Monday, March 30, 2015

Katie Hopkins and the PC Police

Katie Hopkins, British journalist and TV personality, has once again angered the politically correct prats of the UK establishment by daring to take offense at MP Simon Danczuk's vomit-inducing display in Rochdale the other week on what was apparently "National Pakistan Day". Not content with merely accusing Ms. Hopkins of racism, Mr. Danczuk - in true tattletale fashion - actually went and reported the poor woman to the authorities for possibly inciting racial hatred.

Rochdale is the Manchester suburb made famous for being the center of a horrific paedophile scandal in which it was revealed that a group of Pakistani Mohammadens had, for years, been grooming and exploiting local, native English girls. What's worse, certain authorities in a position to do something to stop this abuse knew about it, but purposely declined to act lest they be seen as "racist" for "targeting" people of Pakistani origin. 

Yes. Please, let that sink in. Such is the state of once-great Britannia - bowed and beaten by cultural Marxism to the point where otherwise law-abiding and mostly-decent human beings would rather turn a blind eye to child-rape than be accused of being racist. 


Given this climate and Rochdale's now notorious reputation, is it any wonder Ms. Hopkins suggested on Twitter - rightly - that, "raising a Pakistani flag in Rochdale is not helping community cohesion. it [sic] is inflammatory." Ignoring the fact that in a truly civilized age the raising of any flag of any foreign nation over a British city would be an act of high treason, raising the flag of the community whence came the Rochdale rapists, one that relishes in its own refusal to integrate at that, was a supremely stupid and insensitive move.

Hopefully Ms. Hopkins will survive whatever inane inquiry to which she is subjected. It is tragic that the country which gave birth to the notion of political liberty now tries to have people prosecuted for speaking freely (well, only when they're speaking freely about certain things and certain people), but such is the modern age.

In the words of Czesław Miłosz, a far more intelligent and far less cowardly Pole than Mr. Danczuk, "in a room where people unanimously maintain a conspiracy of silence, one word of truth sounds like a pistol shot."

 

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