Migrant crisis: Pakistani drug dealer avoids deportation because he was 'star pupil' in school and it would 'negatively impact his mental health' - "Muhammad Izhan, 22, was jailed for 30 months for his role in a "sophisticated" drugs ring, which he is said to have joined because of his "inability to properly regulate his ADHD". The drug ring included dealing both Class A and B drugs, but an immigration tribunal ruled that he could stay in the UK because his removal to Pakistan could "have a negative impact on his mental health"... Despite his supposed "star pupil" status, he received cautions at school for shoplifting and bringing a bladed weapon into the classroom. He was suspended in 2015 and later expelled... Izham's role in the school rugby team, along with the fact that he attended both primary and secondary schools in the same city, played a big role in him being viewed as a "star pupil" - despite the fact he was suspended, and then ultimately expelled, from the latter. Pakistan now leads all 175 nations from which migrants seek refugee status in the UK, with more than 11,000 asylum applications recorded, placing it ahead of Afghanistan, Iran and Eritrea. Pakistani nationals also now account for one in ten of all asylum claims."
Migrant staying in asylum hotel 'raped and sexually assaulted crying woman who secretly recorded attack on her phone to snare him' - "Chret Callender, who was staying at the Britannia Hotel in Bournemouth, drunkenly forced himself onto the young woman after turning up at her home following a night out, a jury was told at Bournemouth Crown Court. The 28-year-old asked the woman for some 'loving', which she rejected, before he allegedly overpowered her and 'carried on regardless'. The victim, who had offered him a lift home, recorded the incident on her phone to snare him and could be heard crying and becoming increasingly upset in audio clips, prosecutor Russel Pyne said... 'At the end of the evening she went home in a taxi. 'She had offered [Callender] a lift to the hotel where he was staying because she was concerned about him being drunk and he had said no. 'He turned up at her front door, she didn't want him at her address but allowed him to come in and eventually agreed to let him stay overnight. 'He was talkative, argumentative and increasingly it became apparent he wanted to have sexual relations with her. 'He said to her "Are you going to give me some loving?" She understood that meant sexual contact, she said no, she did not want any sexual contact between them at all. 'She pushed his hands away but he persisted against her wishes. 'She describes the measures she took to try to stop him - most obviously, the word no said repeatedly, "I don't want to", "don't touch me", she says she attempted to push him off. 'She became audibly upset and had cried, none of this put him off. He carried on regardless.' Mr Pyne said the woman had the presence of mind to record what was going on in the bedroom."
Luckily she had "empathy" and "kindness"
David Atherton on X - "In the wake of Saturday's Muslim protests in Tower Hamlets a man is interviewed. "The message I want to give to the far-right people is we're here to take over your country, you can't stop us, you can try but we're here to uphold Sharia Law ." I'm glad we cleared that up."
If you oppose Sharia Law, you're "far right"
Islam Invasion 🚨 on X - "In the meantime, the UK already has a Sharia patrol!! “Ultimately I want to see every woman covered from head to toe!” If the USA does not set up a combat strategy, this is what’s coming!"
Emily Wilding Davison🏴 on X - "⚠️ NORTHERN IRELAND: Two men who filmed themselves attacking an almost unconscious woman in a Dungannon car park are now delaying their own sentencing - claiming they suddenly "can’t understand English." Alcino Soares, 20, and Luis Dos Martins Mariano, 19, pleaded guilty to r-ping the woman, laughing as they took turns and filmed it. They were due to be sentenced last week - but the hearing collapsed and was pushed back 3 months after Soares insisted he needed a rare Tetum interpreter.
This, despite Soares:
• having several Facebook profiles in English
• reading his police interview transcript in English
• attending school in English
• friends confirming he spoke fluent English
• telling police: "She wanted it" and "I didn’t r-pe anyone. No way, man"
• previously appearing in court with no interpreter
Even Judge Richard Green called it out: "He appears to have communicated very well without an interpreter." Meanwhile, their victim - subjected to a horrific attack, described limp and "ragdoll-like" in the footage - must wait even longer for justice. ⁉️ Why are courts allowing dangerous offenders to stall justice with blatant interpreter games?"
Basil the Great on X - "The Mayor of Rotherham. Speaking in a foreign tongue with foreign flags hanging behind her. How can anyone look at this and not think Britain is being colonized?"
Concerned Citizen on X - "A man who wrote “stop the boats” on his Mother’s cast after she broke her leg is being investigated. The UK is no longer a serious Country."
Splurging benefits on migrants is not Christian - "It may frustrate some, but a country without secure borders is like a house without secure walls. You don’t start deciding what furnishings to place in a room that is open to the elements. You secure the walls first, or everything within goes to ruin. Mass migration is thus an omni-issue affecting nearly all others, including even something like lifting the two-child benefit cap. Indeed, migration was the elephant in the room in an interview Badenoch gave with Nick Robinson on Friday discussing her quoting of St Paul’s Letter to Timothy (“whoever does not provide for relatives, and especially for family members, has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever”). It is unchristian, therefore, said Badenoch, to delegate responsibility for others to the state. This was something Margaret Thatcher was getting at when she famously pointed out, “no one would remember the Good Samaritan if he’d only had good intentions. He had money as well”. Perhaps unbeknown to herself, Badenoch was touching on one of the liveliest discussions in Christianity and politics of recent decades. It arose after JD Vance quoted a teaching of St Augustine and St Thomas Aquinas in connection with migration last year; the doctrine of ordo amoris (“the order of love”), which commends prioritising those closest to oneself in practising love of neighbour. There was of course much pearl clutching at Vance’s words. But, as Vance pointed out, we nearly all tend to order our sharing of resources in this fashion: ensuring personal income first, then willingly sharing with immediate family before friends, friends before the local community and so on. Badenoch’s landing on a Biblical passage reminiscent of Vance’s position could have strengthened her rebuke of Reeve’s welfare spending. The old Left-Right divide between “welfare good” and “welfare bad” simply doesn’t map comfortably onto a country like modern Britain, where the recipients of a welfare measure like the two child cap will vary according to the Balkanised demography created by mass migration. As GB News presenter Martin Daubney has pointed out, among Pakistanis in Britain, 41 per cent have three or more children, among Bangladeshis the figure is 38 per cent, but for white British families it is only 14 per cent. Given migration figures of recent years, significant numbers of those communities more likely to have large families will be recent arrivals. Lifting the two child cap thus rewards migrant communities disproportionately, reversing the ordo amoris. Given the struggles over tax hikes, cost-of-living and housing facing many today, lifting the cap threatens to reverse St Paul’s Letter to Timothy as well; as in failing to provide for those for whom any government would ordinarily focus their policies, particularly the younger members of the workforce. For much of the post-Thatcher years, a knee-jerk Leftism has dominated discussions of Christianity and politics. People assume the Sermon on the Mount was of one mind with Jeremy Corbyn, that St Paul was a prototype of Owen Jones. “That’s not very Christian, is it?” became a common rebuke to anyone suggesting things are more complex... Some might applaud Reeve’s heartfelt concern for the vulnerable. But, as Martin Daubney also pointed out, the demographic groups most likely to benefit from lifting the cap are those which overwhelmingly live in Labour seats. Lifting the cap might therefore seem a cynical Labour move to win votes, not something provoked by self-sacrificial virtue at all. If this is the case, now’s the time that those on the Right should start saying “That’s not very Christian, is it?”."
Albanian immigrant living in UK illegally can stay because deportation would be 'unduly harsh' on daughter who he 'spent a lot of time taking to ballet', judge rules - "An immigrant living in the UK illegally has been allowed to stay because deporting him would be 'unduly harsh' on his daughter who he 'spent a lot of time taking to ballet', a judge has ruled. The Albanian national, 40, who was granted anonymity, was previously deported from Britain but re-entered the country and has lived here unlawfully since 2016. He was set to be removed from the UK, but a tribunal judge ruled that doing so would be 'unduly harsh' on his daughter. This was despite the fact that he is not with her mother and does not even appear on his daughter's birth certificate... Arguing against keeping him in the UK, the Home Office said he 'did not have a genuine and subsisting relationship with his daughter' and 'there was no evidence of any relationship between them before 2022' - six years after his unlawful re-entry. "
Jeremy Corbyn on X - "We need solutions, not scapegoats. Stop attacking asylum seekers and tax the rich instead!"
Julius Caesar on X - ""We need solutions, not scapegoats" - proceeds to engage in scapegoating."
Matt Goodwin on X - "When you read about an Afghan migrant raping a 12 year old girl never forget that hundreds of woke women from Paloma Faith to Charlotte Church, Zarah Sultana to Shami Chakrabarti signed an open letter saying that if you talk about such cases it is “far right racist lies”"
The Composite Guy on X - "Disabled White British adults have lower unemployment rates than the following non-disabled ethnic groups in England & Wales:
• Arab
• Black African
• Bangladeshi
• Black Other
• Pakistani
• Irish Traveller
• Black Caribbean
Insane."
Proof that racism and xenophobia are more powerful than ableism!
German drug dealer claims UK must not deport him as his German is bad - "A German drug dealer has avoided being deported to his home nation because he doesn’t speak the language well enough. Saleh Hussein Hamid lawyers argued against deportation based on human rights laws... Hamid is a German citizen who arrived in the UK as a young boy. In an appeal against the Home Office decision, his lawyers reportedly referenced this and how he was unable to speak German. The lawyers also claimed Hamid would be targeted by far-right German groups, saying Germany is less tolerant of his Muslim faith"
Jess Gill on X - "Rachel Reeves is evil. Scrapping the two child benefit cap will just accelerate the demographic replacement of native Brits. Only 14% of white British families have three or more children compared to 40% of Pakistani and Bangladeshi. Plus they’re 2-3 x more likely to be unemployed than the white British population so we’re the ones funding it. With tax rises, this is going to make it impossible for white British to have a children. You’re funding your own replacement."
Peter Kyle has just given Rachel Reeves’s game away - "When the last taxpayers leave Britain, who will be left to keep the lights on? Business Secretary Peter Kyle has finally admitted what everyone else already knew: Keir Starmer is winning his war on private wealth, with Labour’s tax raids driving the wealthy and the high income overseas. Not to worry, however: Kyle assures us that “other people” are coming to Britain “because of the excitement in our economy at the moment”. And this is true, in the sense that great many people are flowing through Calais for an exciting opportunity to work illegally in the delivery sector while staying in a state-funded hotel room. But it still leaves Britain with a headache: the problem of migration isn’t just one of population size, but composition. The discovery that the number of British citizens leaving the country is far higher than previously estimated is a perfect illustration of the point. Last year, for instance, what was originally a small outflow of 17,000 British citizens has become a torrent at 114,000. Overall, somewhere around 342,000 more British people left the country between 2021 and 2024; roughly the population of Blackburn, York and Shrewsbury combined. Ask the Office for Budget Responsibility or the enthusiastic migration advocates on the Labour benches, and they probably don’t think this is a problem: one person leaves, another comes in. What the focus on overall numbers misses, however, is that the problem of migration isn’t just one of population size, but composition. Take, for instance, a British doctor, educated at great expense to the taxpayer and ready to start work. Thanks to the wonders of the British health system, their application for a training place is ranked not by their ability, but by a randomised draw. They end up far away from home, earning about £39,000. And they are understandably unhappy about it. After a while, they head to Australia for better pay, better hours, and better weather. Their contribution to our migration figures is -1. Now take the case of an illiterate animal herder who enters the UK illegally fleeing officials in his home country who want to arrest him for his part in a tribal war. His contribution to the migration figures is +1. Together, the doctor and the asylum seeker net out at 0. So far as net migration goes, nothing has changed. From every other perspective, Britain is considerably worse off. And regrettably, neither of these cases is hypothetical. The animal herder, when last spotted in the immigration tribunal system, was entering year three of a protracted battle to stay in the UK. The doctor, meanwhile, could be one of any number to have packed their bags in the last few years. Because while Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer are certainly doing their bit to drive productive workers overseas, the most worrying thing about the new ONS figures is that the problem seems to be less a sudden exodus than a steady stream. Let’s go back to our doctor. They’re far from alone in heading to Australia: net migration from Britain has more than doubled since 2019, driven mostly by fewer Brits coming back (no more “ping-poms”). Among those going out to Australia on visas with potential for permanent residency were 1,061 GPs and resident medical officers, 710 registered nurses, 239 police officers, and a long list of well-paid jobs: accountants, engineers, teachers and skilled tradesmen. In 2023-24, that is... Australia, in other words, is taking some of the best workers Britain has to offer. And it’s not alone in this. American companies have also noticed that you can get well-educated English-speakers for low wages... The migration coming into Britain, meanwhile, is more varied in quality. In the last year of data, Britain issued 871,000 non-visitor visas. About 183,000 – or 21 per cent – went to work applicants. Another 103,000 or so went to their dependents. The rest were a mishmash of students, family, and so on. On top of these numbers, we can add on 47,000 irregular arrivals. This is a poor starting point: only a small fraction of the flow is people who have been selected on the basis of their ability to contribute to the economy. And to make matters worse, these work visas don’t necessarily go to the sort of worker you’d expect to receive them. In the last year, we’ve given 133 visas to aerospace engineers, 47 to midwives, and 41 to architects: fewer combined than we’ve given to chefs (724) or “packers, bottlers, canners and fillers” (346). And using previously published data, we can see that quite a lot of restaurants and corner stores are sponsoring workers in Britain. One example chosen pretty much at random from the list of companies is a convenience store which was allocated 17 certificates of sponsorship between 2021 and 2023. While its accounts for that year are now 20 months overdue, the information it did provide shows that it had an average of three employees in 2022, and four in 2021. Was business really so roaring that it needed the ability to sponsor 17 staff members? Were there really no workers in a city with a persistent unemployment problem? Or is recruiting from overseas now just a default for bosses keeping costs down? It’s hard not to suspect the latter. Neil O’Brien, the Conservative MP, has obtained data from HMRC which shows wages for non-EU migrants have plummeted relative to those of their British peers: an observation which would fit a pattern where Britain is making use of lower-cost, lower-skilled migration to resist pressure for wage rises. It’s a far cry from the story we were told by pro-migration politicians: that Britain needed migration because it needed entrepreneurs, to win the race for global talent, to pay for pensions, to fuel economic growth. Instead, we are importing people for whom we are likely to find ourselves paying, while the people keeping the public finances afloat give up and head the other way. Fixing this will require fixing the composition of migration, not just the level."
The Falklands should be looked at again as an asylum processing centre - "Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, has had a great ten days. To invert Dora Gaitskell’s acid comment on a crowd-pleasing speech by her husband Hugh, the then Labour leader, all the right people are furious. The Church of England, the Refugee Council, Rachael Maskell MP, the Green Party: as a full bingo-card of the woolly-minded and wrong, who could want more? Alas, not many of Mahmood’s new admirers on the right – or her critics on the left – seem actually to have read the detail of her proposals... Mahmood would be “forcing people arriving illegally to wait 20 years before they can apply for permanent settlement.” Closer examination of the actual government document, when it was published the next day, shows that only those illegals in a status called “core protection” would have to wait 20 years. And long before anyone reached the 20-year mark, there would be virtually nobody in this status. As the document itself says, “the government does not believe that refugees should seek to remain on Core Protection long-term.” Instead, it says, “we will encourage refugees to switch out of the Core Protection route wherever possible,” to a status called “protection work and study,” in which the illegal arrival can take employment, achieve far quicker permanent settlement (on the same timescale as a legal migrant) and bring in family members. As the document puts it, “the same conditions may apply as for other legal migrants and UK citizens.” Mahmood’s much-ballyhooed “temporary” status, with refugees sent back if their countries are now deemed safe, appears to apply only to the small numbers of illegals on “core protection,” not the majority moved on to “protection work and study.” In short, arriving illegally and claiming asylum will still be the easiest way into UK settlement and citizenship for someone who cannot obtain an immigration visa. The ability to work will, if anything, be regularised and formalised. Free board and lodging will still be provided to the vast majority of claimants, and they will still receive free or preferential access to services that UK citizens may have to pay for, or wait for. There are some actual toughenings, or potential toughenings, in Mahmood’s plan, including a proposal to step up removals of those refused asylum, tightening some legal definitions, and asking those with income or assets to contribute to the costs of their stay. But their impact will be marginal. Seeking asylum in Britain will still be an amazingly attractive deal – and Mahmood’s package is unlikely to much reduce the flows of people wanting, quite understandably, to take advantage. The only way to stem the numbers is to make the deal less appealing. To find a place for all the illegal migrants which is safe, which is compliant with UK law, which recognises that some genuinely need protection – but which is also somewhere they really, really won’t want to be. Enter the Falklands. In the middle of East Falkland, thirty miles from the nearest tree, in a bleak moor where the wind never stops blowing, is a big RAF airbase with a runway for large jets, a hospital and a school, surrounded by thousands of acres of empty, undeveloped land. We should build a new Australian-style offshore migrant camp next door, and send every small-boat arrival and other illegal migrant there. The model would be Afghanistan’s Camp Bastion, which was quickly built from nothing on a totally barren site by the Army to reach a capacity of 28,000. The message to the new guests would be simple. We will keep you safe. We will treat you according to British legal standards. We will house you decently, if austerely, in dormitories. We will not keep you prisoner (unless you start smashing the place up, attack the staff or otherwise break the law.) But you won’t be able to work. You will be bored out of your mind. And you will never, ever get to Britain. You will remain in the Falklands until you choose to return (at our expense) to your home country; or to any other country that will take you; or until you die – whichever comes first... if every small boat passenger ended up in the Falklands, the small boats would very soon stop coming."
Mahmood overturns ruling that granted Gazans refuge in UK - "Shabana Mahmood has overturned a human rights ruling that granted Palestinians fleeing Gaza refuge in Britain. In a victory for the Government, Mahmood has been backed by the Court of Appeal in restricting the ability of migrants to use the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to come and live in the UK. The court supported her appeal to reject an immigration tribunal ruling that had allowed a Palestinian family to come to the UK under a scheme meant for Ukrainian refugees... The judgment comes as Ms Mahmood is preparing new laws to limit the way immigration courts use Article 8 in determining whether to block deportations or back asylum appeals. New restrictions on use of Article 8 right to family life will mean only immediate family will count in order to prevent “dubious” connections. Judges will be required to prioritise public safety over individual article eight rights."
Fraudster fights deportation over ‘his human right to NHS therapy’ - "A fraudster who conned elderly people out of their life savings is fighting deportation because he claims he has a human right to NHS “talking therapies” and would suffer PTSD if returned to Pakistan. Omer Iqbal, 41, also insists that a loan contract he obtained from Karachi moneylenders to compensate his victims contains a clause stipulating he must remain in the UK... The latest judgment reveals his entire family claim they have mental health issues and “could not live in Pakistan” because of its “very different culture to the UK”. Iqbal, who also works as a film extra, claims he has post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) owing to childhood trauma and needs cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) as well as other talking therapies. But Judge John Keith described the medical evidence for some of their claims as “scant” or “exaggerated”."
Patriotic 🇬🇧 Nation 🟣 on X - "Green Party leader and tit whisperer, David Paulden, says there is zero evidence of asylum seekers committing sexual assault. What planet are these lefties on?"
Wall Street Apes on X - "Joe Rogan shocked by UK Arab inbreeding statistics, “Strap yourself in for this”
- 70% of all Pakistanis are inbred
- Half of everyone living in the Arab world are inbred
- All inbreds have a 400% increased chance of having an IQ considered mental retardation
- BBC investigation in Britain revealed that at least 55% of the Pakistani community in Britain was married to a first cousin
- Turkey has between 25-30% more stillbirths among immigrants
- BBC's research also discovered that while British Pakistanis account for just 3.4% of all births in Britain, they accounted for 30% of all British children with recessive disorders and a higher rate of infant mortality
- Medical evidence shows that one of the negative consequences of inbreeding is a 100% increase in the risk of stillbirths
- Findings on intelligence research shows that if one parents are cousins — intelligence goes down 10 to 16 IQ points, the risk of having an IQ lower than 70 increases 400% amongst children from first cousin marriages (considered mental retardation)
“We're going to be called Islamophobic for even bringing this up — people don’t like the truth”"
wanye on X - "The challenge for the right in many domains is that if you just say plainly and clearly and dispassionately what’s happening, it sounds like a deranged racist fever dream"

