When Gov Protected 'Children in Need' Turn Out to Be Al-Qaeda, Do 'Racist' Citizens Get Their Lives Back?

Stefan Rousseau/PA via AP

On the 29th of July, a 17-year-old 'boy' armed with a machete slaughtered three young girls who had gathered, with fellow 6-to-11-year-olds, for a girlie afternoon of Taylor Swift-themed yoga, dance, and drawing.

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In the aftermath, the carnage count included, besides their precious little lives, eight other children and two adults who'd been horribly injured during the attack.

Police were tight-lipped on the assailant, citing his age.

But locals had a suspicion and started demanding answers as the shock wore off and outraged horror replaced it.

Starmer immediately made appropriate vanilla 'thoughts and prayers' noises but both the government and Mercyside Police remained mum on the suspect's name and origins.

It didn't take long for that silence to feed the flames of anger and riots - 'disturbances' as they called them - broke out from across the country.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will host senior police leaders at Downing Street later today after protests following the fatal stabbing of three girls at a dance class in Southport spread across the country last night.

More than 100 people were arrested in central London on Wednesday evening as officers clashed with protesters on Whitehall, close to Downing Street, during a demonstration.

There was also unrest in Hartlepool, Manchester and Aldershot. In Hartlepool, eight people were arrested in relation to public order offences after glass bottles and eggs were thrown at police, and a car was set on fire.

Starmer says he will offer senior police leaders his "full backing" in the face of ongoing unrest.

It comes as a 17-year-old charged with the murder of three girls will appear at Liverpool City Magistrates’ Court later today. He has been charged with 10 counts of attempted murder.

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By 1 Aug, the suspect's name, against the wishes of the government, had been released...

As we have previously reported, the suspect, who has now been named as Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, was born in Cardiff in 2006 and moved to the Southport area in 2013.

He has been living in Banks, a village in Lancashire located a few miles north of Southport.

Rudakubana's parents are from Rwanda and he has an older brother who was also born in Cardiff.

...and that made things even worse by confirming suspicions 1) about him and 2) an orchestrated government cover-up to protect the immigrant population rather than be transparent with citizens.

It left a bad taste in British mouths.

As did Starmer's next move, which was, in the face of active protests and online anti-Labour commentaries, to send his stormtroopers out to arrest British citizens protesting his immigration policies, not the 'immigrants' holding entire neighborhoods hostage.

Starmer was also busy introducing draconian law proposals, such as redefining Islamophobia to make it a chargeable offense and codifying "incitement to racial hatred" among the myriad nuances of their dystopian anti-misinformation statutes.

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...You're being arrested. This is in relation to some comments you've made...

You don't understand, British types. The police must be able to "get on with their work" without you nattering, chattering classes talking amongst yourselves on X and Facebook, and being ignorantly critical.

Three little girls dead, British citizens arrested for being angry and protesting about losing their country, no further information was forthcoming on brutal murders, and a new Labour government was determinedly ratcheting up the pressure on "right-wing extremists" to gain control of the streets and interwebs to crush any hope of a nascent native British rebellion.

...Starmer condemned what he called "far-right hatred" and announced a new "national capability" in order to help police forces – more on that here.

To gain control of British citizens' very thoughts.

All this has been simmering under the surface as Starmer's government has lurched from crisis to crisis in the short time he's been at 10 Downing Street.

Funny thing about that murderous 'boy' and what those "far-right" haters wanted answers about back in July and August.

Suddenly, it's all so clear.

"WHAT terrorist?"

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Has turned into "Oh, you meant THAT terrorist."

The 18-year-old accused of murdering three young schoolgirls in Southport, and attempting to murder 10 other people, has now also been charged with attempting to make a biological weapon using the deadly toxin Ricin.

In addition, Axel Rudakubana is also facing a second new charge under the Terrorism Act, of possessing an Al Qaeda terror manual.

The dramatic announcement came from Merseyside police, after three months in which authorities indicated they had found no link to terrorism following the 29 July attack.

Unsurprisingly, besides the murderer himself...

...people want answers about what the government knew, when it knew it and why no one else did..

But it doesn't look as if answers are going to be any easier now than before. Stonewalling doesn't need to be fine art in an authoritarian country.

Authorities so terribly worried about upsetting the immigrant community and prejudicing a trial had to keep evidence secret that had been found "in the aftermath" of the attack. 

And now police are expecting more haters to be upset - particularly as there is no 'terrorism' charge attached to the vicious attack that cost three little girls their lives and irreparably damaged the lives of at least ten other people. 

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...GB News understands that additional police resources are being put on standby following today's announcement of new charges.

The Merseyside Chief Constable said: "I want to reassure the communities of Southport and the communities of Merseyside that we are committed to getting justice for the families of Bebe, Elsie and Alice - the 10 victims who were injured at Heart Street, and the other 16 people who were present on that day.

"We are also committed to being open and transparent with our communities. However, I am sure you will appreciate that we also need to make sure that we do not prejudice this trial."

But not to worry. Everything's completely transparent - they're "committed" to it, authorities pledge, except when they're not.

Sadly, if locals were hoping their MP in Parliament could get an answer out of Starmer about WTF was going on with this bombshell and coverup, well, he's made sure there'll be no awkward questions for him to answer.

In fact, no questions about the case will be allowed at all - for him or his staff. The Prime Minister just made that rule.

NO QUESTIONS FOR ME

Welp. It's good to be the next best thing to king.

Not to forget - Starmer had British citizens arrested for "spreading false rumors the suspect was Muslim." Some are still in jail.

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It's a pretty legitimate question to ask what happens to them next...or it should be in a 'civilized' country. Are their lives and livelihoods restored? Their good names?

And there's even more effluent dripping out that condemns this authoritarian nightmare the Brits have seen fit to foist on themselves. 

Of course, Starmer knew every available detail almost from the second it happened. And he went after the British right-wing boogieman.

There is so much truth in this Xweet.

...He would have known within hours, even if it was only a suspicion at this stage. 

He would have been told the Rudakabana was not a native Welshmen but the child of Rwandan immigrants. 

He would have been told that eyewitnesses reported Rudakabana crying, "I did this for Allah" when arrested. 

Starmer not only told the British public the opposite of this, but threatened the public with "the full force of the law" for even suggesting this was the truth.  

People rioted because they felt that they were being lied to, over and over again, with the any suggestion of a larger problem being denied. 

People were in fear for their children and told it was "racist rhetoric" to notice a pattern to the extreme violence they see on the streets of Britain. 

It is one thing for a prime minister to be constrained into silence by the law and national security.  

It is another to boldly take to a stage and claim the EDL were responsible for the rage; to claim that the "far-right" were the real problem here. 

It is another thing to frighten citizens out of challenging the narrative, to threaten and arrest those who shared eye witness accounts, and to brand those testimonies "Russian disinformation." 

He command the judicial system to terrifying citizens into pleading guilty to crimes they did not commit in order, so that they might to avoid prolonged prison sentences. 

In him we see a level of callousness and deceit unmatched by an enemy of the people.

Do not trust this man.

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Starmer has so much to answer for.

The question is, will the British people rise against the police state to get the answers?

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Ed Morrissey 10:00 PM | November 20, 2024
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