The Unite the Kingdom rally was an outlier in recent London marches in
having no mass chants calling for death to minority groups, yet
perversely this was the one Sir Keir Starmer chose to condemn, says
Jonathan Sacerdoti in the Spectator. Here’s an excerpt.
Perhaps
the strangest thing about the Unite the Kingdom rally was just how
unremarkable it felt. There were no mass chants calling for the death of
particular groups, no calls for the eradication of foreign countries
and no flags of terrorist groups or tyrannical theocracies waved in the
crowd. Nobody cited scripture to urge the slaughter of another people,
nobody waved terrorist symbols and nobody I saw during the entire day
covered their face.
We live in such peculiar times that this is
what set the march apart from the dozens of others which have descended
on the streets of London over the last couple of years, totally
unchallenged – even protected – by the police and our Government. Yet
this outlier was the first march Keir Starmer decided to speak out
against since taking office as Prime Minister, threatening police action
and the full force of the law against those involved, and pulling out
all the stops to block foreign speakers from entering the country at the
last minute. Of all the political protests we’ve witnessed since Labour
won the General Election – and we’ve witnessed many – this was the one
he chose to obstruct repeatedly. This was the hill he chose to die on.
And
just in case anyone had forgotten what the other type of march looks
like, they handily held one just around the corner so we could compare
and contrast. The far-Left omnicause supporters took to the streets
waving their PLO and Iranian flags – the ones representing the Islamic
Republic regime, not the sun-and-lion version indicating solidarity with
the Iranian people. Some were even sporting Al-Qassam Brigades red
triangles, a symbol made popular by the terrorists when marking out
targets for death in videos.
Unite the Kingdom focused mostly on
domestic issues, British society and Christianity. Mostly the crowd
waved Union flags, St George’s crosses and saltires. The other march
featured few no Union flags, but a sea of red, white, green and black
PLO flags....<<<Read More>>>...
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