Eleven train passengers were seriously injured on Saturday night, on a line I use regularly between Doncaster and London (as of publication, five have been discharged and one remains in a life-threatening condition). I must say the fact I use that line and sometimes that very train really brings it home. I hope, whoever those victims are, that they pull through, and I would not wish to make light of the terror inflicted on folk on the train nor of the horrific injuries that many will have suffered.
But what lies at the root of such violence? Cambridgeshire police, in a remarkable break with protocol, have identified the two suspects they have arrested, as being black but British (one of whom has since been released with no further action). Surely some mistake there? When I heard about the stabbings I immediately assumed – probably due to unconscious bias – that the stabbers were representatives of that cancerous religion which it is metastasising across our country, Christianity.
I fully expected that the perpetrators were a pair of white elderly ladies shouting, ‘Jesus loves you’, before going on the rampage armed with knitting needles and brandishing copies of the New Testament. After all, Bible wielding weirdos are running amok on our streets at night, terrorising neighbourhoods, stealing from shops and committing unspeakable acts of sexual depravity upon our young ladies.
It seems that the problems have arisen since we started deporting peace-loving migrants who were making such a valuable contribution to our society. It is clear that such people, now being loaded on planes by the thousand and sent back to whence they came, were a stabilising influence on our society. That exodus must be stopped.
A government spokesperson recently said:
“We are witnessing an increase in violence on our streets perpetrated mainly by Christianist fundamentalists. Their goal seems to be to impose Judaeo-Christian law on the country and replace our current system based on Sharia law which is working so well to promote the rights of women and children, especially young girls.
Literature found at the homes of known Christianists by anti-terrorist police makes their agenda clear. They want an end to both female genital mutilation and forced marriages of underage girls. They want religious education according to Christian principles in schools and an agreed and legally enforceable definition of Christianophobia.
The government is doing everything in its power to stop this and the full force of the law will be applied whenever and wherever Christian extremism is encountered.”
Clearly the government and the police have their work cut out to stop this rising tide of hatred. We may even be facing a civil war on our streets between the forces of good and evil (Christianism). On the streets of my own city the problems are plain to see and hear. It is almost impossible now to hear the Muslim call to prayer of a morning; such is the racket emanating from the growing number of churches, which insist on ringing their bells once a week to summon the faithful.
Then there is the appalling spectacle which will be obvious in the next few weeks, as an increasing number of houses become decorated with Christmas lights. Christmas trees will be in every window and some churches will have cribs outside showing a man and a woman and the prophet Jesus surrounded by animals. Thankfully, some local councils are taking steps to have these offensive symbols removed from outside churches.
There is not much the government can do in England, despite public pressure, to ban Christmas decorations inside houses or to ban Christmas carols which many in our migrant community find intimidating. However, north of the border in the enlightened land of Scotland, they have taken steps to ban prayer in people’s own home, especially if anyone reports feeling offended. Could we not implement that here?
It must pain our sovereign, the Grand Mufti of Highgrove (peace be upon him) to look over his kingdom and see such chaos. He has made clear his regal agenda to stamp out the final vestiges of Christianity in our country and replace it with a syncretistic combination of faiths which, in his royal wisdom, he refers to simply as ‘faith’. Long may he reign.
Roger Watson is a retired academic, editor and writer. He writes regularly for a range of conservative journals including The Salisbury Review and The European Conservative. He has travelled and worked extensively in the Far East and the Middle East. He lives in Kingston upon Hull, UK.
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