HebrideanUltraTerfHecate on Nostr: ...
https://www.thetimes.com/comment/columnists/article/the-police-hate-disorder-more-than-grooming-7zhjn557l
A West Midlands police report in 2010 showed they and the local authorities knew well what had been going on, knew that gangs would even approach children at the school gates (a Labour MP, Ann Cryer, had gone public about such activities in her Keighley constituency in 2003, only to be damned for “racism”). But that West Midlands police report, which was blocked from publication for years, warned: “The predominant offender profile of Pakistani Muslim males … combined with the predominant victim profile of white females has the potential to cause significant community tensions.” As a former police officer of 25 years, Dominic Adler, observed on the website UnHerd: “Riots, especially those with a racial element, are the ultimate manifestation of police failure … forces like Greater Manchester and South Yorkshire are petrified of seeing a repeat of the 2001 disturbances in Oldham. I suspect, then, that chief constables were inclined to see the rape gang scandal as another intractable problem, confined to a marginalised section of the white working class. To pick at that particular scab might risk public disorder. Better to speak to ‘community leaders’ — to keep the peace, even at the price of allowing organised paedophile networks to operate in plain sight.”
The media, too, have felt the force of the police’s neuralgia over the threat of a resurgence of race riots (or disturbance in “community cohesion”, as they put it more delicately). In 2007, Channel 4 broadcast a documentary, Undercover Mosque, that contained footage of an imam in the West Midlands preaching: “As for the Jews, you kill them physically”, and another telling his British audience: “You cannot accept the rule of the kafir … we have to rule ourselves and we have to rule the others.” The reaction of West Midlands police to this was to go after … Channel 4, declaring that the programme was “sufficient to undermine community cohesion [and] likely to undermine feelings of public reassurance”. For good measure they reported Channel 4 to the media regulator, Ofcom — which pushed back hard, finding that C4 “had dealt with the subject matter responsibly and in context”.
https://archive.ph/k99pj
A West Midlands police report in 2010 showed they and the local authorities knew well what had been going on, knew that gangs would even approach children at the school gates (a Labour MP, Ann Cryer, had gone public about such activities in her Keighley constituency in 2003, only to be damned for “racism”). But that West Midlands police report, which was blocked from publication for years, warned: “The predominant offender profile of Pakistani Muslim males … combined with the predominant victim profile of white females has the potential to cause significant community tensions.” As a former police officer of 25 years, Dominic Adler, observed on the website UnHerd: “Riots, especially those with a racial element, are the ultimate manifestation of police failure … forces like Greater Manchester and South Yorkshire are petrified of seeing a repeat of the 2001 disturbances in Oldham. I suspect, then, that chief constables were inclined to see the rape gang scandal as another intractable problem, confined to a marginalised section of the white working class. To pick at that particular scab might risk public disorder. Better to speak to ‘community leaders’ — to keep the peace, even at the price of allowing organised paedophile networks to operate in plain sight.”
The media, too, have felt the force of the police’s neuralgia over the threat of a resurgence of race riots (or disturbance in “community cohesion”, as they put it more delicately). In 2007, Channel 4 broadcast a documentary, Undercover Mosque, that contained footage of an imam in the West Midlands preaching: “As for the Jews, you kill them physically”, and another telling his British audience: “You cannot accept the rule of the kafir … we have to rule ourselves and we have to rule the others.” The reaction of West Midlands police to this was to go after … Channel 4, declaring that the programme was “sufficient to undermine community cohesion [and] likely to undermine feelings of public reassurance”. For good measure they reported Channel 4 to the media regulator, Ofcom — which pushed back hard, finding that C4 “had dealt with the subject matter responsibly and in context”.
https://archive.ph/k99pj