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To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
The National Review operates on Political Correctness?
To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
This article gives a very biased view and anti-white view (gee), but no American MSM has picked up on it that I see...
To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
Yes, in his native England, he could go to jail for his boldness.
Didn't know he had undergone chemo.
To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
Yes, in his native England, he could go to jail for his boldness.
Didn't know he had undergone chemo.
By that I'm assuming you're familiar with Nick Griffin and his "hate speech" trial, in which he was cleared.
But it's funny you should mention this, William. Over the last few weeks there's been a bit of controversy in the UK over an article written in the Evening Standard by an Indian journalist who penned an open letter to Britain's black community. In the letter he bluntly asked them where their collective outrage was for a young Indian girl who's been confined to a wheelchair after three black robbers opened fire during a botched robery at her family's mini-market in South London, and why they weren't marching in her honour. It was essentially an attack stemming from one race to another: Indians on blacks. He was basically calling for them to get their house in order, but they won't because they capitalise on the leverage the imposition of "white guilt" has given them. The journalist hasn't been charged with anything and hasn't been shunned by the media, either. One could be forgiven for assuming that there's one rule for minorities, and a less favourable rule for the indigenous whites.
Where is the Black Outrage Over Thusha's Shooting - Evening Standard
Yes, in his native England, he could go to jail for his boldness.
Didn't know he had undergone chemo.
By that I'm assuming you're familiar with Nick Griffin and his "hate speech" trial, in which he was cleared.
But it's funny you should mention this, William. Over the last few weeks there's been a bit of controversy in the UK over an article written in the Evening Standard by an Indian journalist who penned an open letter to Britain's black community. In the letter he bluntly asked them where their collective outrage was for a young Indian girl who's been confined to a wheelchair after three black robbers opened fire during a botched robery at her family's mini-market in South London, and why they weren't marching in her honour. It was essentially an attack stemming from one race to another: Indians on blacks. He was basically calling for them to get their house in order, but they won't because they capitalise on the leverage the imposition of "white guilt" has given them. The journalist hasn't been charged with anything and hasn't been shunned by the media, either. One could be forgiven for assuming that there's one rule for minorities, and a less favourable rule for the indigenous whites.
Where is the Black Outrage Over Thusha's Shooting - Evening Standard
P.S. This is America..
To speak out against the 'Establishment' and the modern day inquisition of Political Correctness is an instant career killer or even an imprisonable offence. I commend this man for his honesty. Having been recently diagnosed with cancer and in chemo, maybe he doesn't see the point in being as reserved as he was prior to being diagnosed.
Yes, in his native England, he could go to jail for his boldness.
Didn't know he had undergone chemo.
By that I'm assuming you're familiar with Nick Griffin and his "hate speech" trial, in which he was cleared.
But it's funny you should mention this, William. Over the last few weeks there's been a bit of controversy in the UK over an article written in the Evening Standard by an Indian journalist who penned an open letter to Britain's black community. In the letter he bluntly asked them where their collective outrage was for a young Indian girl who's been confined to a wheelchair after three black robbers opened fire during a botched robery at her family's mini-market in South London, and why they weren't marching in her honour. It was essentially an attack stemming from one race to another: Indians on blacks. He was basically calling for them to get their house in order, but they won't because they capitalise on the leverage the imposition of "white guilt" has given them. The journalist hasn't been charged with anything and hasn't been shunned by the media, either. One could be forgiven for assuming that there's one rule for minorities, and a less favourable rule for the indigenous whites.
Where is the Black Outrage Over Thusha's Shooting - Evening Standard