Not exactly. The kid who did the stabbing was born in the uk.
They are rioting because fiat money allows the government to print money to finance unsustainable policies which inevitably leads to inflation and an increase in the cost of living. Most probably donβt understand this cause and effect and see the immigrants as the problem whereas in reality they are a symptom.
I agree that fiat creates the problem, but that can't be used to excuse murder or the culture that caused that guy to commit murder. I have actually read the Quran, and the language used in that book is so violent that it actually makes a strong case for censorship - I'm against censorship, but it clearly has an influence on people's behavior. That guy murdered 3 little girls... One was 7 years old. And you can't tell me that's only because of fiat - Muslim cultures have been mutilating young women for centuries, in their own countries, way longer than fiat money has existed. I didn't know he was born in the UK, but it doesn't matter - Islam promotes violence.
He was muslim. Have you noticed that state run news media never say when the perpetrators are Muslim? And Muslims have been staging counter protests, which are VERY violent, while the state run media calls the native British protestors violent. It doesn't take much digging to find videos, despite the regime arresting people who post real information.
Not fast enough. I know its not directly connected, but a state that imprisons people for speech should fail as fast as possible, by any means possible.
it makes me so sad. I love my country deeply. it's like watching an ex gf descend into drink and drugs and desperation and chaos. it just makes my heart ache.
Ah, it will all end in tears.
David Bowie on the racist riots of August 1958.
βI remember the riots. I remember mainly the prison sentences they handed out afterwards... ten years, incredible sentences, and all of a sudden there werenβt any white thugs wanting to go down to Notting Hill to cause trouble.β
It is a paradox of the highest order that a nation once heralded as the bastion of liberty, the birthplace of George Orwell, has now seemingly forsaken its illustrious past. The country, which once stood as a beacon of freedom and a defender of truth, now appears to have lost its way, descending into depths unworthy of its storied heritage. It is both disheartening and perplexing to witness such a profound lapse in collective memory and values, a descent from the zenith of enlightened leadership to a nadir of forgotten principles.