“SHUT UP YOU BITCH, YOU SLUT. GIRLS LIKE YOU. I KNOW HOW TO FIX THEM UP”
So said one of the brothers to his victim in Sydney’s Ashfield Gang Rapes of 2002 as documented in Sydney Morning Herald journalist Paul Sheehan’s meticulously-researched book Girls Like You. The book describes the ordeal where gangs of Pakistani rapists preyed upon naive white Australian girls. Just two years earlier a gang of Muslim Lebanese raped fifty Anglo girls in Sydney.
Three years later, in December 2005, Anglo-Aussies gathered in Cronulla, NSW to protest years of targeted harassment of young Aussie girls at the hands of Lebanese-Muslim gangs in Western Sydney. Most of the media took part in a disgraceful campaign of selectively concentrating on riotous behaviour by a drunken minority of the protesters to shame what they depicted as generally racist, bogan Aussies for sticking up for their community. Talkback radio though told the real story. Many callers expressed frustration that the authorities appeared to be doing very little about the problem.
A similar situation is the subject of a recent video from British thinktank New Culture Forum called The Truth about Pakistani Men and Grooming Gangs. GB News reporter Charlie Peters discusses his hard-hitting documentary on the topic. The video details a disgraceful litany of cover-ups, obfuscations, white-washes, victim-blaming and justice-denying.
If you have a spare half hour in your day, I would strongly recommend that you watch this discussion. Among other things it details how institutional Anglophobia has protected rapists and torturers of Pakistani background, how the diversity industry and ethnic activists have colluded to obstruct all attempts at justice and how English girls have been selectively targeted. Yes it is true that Pakistani rape gangs have also targeted Sikh girls but nowhere near the extent to which they have violated white girls. Why wouldn’t predatory opportunists target white girls knowing that no action will be taken for reasons of political correctness, that their tribe will not defend them?
This video goes a step further than most and talks about the cultural and biological basis for such behaviour. It has been fashionable among the elite to view humans as basically all interchangeable cogs, economic units who might be just at home in Dublin as in Dubai. What decades of multiculturalism has revealed is just how different we are. Whereas Anglos tend to be private, understated, punctual, individualistic and freedom-loving; other groups, in this case, Pakistanis, can hold vastly different cultural values.
The prevalence of cousin marriage is perhaps the most glaring example. Anglos see this practice as ghastly and the subject of cruel jokes but in Pakistan, cousin marriages are in the majority . The fact that Pakistanis in Britain are so closely related creates a clannishness that manifests as extreme “in-group preference and out-group hostility”. This creates a siege mentality akin to the behaviour of criminal gangs in which a code of silence excuses the worst behaviour – in this case rape, torture and sexual predation of minors. This has happened even as Anglo solidarity has declined.
After watching this video, some thoughts come to mind. Firstly, that successive waves of mass migration pushed by elites after WWII are something that has always been imposed upon the Anglo people. They were never asked and most never supported it. The political class, which contemptuously urged tolerance (which means to put up with something imposed without consent), assured us that immigrants would always assimilate and become Westernised cogs. But the Pakistani grooming gangs reveal how dangerously wrong this assumption can be.
Let us be bluntly clear about what is going on – many members of a group of people who have been allowed into someone else’s country, have responded to this magnanimity by violating that nation’s women. In any other time and place this would be seen as an act of war. Yet far from responding to such hostility in kind, cowardly law enforcement agencies and politicians felt stifled by not wanting to appear racist. Whatever this term once meant, it has de facto become a weapon against Anglo communities. We need to change the language away from a defensive and cowering mindset to one of unabashed protection of our most vulnerable people.
Secondly, it is clear that the closely-knit Pakistani community is fed a story about white girls – a story not helped by the proliferation of Western pornography. Left-wing political parties, who once waxed lyrical about the working class, have thrown their underclass on the altar of political correctness. In the UK, we see the obscene disparity between how white and non-white infractions are dealt with. Police knock at citizens’ front doors to caution them about impolitic comments heard at a bus stop while mass rape is met with purposeful silence and inactivity.
The video hopefully points to progress in this area and the shifting of the Overton window of political discourse. The authorities are finally feeling pressure to act on this issue. They have agreed to better record the ethnicity data of criminals and institute a taskforce to address the problem. The guests in this video intend to “restart a national conversation that never happened”. Thankfully we in Australia have the opportunity to learn from the UK and get on the front foot on this issue before it reaches the scale seen in Britain.