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Adrian Roberts's avatar

The results of the 2024 British general election are far more demoralising than you seem to realise. It's true that Labour does not enjoy popular support. But the sad fact is that of those who voted, 83% voted for pro-immigration parties. You might not have voted Labour, but you probably voted for an equally bad party (i.e. Conservatives, LibDems, Greens, SNP, Plaid Cymru, Sinn Fein and other Northern Ireland parties). The other 17% voted almost entirely for Reform UK, a fact which seemed more encouraging then than it does now, with Reform's leadership having firmly set its face against any serious questioning of the globalist narrative.

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Evan's avatar

Would months long riots against mass migration have been politically conscionable just ten years ago in Britain? The average Reform voter was clearly voting for an end to the migratory regime, not for Farage, and Farage is clearly being vilified for turning on his base. Reform has popularized rhetoric too “radical” for the British Establishment for it to be genuine controlled opposition, beyond select figures (e.g., Farage).

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__browsing's avatar

> America’s soft power will no longer be used to maintain information firewalls and political quarantines

'Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished.

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