They turned up waving flags, howling about protecting “our women” from some imagined horde – and two in five of those later dragged before the courts for their part in the so‑called “refugee riots” had themselves been reported for domestic abuse. Not whispered rumours, but police reports: assaults, stalking, coercive control, even grievous bodily harm.
In some towns the proportion was closer to seven in ten. And here’s the rub – many of those shouting loudest about keeping Britain “safe” for women couldn’t keep their own hands off them.
It would almost be funny if it weren’t so bleak. The same men who spray‑painted slogans about “protecting our daughters” are the ones who sent their partners to A&E, who ignored restraining orders, who made homes into war zones.
Yet they drape themselves in the Union Flag, claiming to be guardians of some mythic national virtue. When the smoke clears, it turns out the danger to women wasn’t coming from a dinghy in the Channel – it was already in the house, sitting on the sofa, scrolling through Facebook rants about “illegals.”
There’s an irony so heavy it could crack the pavement. Politicians who pander to these mobs won’t say it, but the numbers don’t lie. The violence these men feared was the violence they brought with them.


2 comments:
This doesn't surprise me at all. We had appalling scenes of violence and mayhem following Southport where I live, altho it took the mainstream media a couple of days to remember we actually existed. As the cases came up in court it became obvious how many had previous convictions for violent crime and disorder, how many ne'er-do-wells were just awaiting an opportunity to lob a brick at the police or clear the shelves at Lush.
Didn't know you lived in Southport.
I was raised there - Scarisbrick New Road (opposite KGV) as a kid, before we moved to Shirdley Hill. Then I returned as an adult, having houses in Leyland Rd and Cumberland Rd, before decamping south.
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