Search A Light In The Darkness

Wednesday, 12 March 2025

New sentencing guidelines embed bias against white males in UK’s legal system

 The Sentencing Council for England and Wales has introduced new guidelines that emphasise the use of pre-sentence reports, which will lead to more lenient sentences for non-white, non-Christian groups, effectively creating a two-tier justice system.

The revised guidelines are promoting identity politics and favouring non-white and non-male offenders. It is enshrining racial and sexist bias into the heart of the UK’s legal system. “The anti-white, anti-male takeover of Britain is all but complete,” Frank Haviland writes.

Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has expressed displeasure with the guidelines but her opposition has been met with scepticism given the Labour government’s past support for similar policies, and the fact that the revised guidelines are based on David Lammy’s 2017 review of discrimination in the criminal justice system.

Equality before the law (the only form of equality worth entertaining) has long been a bad joke in Britain. Whether it’s Jews interfering with the latest jihad march by looking “openly Jewish,” fathers arrested for objecting to the multicultural gang rape of their daughters, or the policing disparity between the Black Lives Matter (“BLM”) and Brexit, Covid and Tommy Robinson marches, anyone with a pulse realises that the likelihood of getting your collar felt in 2025 rests largely on your ability to identify as anything other than a white male.

Up till now, the powers that be have at least pretended this is something they do not approve of. Even as he emptied the prisons of rapists and murderers to make room for native Brits who tweeted things he disapproves of, Keir Starmer told us categorically: “There is no two-tier policing. There is policing without fear or favour – exactly as it should be, exactly what I would expect and require.”

We all enjoy a giggle now and then, which is presumably why The Sentencing Council for England and Wales has chosen 1 April to enact its overhaul of the sentencing guidelines – the principles that magistrates and judges must follow when imposing community orders and custodial sentences.

The primary focus of the revision is the additional emphasis it places on pre-sentence reports – those compiled by the Probation Service, to assist the court in fully understanding the background in certain cases. Here is an excerpt from the Council’s statement on pre-sentence reports....<<<Read More>>>...