In London on Saturday, there were two marches: the Unite the Kingdom rally attended by ordinary Brits and the Nakba Day 2026 protest attended by “pro-Palestinians.”
“[They]
clearly demarcated the two faces of Britain. One is open, loving and
unifying (while honest about the threats we face), the other is masked,
hateful and has murder in its heart. Britain needs to choose the former,
even though our overlords do everything they can to embolden the
latter,” Frank Haviland writes.
“Division” is one of those
overused w*nk-words governments employ to tell you whose side of the
debate you should find yourself on. In Britain, towns increasingly split
along religious fault lines, migrants who refuse either to follow our
laws or integrate and grooming gangs that target white, working-class
girls, calling them “white slags,” are euphemised as “diversity.” The
native British people, meanwhile, who dare to notice them, are
increasingly referred to as “divisive.”
So it played out
predictably on the streets of London this weekend, as our capital hosted
two very different demonstrations. On one side stood the Nakba Day
protest, a commemoration of the 1948 displacement of Palestinians. In
reality, this was little more than the ongoing “pro-Palestine” marches
that have dogged the streets of Britain for the last few years. On the
other side was Tommy Robinson’s latest “Unite the Kingdom” rally,
focusing on cultural cohesion, the dangers of mass immigration and a
stand against the erosion of British identity. The contrast in both
appearance and treatment from the authorities could scarcely have been
more glaring.
In the days leading up to the event, the Home
Office moved aggressively to disrupt the Unite the Kingdom march. Eleven
conservative speakers from overseas were banned from entering Britain
on vague “public order” grounds, with, one has to say, impressive and
uncustomary speed. These included the Dutch commentator, Eva Vlaardingerbroek,
whose crime appears to be her criticism of Keir Starmer, the Polish MEP
and opponent of illegal immigration, Dominik Tarczyński, as well as
Rebel News journalist, Ezra Levant. While said speakers might be
considered “racy” outside of BBC / Guardian dinner-party circles,
they’re hardly in the same league as the former Al Qaeda leaders Starmer is happy to host in Downing Street....<<<Read More>>>...
Welcome to "A Light In The Darkness" - a realm that explores the mysterious and the occult; the paranormal and the supernatural; the unexplained and the controversial; and, not forgetting, of course, the conspiracy theories; including Artificial Intelligence; Chemtrails and Geo-engineering; 5G and EMR Hazards; The Net Zero lie ; Trans-Humanism and Trans-Genderism; The Covid-19 and mRNA vaccine issues; The Ukraine Deception, Flat Earth, Tartaria ... and a whole lot more.
