The Demonisation of the Union Jack: Elites' War on Traditional Britain, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)
In a chilling sign of the times, Shaun Remmer, a 49-year-old father from Thirsk, North Yorkshire, was fired from his job as a teaching assistant for the audacious act of hanging Union Jacks around his hometown. What was meant as a symbol of national unity, celebrating Britain's shared heritage, sparked complaints, leading to his dismissal and even threats of charges from local authorities. This isn't an isolated incident; it's part of a broader campaign where globalist elites have recast the British flag as a "hate symbol," all in service of deconstructing traditional Britain and rebuilding it in their image. As multiculturalism is forced upon the nation, any display of native pride is smeared as bigotry, paving the way for a fractured, rootless society. But why? Because a united, traditional Britain stands in the way of their vision for a borderless, controllable "utopia."
The Union Jack has long embodied Britain's storied past, a fusion of the crosses of St. George, St. Andrew, and St. Patrick, representing the unity of England, Scotland, and Ireland (now Northern Ireland). For centuries, it flew over explorations, battles, and triumphs, from Trafalgar to the defeat of fascism in World War II. It was a banner of resilience, waved during jubilees, coronations, and sporting events without a hint of shame.
Remmer's gesture echoed this tradition. He estimated putting up 150 flags, receiving compliments from locals who shook his hand in gratitude. Previously, he'd displayed the flags of Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, hardly the acts of a xenophobe. Yet, North Yorkshire Council cited "health and safety" and resident "discomfort," while his school sacked him after anonymous complaints. Who feels "uncomfortable" with the national flag? As the story suggests, it's often those with divided loyalties, amplified by elites who view patriotism as a barrier to their agenda.
Over the past decade, the Union Jack and its English counterpart, the St. George's Cross, has been systematically tainted. Anti-racism groups like Hope Not Hate and Stand Up to Racism have linked flag displays to far-Right extremism, particularly during anti-immigration protests. Campaigns like "Operation Raise the Colours," which encouraged flying English flags amid riots over asylum policies, were branded as "racist" by critics, despite participants insisting it was about peaceful patriotism.
This narrative didn't emerge organically. Elites in media, academia, and politics have pushed it. In 2022, during the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, commentators decried the Union Jack as a "symbol of hate and oppression" tied to colonialism. Even Team GB's redesigned flag for the Olympics, splashed with pink and purple, was slammed as "woke" by some, but defended by others as a move away from "divisive" traditional colours.
Why this vilification? Elites despise traditional Britain, its history, values, and homogeneity, because it resists their deconstructionist plans. Mass immigration, often from cultures incompatible with British norms, is a tool to dilute national identity. When locals wave the flag in protest, it's reframed as "hate" to justify suppression. As one Reddit user noted amid 2025 protests, the flag is now seen by some as a "sign of anger" rather than love for country.
This flag-bashing fits a larger pattern: elites' hatred for traditional Britain manifests in policies that erode its foundations. Uncontrolled migration has strained communities, with grooming gangs and cultural clashes ignored to avoid "racism" accusations, issues Remmer discussed online, likely contributing to his firing. Councils remove flags citing "inclusivity," yet Palestinian flags fly freely during protests, unchallenged.
Globalist villains like those in Westminster and Brussels push this reconstruction: a Britain where history is apologised for, borders are porous, and native pride is pathologised. Hansard records from 1986 show early concerns over flags abused by fascists, but today's blanket stigma targets ordinary patriots. As blogger Richard Murphy expressed unease with flags in 2025, associating them with "hate," it reveals how elites condition the public to self-censor.
Remmer's case exemplifies this: fired without discussion, labelled a "safeguarding issue" for patriotism. It's not about safety, it's about control. Elites want a reconstructed Britain: diverse to the point of division, where symbols of unity are hate, and dissent is job-ending.
The Union Jack isn't hate; it's heritage. Elites' evil plan, to deconstruct and reconstruct Britain into a multicultural experiment, relies on shaming its symbols. But stories like Remmer's spark resistance. Locals thanked him; perhaps more will follow, flying the flag defiantly.
True inclusivity embraces Britain's roots, not erases them. Reject the smear: wave the Union Jack with pride. It's not hate, it's home. If elites succeed in demonising it, traditional Britain falls next. Time to fight back.
https://jihadwatch.org/2025/10/put-out-british-flags-in-the-u-k-you-can-lose-your-job

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