Brian Ross wrote on Jan 24
th, 2025 at 11:33am:
Frank wrote on Jan 24
th, 2025 at 11:26am:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 21
st, 2025 at 9:25pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 21
st, 2025 at 7:59pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 21
st, 2025 at 6:33pm:
The family members are not guilty of any crime. What a Nazi response. Tsk, tsk, tsk...
They are hatching and then harbouring enemies. They are generating them.
Crime.
Be careful, Soren otherwise you'll be found of a Racist offense. Tsk, tsk, tsk...
How many little children are you prepared to sacrifice to knife wielding tinted third worlders in the name of your po-faced, woke diversity fetish?
So much for Human Rights, hey, Soren? So much for Legal Rights, hey, Soren? Lets just deport them all, afterall they're
Muslims/Darkies/Gays now aren't they, Soren? And you claim not to be an Islamophobe/Racist/Homophobic? Yeah, sure. Tsk, tsk, tsk...
Keir Starmer knew, long before the rest of us, the full horror of the Southport mass-murder of little girls. His considered response? To call for double verification for the online sale of knives.
Hannah Arendt wrote about the “Banality of Evil”. But what explains the fathomless banality of Keir Starmer in the face of such evil?
In this extract from my conversation with Laurie Wastell of the Daily Sceptic below, I say it’s because Starmer’s read nothing apart from legal textbooks and Arsenal programmes.
But if he’d read Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The Demons, he’d have some inkling. The first great novel about terrorism, it sees the clash of cultures and “isms” as being important.
However, they are secondary to the brute fact of blood lust and delight in slaughter: “I am so glad the children are dead, so glad … Six years old, so happy”, Axel Rudakubana gloated.
Starmer should be asking why some groups seem to be more prone to these terrible demons than others.
And if he doesn’t, the rest of us will.
https://x.com/DrDStarkeyCBE/status/1882525577875276247