“We are All Anti-Establishment Now”! By Richard Miller (Somewhere in Europe)
Is "Anti-Establishment Rhetoric" Now a 'Far-Right' Offence?" is a question asked and answered by Mick Hume, regarding the present situation in the UK, where the ultra-woke Labor government is emptying jails of violent criminals to put in their place White protesters, some of whom merely re-posted social media material. As noted:
"An Englishman who the judge condemned as a "keyboard warrior" has been jailed for three years for posts he made on Twitter/X during the recent UK riots. When Wayne O'Rourke from Lincoln first appeared in court, the BBC reported that prosecutors alleged his posts contained "anti-Muslim and anti-establishment rhetoric." While the anti-Muslim rhetoric has for some time been a near hanging offence, it is somewhat new to be prosecuted for "anti-establishment rhetoric." What about all the Marxist books at universities such as Oxford and Cambridge which advocate revolution, or neo-Marxist academics working away at universities across the UK for the same end? No, it is only Whites from the Right that are punished in this way.
"Nonetheless, the state's careful coupling of "anti-Muslim and anti-establishment rhetoric" in court is a new political landmark. It captures the way in which the authorities, from Keir Starmer's Labour government downwards, are exploiting the thuggish antics of a few 'far-right' rioters to try to outlaw any criticism of the Westminster elites' disastrous policies on everything from mass immigration to law and order.
By equating anti-migrant and anti-establishment feeling, they have somehow twisted the public's anger over the brutal murder of three working class girls in Southport to tar the working classes as racist 'Islamophobes' who must be censored if not incarcerated."
This is a whole new level of woke Leftist tyranny. And it was not just people physically present at the riots; police worked overtime to find Whites who had posted criticisms on social media, and they too were subjected to the show trials. As polls are showing that 34 percent of the British public, more than the percentage who voted for Starmer, see immigration as a major problem, the Labor strategy is to make one third of the population potential criminals.
Thus, I could not agree more with this conclusion: "Some conservatives may feel rather uncomfortable with being put in the radical, anti-establishment camp today. Yet it's important to recognise that the ruling leftist establishment—"a group in a society exercising power and influence and resisting change," just as the traditional establishment once did—is on the other side of the battlelines in everything from the crucial fight for free speech to the wider culture wars.
Anybody who wants to change the direction in which British and European society is heading, and stand up for free speech and democracy, needs to ignore their 'far-right' name-calling and declare that we are all anti-establishment now."
If opposing mass immigration is racist, then we are all racists now!
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