient.

2
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Steven Robinson

Over the last four years my skepticism of medical professionals has gone off the chart. My go-to position when dealing with them is to take everything they say with a large pinch of salt. Furthermore, if I don’t agree with them I tell them. Recently that has resulted in a cardiologist dismissing me from his caseload because I refuse to take statins. Remarkably, as an alternative he offered a twice yearly injection. I had never heard of such. Some interweb searching when I got home revealed that the injections were experimental and had not yet been cleared by the UKHSA, not that that confers any legitimacy. Further discussions with a cardiac nurse last week revealed said injections had been cancelled / abandoned as not proven. Clearly the cardiologist has a lot of reading to catch up on.

4
0
Tylney
Tylney
1 year ago

During the insane COVID years, face masks were the most obvious symbol of state control of the minds of the sheep-like public. But that experiment unexpectedly worked most satisfactorily, so now it’s moved on to a more blatant extension, apparently to calm public unrest over a number of new issues.
Thousands of conveniently portable and perfectly printed protest banners, with carefully chosen attention-grabbing red and yellow backgrounds, are brandished in every unorthodox public gathering. They’re everywhere. Their messages vary according to the circumstances, and the banners even appear to have identical sticks, to raise them more visibly above the crowds. They instantly appear, supposedly ‘spontaneously’, wherever crowds are induced to gather, apparently reinforcing whatever politically message favours manipulation of the currently fashionable state objectives in controlling public behaviour.
Surely these banners cannot be randomly printed, at incredibly short notice, by numerous print shops all around the country? Or am I being naive again?

7
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago
Reply to  Tylney

Just like all the Convid stickers etc , they must be made and ordered before hand !

4
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Tylney

No you are not being naïve. The naïvity attaches to those carrying the banners although I would prefer to call them THICK and STUPID.

Last edited 1 year ago by huxleypiggles
2
0
Tylney
Tylney
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Sheepdogs nudge sheep to get them to do what the shepherd wants. The sheeple dogs hand out the banners to the sheeple, then who is the sheepleherd?

2
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Tylney

Indeed.

1
0
GroundhogDayAgain
GroundhogDayAgain
1 year ago

For an insight into the credulity of celebrities, recall Brass Eye. Chris Morris got several slebs to join fictitious campaigns. Cake as a ‘made-up’ Drug. An elephant called Carla slowly disappearing up its fundament trunk-first. And Pedogeddon, literally ‘Nonce-Sense’.

They lapped it up. David Ames (RIP) even took the topic of ‘Cake’ into the House of Commons.

If anyone hasn’t seen Brass Eye and The Day Today, they’re brilliant satire.

2
0
Grim Ace
Grim Ace
1 year ago

We live in a society with lowering overall IQs. Letting in millions of people feom sh1th013le countries means we are importing lower IQs. And letting DEI hires get a pass with low or no relevant qualifications is another reason. We are becoming South Africa.

2
0
adamcollyer
adamcollyer
1 year ago

It has been clear for some time that “public health” is a political discipline, not a medical one. So don’t confuse public health campaigners with doctors.

1
0
Norfolk-Sceptic
Norfolk-Sceptic
1 year ago
Reply to  adamcollyer

Trust me, I’m a public health campaigner. 🙂

0
0
Epi
Epi
1 year ago

I see Dame Sharon White on the credits at the end of the film mentioned. No wonder John Lewis has taken a dive she clearly doesn’t check her facts before making important decisions.

Last edited 1 year ago by Epi
2
0
beaniebean
beaniebean
1 year ago

Excellent analysis.
Sadly those doctors and other medical professionals who spoke out during the pandemic risked their professional registration and continuing employment. Many are still suffer the consequences.

1
0
coviture2020
coviture2020
1 year ago

Wouldn’t surprise me if ” discussion of global boiling” doesn’t appear as a performance indicator in the GP contract and as such will attract a fee!

0
0
SimCS
SimCS
1 year ago

As a reminder, from the Cochrane mask trial report: “The pooled results of randomised trials did not show a clear reduction in respiratory viral infection with the use of medical/surgical masks during seasonal influenza.”, i.e. based on the EVIDENCE of all the trials conducted before covid, there’s NO evidence face nappies make any difference.

0
0
Norfolk-Sceptic
Norfolk-Sceptic
1 year ago

The ‘advantage’ of “centrally constructed protocols to direct healthcare interventions” is that there’s no room for informed discussion. 🙂

It’s the difference between being a representative and a delegate: the personification of central planning. New symptoms that don’t fit are not recorded, so they haven’t happened, so the status quo is kept, and mentality coaxed towards NET Zero policies, the ultimate destroyer of the national Economy. I suppose it’s our only hope to rid ourselves of this medical authoritarianism.

0
0

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