In response to protests and riots in the last week in the UK, there has been a general feeling among the British public that the police are engaged in two-tier policing – taking a soft approach to certain sectors of the British public while taking an overly aggressive approach towards others. Sir Keir Starmer’s two-tier response to the same protests and riots has significantly aggravated the situation.
While Starmer and his government are pursuing a socialist agenda, could the police’s two-tier response be the result of years of critical social justice activism and accusations of “systemic” or “institutional” racism by British corporate media? An overreaction which fits comfortably into a “preventative state” agenda.
Last Thursday, reports started emerging that police had orders to randomly arrest people in London so that corporate media could say 100 arrests were made at the “far right” protest held on 1 August.
During the same protest, a video emerged of police handcuffing a 73-year-old woman who has a pacemaker.
Random arrests weren’t only occurring in London. On Tuesday, Leeds resident Nicola Wilcox tearfully recounted on Talk TV how she was a victim of two-tier policing after she was jailed instead of rioters.
“It was the most hideous, alien experience to me. I’ve never been in a police station; I didn’t even know why I was there!”
1 comment:
Fear tactics and intimidation works until it doesn’t and when that happens there is an equal and opposite reaction. How many times does history have to repeat itself before the psychopaths learn.
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