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The Home Affairs Select Committee Report on the Southport Riots Gets One thing Right – the Authorities Shouldn’t Have Withheld Information About the Attacker For so Long

by Laurie Wastell
28 April 2025 7:00 AM

It is becoming increasingly obvious today that the British public has lost the trust of the British state. An official attitude of fear and loathing can be observed wherever one looks. The recent hysteria over the Netflix drama Adolescence, for instance, suggests that in Britain’s teenage boys, the powers that be see a gurning, misogynist army of would-be killers in need of urgent re-education. The internet is now viewed as a frightening force to be censored and controlled; dissenting opinions or sentiments published thereon are aggressively punished. Rape-gang survivors righteously demand thorough investigations and accountability for these horrors – but inquiries are repeatedly put on ice lest the abuse that is found be so shocking that it provokes a backlash. On all issues of importance or sensitivity, the public, it seems, are to be treated like mushrooms: kept in the dark and fed BS.

So it is that a report this month into the Southport response by the Home Affairs Select Committee has denied the well-founded public grievance that it involved any two-tier policing. This is obviously not true, most glaringly in how Muslim sectarian mobs were allowed to run around unpoliced, while violence at asylum hotels was (rightly) dealt with robustly. As ever, rather than risk engaging with this important, thorny issue, the response is to deny, deny, deny.


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Tags: Axel RudakubanaHome Affairs Select CommitteeRiotsSir Jonathan HallSouthport Attacks

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15 Comments
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Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
2 years ago

Tailor made militant angry activist who has conveniently Parted company with the indigenous mother of his child as he rises to the top of another stinking pile of shit ! We know someone in Scotland just like that ! Strange isn’t it – NOT !

40
-1
DomH75
DomH75
2 years ago

I’ve said for a long time that there’s one way to sort this issue. Separate a vast tract of land in the Americas or Africa and allow all these SJWs to create their own country with all their laws that they believe are fair. Let them establish their ultimate wet dream ‘anti-racist’, ‘anti-fascist’, ‘progressive’, virtue signalling, ‘anti-transphobic’, green, SJW state and give people who want to live in that state a grant to let them move there. Let them go. Let them be a beacon of ‘kindness’ in the world and let the rest of us stay here and be the squalid, ‘fascist’, ‘racist’, ‘intolerant’, ‘micro-aggression’-orientated hellholes they claim we are.

Some sort of diaspora is the only way we can solve this problem. These people are nihilists and misanthropes who want to corrupt our children, intellectually and sexually. Let them have their own country, let all the teachers, the activists and politicians and members of the public who think that way have a nice sunny, warm country to live in and try to achieve their idea of perfection and let the people left behind sort out the education system for ourselves. The Guardian can move there as the state newspaper, the unions can close in the UK and set up shop there, virtue-signalling corporations that don’t mind vast green taxes can set up shop there, the British police constabularies can head over there. Everyone can wear masks to show how ‘kind’ they are.

It’s going to have to be this way sooner or later – national divorces – or there’s going to be civil war. And I wish that were hyperbole. As we’ve seen with motorists dishing it out to eco-loons, the public aren’t going to tolerate much more.

112
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

👍✅

21
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

They would fail abysmally. Insisting that things are as you wish them to be rather than as they actually are will lead to disaster and misery.

11
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DomH75
DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

Exactly. But it’ll be their problem, not ours. They can sit there and blame each other and us. Ultimately, their utopia will be the same sort of totalitarian hellhole all the others have been. But they won’t be buggering up our lives!

38
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

It’s a lovely thought.

Would also like to see Saint Greta go and live with the Amish, see how she likes Hard Work. Then again, I admire the Amish so perhaps it’s unkind to wish her upon them.

42
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DomH75
DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

Definitely. With the arrival of smart technology, I’m increasingly liking the Amish. As long as I can get my books printed and I have a gas lamp to read them by at night, I’d be very happy to get away from the modern world! 😀

26
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Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

I’ve never understood the beard-but-no-moustache look: you still need to shave.

18
0
Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

And that’s just the wives 🙄

7
0
NeilParkin
NeilParkin
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

They can have Liberia. Established so that former slaves from the US would face better chances for freedom and prosperity in Africa than in the United States. They are currently around 180th on the list of nations wealth, and suffering from civil war, corruption and a level of sexual violence that would make your hair curl. Life expectancy is around 64 years, which puts them in the bottom 50 globally. But, you know…white folks, etc etc.

33
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LaptopMaestro
LaptopMaestro
2 years ago

It’s about installing a Labour government – nothing else.

38
-2
DomH75
DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  LaptopMaestro

Unquestionably. Militant union leaders have been pushing for national strikes for years. We were naive enough to think that by the end of the 1980s the unions had been put back in their box. The only route is to outlaw the public sector unions. The only place unions have a right to exist is the private sector, with private companies being given the right to recognise them or not!

25
-1
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  LaptopMaestro

The current round of public sector strikes have nothing to do with changing the name of the nominal party of government. We now are most definitely living in a one party state and whichever lickspittles make up the executive they rank only as middle managers at best within the Davos Deviants hierarchy.

The only difference a change of Downing Street incumbents will make to this country is in the immediate degree of suffering the people are forced to tolerate.

28
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LaptopMaestro
LaptopMaestro
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

The public sector leeches will suffer less.

5
0
Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

Close down state education and use the money saved to reduce taxes on the working less-well-off.

17
-1
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago

Most of the big Union leaders have been bought by the Davos Deviants. I have been making this point for months.

These strikes from big public unions are not really about money they are about disrupting society which is just what the DD’s want. The government has a part to play of course so they string the game along and this will probably continue until public pressure means the government gives way a little.

Not all teachers support this and I have two neices in the industry who refuse to strike but many have had almost a two year holiday on full pay and obviously enjoyed themselves and are quite happy for this to continue.

Public sector disruptions will continue for at least the next two years if not longer. In the case of teachers once this pantomime is over things will appear to calm down for a while until the DD’s issue a new set of orders to the leadership – pensions or working conditions, whatever; anything to spark another round of disruption. And where teachers are concerned it doesn’t take much for this left-wing blob to find a new grievance to raise their “out brothers out,” placards. Whoops, sisters too.

All so blatant and obvious.

40
-2
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Reminds me of Jack Harper from On The Buses: “Brothers…”

Incidentally, what exactly does the “Labour” party think of working class English men in the private sector these days? Was Emily Thornberry’s white van man tweet from Strood a warning sign or a mere “slip of the tongue”? We wonders…

13
0
Andante
Andante
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

You can see how the Liebour party thinks of all the people by looking at the devolved administration in Wales. Sometime ago they decided to experiment on children by giving them bugs and insects to eat at school.

More recently they decided to force ‘sex education’ (really perversion) on children; when a group of parents tried to stop it, Drakefords gang forced them to raise substantial sums of money to go to Court. (Does anyone know what the outcome of that is?)

Now they have said that they will give £1500 a month to any and all the asylum seekers in Wales to help with their living expenses asylum applications!!

Complete contempt and disdain for the people of Wales. The Liebour Party (i.e. Starmer) has done NOTHING to stop any of these policies THEREFORE they should be considered as Liebour policy, so no-one should cast their vote for Liebour in the comming local elections. No-one!

4
0
Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

I’m no fan of woke indoctrinators, but why is it unreasonable to want your salary to keep up with government-created inflation?

I’ve been putting up my charges to my clients by what I estimate inflation to be.

2
-19
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

A perfectly reasonable desire of course, and likewise reasonable to want interest rates to be above inflation, and have a prospect of a return on your savings. What was unreasonable was for teaching unions to demand lockdowns and related restrictions, and then demand that others pay for the cost of this – if these people maintain their standard of living, it will be at the expense of others given that overall we are all poorer as a result of policies they supported – the cost of lockdown crisis.

Last edited 2 years ago by Hugh
44
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RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Thank you for putting this so nicely into words. There’s obviously nothing wrong with wanting one’s salary to keep up with inflation, however, for the vast majority of people, that’s not an option and inflation also devalues their savings. What the teaching unions want is a Get Out of Corona Free! card to be paid for by the people who don’t have the slighest bit of a chance of getting inflation-matching pay rises.

Further, they also want to government to increase the money supply yet more, potentially driving inflation even higher. There’s a possible positive feedback loop here:

1) Inflation becomes higher.
2) Therefore, public sector unions demand more pay.
3) Public sector works get union demanded payrises, which increases the money supply.
4) goto 1

34
-1
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

Is that how you get hyperinflation?

Actually, I was reading about this the other day in a book called The Great Deception (2021 edition, revised). Apparently in Germany’s case, as I recall, a French army of some 70,000 (stuffed with colonials) invaded Germany’s industrial heartland in 1923, committed a lot of human rights abuses (“a large number of colonial troops who were allowed to run amok”), buggered up production (“deliberate wrecking of Germany’s infrastructure”) – with disastrous consequences: “collapse of industrial output”, “mass unemployment”. The German government then “guaranteed the wages of dispossessed workers”, triggering hyperinflation. Apparently, for some reason not a lot is said about this episode in modern history textbooks. Plus ca change? One of the most worrying developments in recent times is Germany conceding to measures which will inevitably stoke inflation.

Last edited 2 years ago by Hugh
10
0
RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

That’s the so-called Ruhrkampf (fight on the Ruhr). French troops occupied the Ruhr area because it was conjectured that Germany didn’t do as much to pay war tributes (reparations) to France as it could. The idea was they could extract more of what they had awarded to themselves by direct management under military occupation. The German reaction to that was the so-called passiver Widerstand (passive resistance), essentially a general strike paid for by the unoccupied parts of Germany, which eventually collapsed/ was eventually abandoned because of inflation.

But there’s also a more shady aspect to this: The Reich was heavily indebted to its own citiziens because of a series of war loans they had financed. Hyperinflation, which eventually lead to the collapse of the original German currency (the 1871 Mark), enabled the ‘democratic’ authorities to get comfortably rid of all this debt by swindling their creditors, ie paying the loans back with worthless pieces of paper printed for this purpose. I’m not aware of any history books mentioning this, it just happened.

5
0
Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

5 out of 3 maths teachers can’t do fractions.

11
0
DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

You are undoubtedly working in the private sector, where your fees are solely a matter between you and your clients. If you increase your fees beyond the value of your services then your clients will not stay with you and choose one of your competitors instead. Public sector employees are paid by us dumb taxpayers and are monopoly suppliers. The teaching unions were a major driver of school closures, while of course their members were still being paid, so their increased salary demands are the exact opposite of “reasonable”. It’s blackmail, pure and simple.

22
0
RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  DevonBlueBoy

There’s another aspect to that: Pay rises in the private sector must come from somewhere. If pay is supposed to rise, either, profits must fall or economically valuable output must be increased. This is not the case in the public sector and especially not here, where the unions specifically demand that the government must increase its spending to finance the sought-after pay rises. The government could do that by raising taxes but this tends to be very unpopular. The government could also do that by simply increasing the amount of money in circulation, the method already used to pay for all of Corona so far. The teaching unions basically demand that this warm rain of freshly-minted pound coins must continue even in absence of a so-called pandemic.

7
0
LaptopMaestro
LaptopMaestro
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

Public sector leeches get what the private sector tax-payer can afford. If inflation goes up, their remuneration should go down, as I now have less to spend.

5
0
Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago

God forbid the teechers should ever go back to skool and teech

11
0
DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago

All these lefties would argue vehemently against the evils of monopolies in the economy but funnily enough a monopoly in their union dominated profession is perfectly acceptable. Hypocritical bar stewards. 😡

8
0
NeilofWatford
NeilofWatford
2 years ago

To deprive children of proper education and disrupt working families.
Sun Tzu, rule 1: understand your enemy.

8
0

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