Report finds no evidence of "far right" link to Southport protests...
... so where is Keir Starmer's apology and why aren't those in prison now free?
By Gary Chappell
AFTER countless British citizens were smeared by a UK Prime Minister whose words inflamed the Southport riots, a report has found no links to the “far right” during those protests.
Of course, those of us who are ‘awake’ knew this from the very beginning. But this report is more akin to something tangible that Keir Starmer must surely now answer to?
Three children were slaughtered in a crazed terror attack by 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana last July. But what followed was not just grief. It was a Prime Minister in Westminster, miles from the bloodshed, choosing politics over truth.
Within hours, Starmer was on camera pontificating, not about the terror attack – which at that time was being denied as such. But smearing those who took to the streets in protest at yet more children being killed and abused. “Far-right extremism,” said Starmer, belittling any one with genuine concerns about unfettered immigration.
Rudakubana was the son of parents who had moved to the UK from Rwanda. In the immediate aftermath of the butchery in Southport, some had taken to social media to vent their fury. Some, according to reports, had posted that Rudakubana was a Muslim asylum seeker.
Many of those people are now in prison, smeared by their own Prime Minister of spouting the toxcity of the so-called “far right”. In response to Starmer’s repeated rhetoric, countless others took to the streets, many gathering, waiting, in huge groups and recording themselves on video saying: “The far right doesn’t stand a chance.”
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