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| Northern Ireland erupted on Tuesday night |
A fiery night in Belfast and pockets of disorder across Northern Ireland was the most predictable outcome following Monday night's horrific knife attack. Both communities north of the border have fought tooth and nail for centuries to maintain their place in this corner of the United Kingdom - or the island of Ireland, depending on who you ask. However, both communities now face a shared threat to their existence and anyone who thinks they will simply cave in and go meekly to their doom - the way of Cockneys, Brummies and countless others - can think again.
Two years ago, for the first time in history, a protest was held in Belfast that saw Catholics and Protestants flying Irish tricolours and Union flags - not on opposite sides of the peace line, but together as one, side by side. It was unprecedented, but it was necessary. The protesters had simply had enough of mass migration, which has also spread rapidly to the Irish Republic in recent years. On Tuesday evening the two communities came together again, in response to Monday's brutal attempted murder that took place in a Republican community. Loyalists crossed the peace line to offer their support and they were welcomed, not shunned. These acts of unity should send shivers down the spines of the politicians who govern through division, of course that is assuming that they have spines.
Initially, roads were blockaded - not just in Belfast, but across Northern Ireland. Then fires were lit. The condemnation from the politicians was swift, not so much for the barbaric attack on a native, but for the violence that followed. Ministers and assembly members from across the divide were posting vilifying statements as cars and homes were going up in smoke (and yes, there's a huge irony every time someone from Sinn Fein condemns violence). Starmer has issued his usual threat of the 'full force of the law', meaning that anyone arrested and charged will be fast tracked to a lengthy prison sentence. Just as in Southport, some of those involved in the Southampton disorder only last week have already been sentenced to two or three years in the slammer.
But here's the thing. Ultimately it is not so much those burning (or hurling) wheelie bins that are to blame for the violence - it is the politicians who created this multi-cultural tinderbox in the first place. The knife attack in north Belfast by a Sudanese migrant was only a trigger. The Southport massacre was another, as was the release of the bodycam footage in Henry Nowak's murder. These horrific events, which will sadly continue and only get more frequent, present tipping points that release long pent-up frustrations and seething anger as native Brits watch their towns and cities undergo swift and devastating demographic change. This change is accompanied by rampant criminality that is often overlooked by authorities, while judicial punishment is weak and the culprits are rarely ever deported - thanks to activist lawyers and activist judges working hand in hand. Key members of the Rochdale rape gang faced deportation orders as long ago as 2012 and yet they remain here in the UK today, living in the same communities - alongside the victims of their hideous crimes.
So many disgusting crimes have been perpetrated by migrants (and their descendents) in recent years - too many to list here - but the biggest criminals of all remain the politicians. They forced this multi-cultural mess on our nation without any consultation or consent from the masses, and they continue to exacerbate and speed up the process of our demise. They look on from gated middle class communities as our girls are raped and our people butchered in the street, rubbing our noses in the dirt by declaring that 'diversity is strength'.
No, diversity is national suicide, and more and more Brits are waking up to that fact. The limp-wristed one-sided narrative of politicians who knelt to honour a foreign serial criminal as US cities burned, can no longer have it both ways. The same politicians who cried for 'righteous anger' when Floyd was killed, just three years earlier told the masses to 'not look back in anger' after 22 mostly young people were torn apart in a suicide bombing in Manchester. They told natives not only to quietly submit to the horror, but to celebrate the diversity that created it in the first place. No more. The days of wishy washy candle burning are behind us now. The horrors have become far too frequent and, frankly, too horrific to bear.
Condemn nativist violence if you like, but first and foremost our condemnation must be for the politicians who brought us here. Our nation is dying and our people are being raped, butchered and replaced. Enough is enough.

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