I have discussed the issue of non-crime hate incidents before, where police harass people who say things the UK state does not like, even though no law has been broken. This is the force of intimidation of state power to suppress what should be free speech in a supposed liberal democratic society.
Here are some more examples to prove my point. Thus, two school girls were investigated for saying that another pupil smelt like "fish." Maybe that pupil did, for all we know. There are thousands of examples of bs just like this, showing where police energies are devoted. Not for dealing with ethnics grooming and mass raping White children; instead energies and tax money are channelled into social control of White British people.
"A nine-year-old who called a classmate a name and two secondary school girls who said another pupil smelt "like fish" are among thousands of people being investigated by police for non-crime hate incidents. The Times has more.
Police forces recorded incidents against a nine year-old who called a primary school classmate a "retard" and against two secondary school girls who said that another pupil smelt "like fish".
They were among several cases of children being logged as having committed non-crime hate incidents (NCHIs), according to freedom of information requests to police forces.
Government guidance says that NCHIs are supposed to be recorded for incidents "clearly motivated by intentional hostility" and where there is a real risk of escalation "causing significant harm or a criminal offence". Classroom incidents that do not amount to crimes are not supposed to be recorded, and neither are incidents involving journalists expressing lawfully held views with no hostility.
However, the Times has found evidence of widespread confusion among police over what types of incident should be recorded.
No. 10 said that the Home Office would review its guidance to protect "the fundamental right to free speech" after the journalist Allison Pearson claimed she was being investigated over an NCHI. Essex police say this is inaccurate and have defended their handling of the case.
However, data collected by the Times shows the recording of NCHIs is widespread. More than 13,200 hate incidents were recorded in the 12 months to June this year, according to statistics from 45 of Britain's 48 police forces."