By John Wayne on Friday, 31 January 2025
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Starmer Labour Government Claims Seeing Rapist Grooming Gangs as Anything Other than Joyful Multicultural Diversity, is a Right-Wing Extremist Narrative! By Richard Miller (London)

The Starmer government's "Understand," a Home Office report, has been leaked. The report on counter-extremism was ordered by Labour's Yvette Cooper, following from the mass protests after the Southport child murder protests, which saw the government come down hard upon protesters, even people posting on social media. Jails were cleaned out of criminals to make way for peaceful protesters in the UK version of the US January 6 protests. The report dismissed the Southport protests and concerns about two-tier policing, that is jailing social media protesters while other diverse chaps roamed the streets with machetes with no arrests of them, as a "right-wing extremist narrative." As well, public concerns about the rape grooming gangs were dismissed, with the abuse being "alleged." Even in dhimmi Britain men have been prosecuted.

It is an indication of the rot and evil that exists in the government, as Elon Musk has well recognised.

https://dailysceptic.org/2025/01/28/alleged-problem-of-grooming-gangs-and-claims-of-two-tier-policing-are-part-of-a-right-wing-extremist-narrative-leaked-home-office-report/

"The "alleged" problem of grooming gangs and claims of 'two-tier policing' are part of a "Right-wing extremist narrative" and police should record more non-crime hate incidents, not less, a leaked Home Office report has said. The Telegraph has the story.

The counter-extremism review recommends that Labour reverses the previous Government's move to limit the recording of non-crime hate incidents (NCHIs) over concerns about their impact on free speech.

On Monday night, Ministers backed the increased use of NCHIs for incidents of Islamophobia and antisemitism.

In an assessment that will lead to a backlash from Tory and Reform politicians, the report also says that "claims of 'two-tier' policing" are a "Right-wing extremist narrative" and that grooming gangs are an "alleged" problem "frequently exploit[ed]" by the far-Right.

The row over NCHIs and free speech flared last year after [Telegraph journalist Allison] Pearson was investigated by police for the crime of allegedly stirring up racial hatred in a tweet about two-tier policing. The case was subsequently dropped.

Pearson initially believed she was being investigated for an NCHI and the incident resulted in a public debate about their use.

In June 2023, Suella Braverman, the Conservative Home Secretary at the time, ordered police to stop recording NCHIs, which do not meet the criminal threshold but are logged by police regardless, just because someone was offended.

The new report says the Home Office should "reverse the previous Government's code of practice".

The review – called a "rapid sprint" – was ordered by Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, in August last year as part of work to develop a new counter-extremism strategy and was leaked to Policy Exchange, the think tank.

NCHIs were introduced after the racist murder of Stephen Lawrence to monitor situations that could escalate into more serious harm or show heightened community tensions. However, they have increasingly been used to record trivial incidents.

More than 13,000 incidents were logged by police forces in the past year, including against schoolchildren, vicars and doctors.

Although having an NCHI recorded against a person does not involve any sanction and is not a criminal record, it may show up on an enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service check, potentially affecting employment prospects.

Ms Cooper has proposed expanding the recording of NCHIs in relation to antisemitism and Islamophobia because she believes they can warn of rising abuse against Jewish and Muslim communities.

The report suggests that any changes would "encompass all five protected characteristics", which includes hate based on race, disability, sexual orientation or gender reassignment. Home Office sources said a wider expansion of NCHIs was not planned.

In its section on the extreme Right, the Home Office report says "claims of 'two-tier policing', where two groups are allegedly treated differently after similar behaviour" are an example of a "Right-wing extremist narrative" which is "leaking into mainstream debates".

It also warns: "Right-wing extremists frequently exploit cases of alleged group-based sexual abuse to promote anti-Muslim sentiment as well as anti-government and anti-'political correctness' narratives." …

Among its recommendations, the report also said ministers should consider a new offence of making "harmful communications" likely to cause "psychological harm".

The proposal – originally part of the Online Safety Bill – was rejected by the previous Government for threatening free speech and its "potential to criminalise speech on the basis that it caused someone offence".

More tin-eared ideological rubbish from the hopeless Home Office. How long till the U.K. moves to political Civil Service appointments, like the U.S., so incoming governments can tame and shape the Blob rather than be held hostage by it?"

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/01/27/home-office-non-crime-hate-incidents-pearson/

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2025/01/28/talking-about-two-tier-policing-rape-gangs-signs-of-extremism-says-uk/

"An internal report ordered by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper risks taking counter-terror police's eye off radical Islamism and tarring "significant swathes" of the public with the "far-right" brush, critics warn, as widespread concerns have been labelled extremist by the government.

'Understand', an internal report on counter-extremism ordered by senior Labour politician Yvette Cooper last year after the anti-mass migration riots following the Southport child murders, has been leaked and reveals how civil servants advise the government to widen the net of the security services radically.

The report, which was leaked to the Policy Exchange think tank, took an extremely dismissive attitude towards important issues facing the country while branding concerns about them as obsessions of extremists. Objections over so-called two-tier policing — which is to say police treating various social, racial, and faith groups differently, in contravention of the concept of equality before the law — is an example of a "right-wing extremist narrative". This attitude comes despite the idea of two-tier policing already being demonstrated as pretty widespread throughout the British public.

Policy Exchange warned: "There is an obvious risk here of tarring significant swathes of the public as Far Right. A similar danger may exist through the [review] categorising the Far Right as 'hijacking extant local grievances about perceived inequalities around access to resources'."

Meanwhile, the issue of so-called grooming gangs, the organised industrial-scale rape of young girls by predominantly Pakistani-heritage gangs in Britain's regional towns and cities, is also airily dismissed by Yvette Cooper's 'Understand'. It states: "Right-wing extremists frequently exploit cases of alleged group-based sexual abuse to promote anti-Muslim sentiment as well as anti-government and anti- 'political correctness' narratives".

Policy Exchange drew attention to the fact civil servants felt the need to call it "alleged" abuse as if this was in question, as it dismisses any idea there may be any genuine concern about the rape of children among those holding right-wing views.

In an area of clear internal contradiction, if not outright hypocrisy, Policy Exchange also noted that the government document exhaustively talks about the danger of "extreme misogyny", relating it to ideas like the "manosphere", "Pick-Up Artists", and "Incels", but makes "little reference" to the perpetrators of some of the most horrendous violence against women in the UK in decades, those same Pakistani-heritage grooming gangs themselves.

Other areas of extremism name-checked included Hindu extremism, anarchism, and radical environmentalism.

The think tank reveals that, in particular, the report advises the Home Secretary to no longer focus on issues like Islamic extremism or right-wing extremism but to be "agnostic" on ideology and pivot to "behaviours and activity of concern" because of the "dizzying range of beliefs and ideologies we see".

Policy Exchange warned in their assessment that this new approach could swamp Britain's intelligence with thousands of new cases of questionable importance, making missing genuinely dangerous extremists more likely and that it risks the counter-British extremism establishment being pushed towards policing symptoms, not causes.

It stated the paper, if implemented, "de-centres and downplays Islamism, by far the greatest threat to national security" and "risks confusing extreme violence with extremism, or extremism with any shocking crime, bad belief or nasty social phenomenon about which we are worried."

The report also calls for an intensification of the collection of the already controversial 'Non-Crime Hate Incidents' by reversing a standing order they should only be recorded in cases where a threat of harm is present. As noted by Policy Exchange the records, which can't be challenged and sit on the police computer for years, where they can be seen by potential employers even though there has been no criminal conviction, are: "intensely controversial, criticised as a waste of police time, an avenue for malicious complaints and chilling to free speech… "NCHIs have been recorded against children after playground disputes and journalists who have used "outdated language.".

Hours after the existence and questionable content of the document was made public, Yvette Cooper briefed that she would not be accepting the findings of the review that she had ordered. The Guardian noted on Tuesday morning that a spokesman said: "Ministers have rejected this advice… Ideology, particularly Islamist extremism followed by far-right extremism, continue to be at the heart of our approach to countering extremism and counter terror. But as the horrific Southport attack shows, alongside that we also need more action on those drawn towards mixed ideologies and violence-obsessed young people."

The report comes just days after the British government announced it had decided it believes an effective way to crack down on the country's knife crime problem is to make buying knives more difficult as if they aren't already available in every kitchen." 

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