Quote of the Day 8th August 2024 – From the Telegraph. Britain’s obvious two tier policing system.

 

There’s a comment piece by Michael Deacon a columnist and Assistant Editor at the Daily Telegraph that is worth a read. In it Mr Deacon outlines many of the obvious examples of two tier policing that a great number of Britons have seen not just over the last few weeks but over years. He also comments on the Prime Minister’s current denunciations of violence and disorder and puts it beside Sir Keir Starmer’s decision to kneel for BLM following the death of the criminal George Floyd. Mr Deacon pointed out that this was extremely poor judgement on the part of Starmer especially as Starmer knelt for the BLM cause shortly after over a dozen Metropolitan Police officers had been injured after dealing with violence from BLM demonstrators.

Mr Deacon is correct in what he says in his article, we should have realised ages ago that Starmer was two tier Keir, in part from his decision to show fealty to the violent Marxist cult that was BLM. What caught my eye and the eyes of others is this section. The kneeling Starmer picture really shows Starmer as a hypocrite as he now has little moral credibility to call violence wrong when he’s clearly supported violent protests in the past by his decision to kneel for BLM. Mr Deacon closed with a warning that we would be in ‘worse trouble’ should two tier Keir not recognise and do something about the two tier policing which we all now suffer from.

Here’s the kicker part of this piece on Two Tier Keir:

 

3 Comments on "Quote of the Day 8th August 2024 – From the Telegraph. Britain’s obvious two tier policing system."

  1. Philip Copson | August 8, 2024 at 3:10 pm |

    “…are violent protests after the killing of a man in the US somehow more excusable than after the killing of three girls in Britain?” – asks Michael Deacon rhetorically: The death of career criminal George Floyd when arrested during a violent incident which he instigated, was quite obviously manslaughter rather than “a killing” – and for any politician to have jumped onto the BLM band-wagon was cynical and shameful: The deaths of the poor little girls in Southport was premeditated murder, and if the violent protests lead to a reconsideration of Britain’s suicidal immigration policies, then – to my own surprise – I find that I am not that bothered about them.

  2. 👍

  3. Stonyground | August 9, 2024 at 11:51 am |

    The BLM narrative seemed to be that innocent black people were routinely being shot by the US police and that the guilty officers were getting off Scott free. If this were the case, how strange that the poster boy for all this was George Floyd, a vile thug who by all accounts died of a drug overdose while violently resisting arrest. It displays a total lack of critical thinking not to ask why Floyd?

Comments are closed.