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zackrawrr

[DROPS ON] BIG DAY HUGE DRAMA TODAY READING THE ENTIRE REPORT NEW GAMES TODAY BIG NEWS AND GAMES MULTISTREAMING+REACTS #AD | @asmongold247

06-18-2026 · 9h 47m

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[00:00:30] I
[00:01:00] How we doing boys?
[00:01:05] Just woke up a little bit ago and I stayed up way too late as usual, like a fucking idiot.
[00:01:14] But you know we're back at it, it's another fucking day.
[00:01:17] How you guys doing?
[00:01:18] And morning?
[00:01:19] Yeah, good morning everybody.
[00:01:21] You know it's big day, very big day today, you know we are going to read the report,
[00:01:25] I don't know how that's going to go.
[00:01:27] I have no idea. It's extremely long and very involved, but we're gonna go through all of it.
[00:01:32] It's apparently like over 200 pages. So I don't know what to expect. I have no idea, but we're gonna find out.
[00:01:39] So yeah, lots of Twitter praise for the Rupert report. I know I saw that. I saw it. I'm gonna look into all that. Don't worry about it.
[00:01:46] And yeah, anyway, I saw Ukraine bomb Moscow. That's got wow, wow, wow.
[00:01:52] And I've also got a few other little things I'm gonna show you guys today, too.
[00:01:55] But we got a big day today. We do and you know lock the fuck in and
[00:02:01] We got a whole lot to do
[00:02:02] You're staying up late nights going Instagram girls of course of course absolutely and yeah
[00:02:07] We read it with the British accent. I can't actually and I can't really do accents bro
[00:02:12] I'm gonna be honest a lot of people can do accents. I'm not one of them
[00:02:15] I'll tell you that so thanks for reading report. I think it's the right thing to do
[00:02:18] It's the right thing to do like it might not be the most entertaining thing
[00:02:21] But I think that you know, it's like, you know, you got you got you got to do something, right?
[00:02:25] You gotta do something and so that's it. We'll get the view count on the report. Let me see
[00:02:30] We're gonna view count of you got obviously a Rupert. Whoa
[00:02:35] Where's it?
[00:02:37] We pulled up
[00:02:39] 42
[00:02:41] That's a lot. Wow. It's a whole lot. You suck. Oh, that's not bad
[00:02:55] Excuse me. All right. Yeah, last night I was doing some research. You know, in two days
[00:03:03] from now we have World Eagle Day. And I don't know necessarily what, you know, I've got
[00:03:11] all this open up. I've been going through all that. I'm not 100% sure about how we're
[00:03:16] going to line things up, but I am sure that we're going to do something. So that's it.
[00:03:20] I've got, I've got a kind of a tentative plan on what I think we're going to do. But we'll
[00:03:24] We'll see what it's gonna be.
[00:03:26] And you got sniffles?
[00:03:27] No, no, I just have a little bit of allergies
[00:03:29] in the morning.
[00:03:29] That's just the way it is, man.
[00:03:30] I'm not gonna worry about it.
[00:03:31] So we're gonna watch Moscow burn today.
[00:03:33] We are, we are, I'm surprised.
[00:03:35] But yeah, what's this here?
[00:03:37] You went and streamed one from Hangout with the Boys,
[00:03:39] disposing bullshit, advocating for Western civilization's
[00:03:41] best interest, Hangout with the Boys.
[00:03:43] I feel like we still do, like,
[00:03:44] I feel like I usually do my stream.
[00:03:47] Like, to me, I feel like I have it kinda segmented, right?
[00:03:50] Where, like, you have gaming,
[00:03:52] and whenever I'm just playing games,
[00:03:54] I don't really like to I don't know if y'all notice this but like I don't really talk politics or I'm playing games
[00:03:59] I think that people there are people that like watching for like let's say
[00:04:04] You know what's happening with Iran right or like what's happening with you know the UK or something or India or Pakistan
[00:04:11] But you know that's that's a certain group of people right but there's another group people that are just like yo
[00:04:16] So what's up with this new game right so like what is this thing you're playing and so like I know that that's two groups of people now
[00:04:23] Now is there a Venn diagram?
[00:04:24] Yeah, there is, but the thing is that the reason why there's a Venn diagram that they're
[00:04:29] in the circle to begin with is that I respect where they're at.
[00:04:33] And so I'm here for it all.
[00:04:34] Yeah, no, I think that that's true, right?
[00:04:36] And a lot of people like everything, but there's some people that like some things, right?
[00:04:40] And I also don't like the idea like I don't want to push anybody into anything, right?
[00:04:44] If people don't want to watch games, then who gives a fuck?
[00:04:46] If people don't want to watch fucking news, then who gives a fuck?
[00:04:48] So really, I don't try to make anybody like anything.
[00:04:51] I think that, you know, I just make the content,
[00:04:53] it speaks for itself.
[00:04:54] And if people like it, that's great.
[00:04:55] If people hate it, then that's fine.
[00:04:57] You know, like that's it.
[00:04:59] And so I try not to ever think about it
[00:05:00] and get in my feelings about it.
[00:05:02] Cause I think if you do, you just fuck your head up.
[00:05:04] So where'd the pineapple go?
[00:05:06] I, I, I've not buried it.
[00:05:08] I planted it, right?
[00:05:09] In the backyard.
[00:05:10] I actually, I went out, I fed the birds this morning.
[00:05:13] I didn't even check on the pineapple.
[00:05:15] I didn't, you know, I don't know how it's gonna go
[00:05:17] or anything, but yeah, I buried it
[00:05:20] we'll see what happens, right? And after challenging powder yesterday, what is this year?
[00:05:24] Do you have a timer stopping? How long does it take you reading it? Well, I think it'll
[00:05:27] probably take me a long time, I do, because I'm going to have like comments and everything
[00:05:30] about it and all this. And I feel like a lot of people are kind of waiting to see, you know,
[00:05:34] like, I don't even really know what to expect. I've seen, I've seen like five pages worth of this
[00:05:39] thing. But everything beyond that, I don't know anything about it. So, you know, it's really
[00:05:45] going to be very new for me and I don't really know what to expect. So, I mean, I hope that,
[00:05:50] I hope it's not like really bad, but like, I mean, again, I, you know, I'll be honest,
[00:05:55] I don't really have like, I can read really bad things happening to other people, and it doesn't
[00:05:59] really affect me emotionally. It just doesn't, like I just, because it's not happening to me,
[00:06:04] like I can understand that it's bad, but like, I don't like, it doesn't affect me on a personal
[00:06:09] level. It affects me like mentally, it affects me like maybe ethically, right? But like, I don't
[00:06:13] get personally upset about it, right? If that makes sense. And, you know, it's not that I way
[00:06:18] or worse. Yeah, yeah. And that's another thing is like, I've seen tons of bad stuff. I remember
[00:06:22] people were crashing out even over the Epstein files. And I was thinking to myself, I'm like,
[00:06:26] the Epstein files aren't even really like, yeah, it's pretty bad. But like, I mean, Jesus, you
[00:06:30] know, like all the really bad stuff is probably censored out of here, right? And, or it's like
[00:06:35] just random, you know, like tips from anonymous people. So I don't know, the dogs raping girls.
[00:06:40] One is the worst. Yeah, I guess so, but we're going to go through everything, right?
[00:06:44] And, uh, pizza gates far, far, far worse. Maybe if Twitch stops the stream,
[00:06:47] please continue to read it on kick and rumble. I think that the probability of,
[00:06:50] like, Twitch stopping the stream, like, oh my God, shut it down. He can't say this.
[00:06:54] Like, it's a 0%. Like, I don't think Twitch really cares.
[00:06:56] Like, Twitch, I wish Twitch just had the pot. I wish Twitch had the perspective that YouTube did,
[00:07:01] where it was like, yeah, there's going to be people that are assholes on the website,
[00:07:05] and it's a problem. But what really matters is, like, what people want to watch. And,
[00:07:10] you know, if people want to watch something, then it's totally okay. And yeah, someone
[00:07:14] threw a child into a crocodile enclosure. I mean, like, that sounds pretty bad. Is it
[00:07:19] was it their kid or is it somebody else's kid? Yeah, I feel like that's nuts. Yeah, does
[00:07:24] the report about women infiltrating gaming? No, surprisingly not. It's actually about
[00:07:28] men infiltrating women in the worst kind of ways. You know, maybe an inappropriate thing
[00:07:34] to say. But yeah, I mean, it's pretty much what it is. So yeah, and it's trying to track
[00:07:41] while you're reading a report. That's okay. That's fine. And you know, again, like, that's
[00:07:44] just what's going to happen with anything. If they do shut you down, will you get a hair
[00:07:47] transplant? I mean, maybe, right? I mean, I've considered doing something, you know, I've
[00:07:51] just been, honestly, I've been lazy. Like if I had the time, I probably would go and
[00:07:54] do that. I just haven't really done that yet. And what's this here? Can I find the other
[00:07:59] ones? You're going to say a gang report? And Dan, that's a good one. Sure. But anyway,
[00:08:03] Yeah, we're gonna go through that stuff in a little bit and look at some other stuff too and and all that
[00:08:07] What is this here is a four-hour video defending them with zero criticism?
[00:08:11] What is this did he shock the dog?
[00:08:14] Kaya accurate. I mean, I'll care for animal. She goes on multiple walks a day
[00:08:19] She has a break of these is who cares about the dog. Oh my god. Oh my god people are still on about the dog
[00:08:26] I think the terrorism stuff's kind of worse than that like I don't know
[00:08:30] Maybe that's just me, but who knows South Asian dumpling rubbish everywhere. What is this? Who's this guy?
[00:08:38] What
[00:08:51] So we just threw it all on the side of the road
[00:08:56] What
[00:09:00] Who does this? Who does this shit?
[00:09:06] This is super common. Oh my god, that's so annoying. Why would you do this?
[00:09:12] It's fly dumping. I don't even know what fly I mean
[00:09:15] I guess like dumping something all you know out somewhere on the fly right and I think it's like kind of like a pretty simple
[00:09:22] Logic of like what that's supposed to mean
[00:09:24] but like yeah third world behavior it is it is import the third world that
[00:09:29] become the third world right and I feel like there's a lot of examples of this
[00:09:33] and probably too many examples of this and shopping cart tests yeah people do
[00:09:39] this in front of my house every day we put nails down to stop their tires and
[00:09:41] never they drive off oh my god trash dumping trash I guess so I don't know
[00:09:45] why anybody like I mean it's it's so weird to me that like in in Western
[00:09:50] civilization nowadays, you know, like, there's so much of tolerance for this, like, I hate
[00:09:56] tolerance, I do, I hate it. I'm a big fan of, you know, the opposite of that, basically.
[00:10:03] What is this? Oh my God, this is, this is, this is Emma Frost, I can tell you that for
[00:10:07] sure. Wow, what a game. And so anyway, and I can't, yeah, I can't tolerate tolerance,
[00:10:13] okay, guys, like, that's it. And anyway, let me go, I got to find a few more of these other
[00:10:17] posts and everything because there's been a bunch of other shit that's happened.
[00:10:20] I saw that Moscow is getting bombed. I guess, you know what, honestly, like that, I probably
[00:10:24] shouldn't even be trying to delay anything. Let me go ahead because we have so much work to do
[00:10:28] today and things to get into. I don't really have time. So anyway, take a look at this.
[00:10:33] Where is it here? Can I find it? No, no, it's not this. This is in Moscow. Oh my god. Look at, wow.
[00:10:44] Jesus.
[00:10:48] Look at all that. Oh
[00:10:51] My god
[00:10:53] They're just bombing the shit out of them. I
[00:10:57] Mean I this is my this is my opinion
[00:11:00] I think it's really sad that
[00:11:02] Innocent Russians are gonna get killed or have their lives disrupted or ruined by these attacks
[00:11:08] But as I said before I mean Ukraine was attacked by Russia
[00:11:14] Russia. They were invaded by Russia. Russia is the aggressor. If anybody else is the aggressor,
[00:11:22] it is the NATO, you know, collaborative powers and not necessarily Ukraine. So even if you
[00:11:29] want to blame it on like US imperialism, the one thing you really I don't think can blame
[00:11:34] it on is fucking Russia or sorry is Ukraine. So NATO forced Russia, NATO made Russia invade
[00:11:41] Kiev. Uh-huh, right. Yeah, I'm sure that's really what's helping them. So Russia's attacking Kiev
[00:11:47] for four years straight. They are. They've been attacking Kiev for four years. And so really,
[00:11:53] I mean, I think it's sad to see this happen to, you know, a lot of the Russians that are there,
[00:11:57] but that's it. They don't 100% force Russia. No, Russia did not need to invade and bomb and kill
[00:12:04] people in Kiev. I can guarantee you that Russia would probably be in a better spot right now
[00:12:09] if they didn't invade Ukraine. It's not even stopping NATO really. It's just making everything
[00:12:16] worse. It's making Russia look bad. It's killing thousands of their people. It's wasting billions
[00:12:22] of dollars. They've lost on every front. They've lost internationally. They've lost millions,
[00:12:28] I don't know about millions, billions of their own money. They've had multiple sanctions.
[00:12:34] They've lost two massive key allies with Venezuela and Iran.
[00:12:39] On top of that, they're not really even winning in Ukraine.
[00:12:43] I think that Russia, everybody I think expected Russia to just roll Ukraine over.
[00:12:48] Like, it was just going to be nothing.
[00:12:50] And when Russia didn't do that, I feel like there was a...
[00:12:54] Like, people were like, damn, wait, really?
[00:12:56] Like, maybe you guys aren't really what you said you were, right?
[00:12:58] Like, that was it.
[00:12:59] And Syria, oh yeah, I forgot all about Syria.
[00:13:02] Yeah, Assad fell in Syria.
[00:13:03] This was I think a year and a half ago somewhere around there and so yeah, absolutely. I forgot all about that
[00:13:09] So you should more on Ukraine updates once a week. Well, I only have so much time, but I maybe I should I mean like I'm a
[00:13:16] You know, I've said before I'm a very big supporter of Ukraine. I don't hate Russia
[00:13:19] I'm actually I think that Russians, you know, you know, religiously at least, you know, like we have things in common with Russians
[00:13:26] You know, like Russian orthodoxy is close to I think Roman Catholicism
[00:13:30] But like at the same time, they do have some great that like Putin's an asshole Putin's a jackass fucking dickhead and like
[00:13:37] I don't know why he's doing this and I think that the leadership in Russia are assholes
[00:13:41] And I don't know why they're doing this at all. So Russia's GDP is less than Texas
[00:13:46] Well, I don't know Ukraine is in our problem Ukraine isn't our problem Russia is our problem
[00:13:51] And if we can if we can we can Russia enter so like think about it like this, right?
[00:13:55] So, you can't think one-dimensionally. You have to think on multiple different vectors.
[00:14:01] So us helping Ukraine, and not just us, but the EU as well, also helping them, and like
[00:14:06] other countries also, you know, like Israel helping them, for example, this happening
[00:14:11] has made Ukraine more resilient, which has caused Russia to send more resources over
[00:14:17] to Ukraine, which has meant that those resources were not sent to bolster Iran. They were not
[00:14:23] sent to bolster Venezuela, and they're not going to be sent to bolster Cuba. So really,
[00:14:28] I think that you're right, that Ukraine isn't our problem, but Ukraine is our advantage.
[00:14:33] It is our advantage on a multi-step level. Does that make sense to you? That's how I'm looking
[00:14:40] at it, right? No, I'm not saying that there's no other way to look at it. And I see what your
[00:14:45] point of view is, but I think that like in a longer, bigger picture perspective, I'm a big fan
[00:14:50] of that, I do. And so anyway, what is this here? Same as Israel, in some cases, yes.
[00:14:56] Anyway, let's keep watching the video. We're getting distracted. So, Moscow is getting bombed.
[00:15:03] Holy shit, look at this. Oh my god.
[00:15:10] See, Elon's tweet? I did not.
[00:15:14] Goddamn. Nothing administration can think that far ahead. Well, I don't know about
[00:15:19] they can. I'm just telling you, that's what I think. I mean, I don't know what they think.
[00:15:23] So the Ukrainian Kamikaze drone was intercepted by Russian anti-air. I love how Kamikaze has
[00:15:29] just become like Kleenex or Band-Aid. Like Kamikaze, as far as I know, this is like a unique
[00:15:35] specific word to Japanese language, right? And like now everybody just knows it after Pearl Harbor.
[00:15:41] Like it's just like, it's become a, you know, like just a normalized word, right? For people
[00:15:47] People only, yeah, it's very funny for me to see that.
[00:15:53] Damn.
[00:15:54] You see this, is that a sound delay?
[00:15:58] Yeah, I guess it must have been, right?
[00:15:59] Holy shit, man.
[00:16:07] Heading towards the oil refinery is insane.
[00:16:09] Look at that.
[00:16:11] Do you think Russia will bomb the factories
[00:16:12] and NATO countries for creating the drones for Ukraine?
[00:16:14] Will Russia do that?
[00:16:15] No, they won't.
[00:16:16] they already have so little political capital and they also still rely on,
[00:16:22] I don't know where their energy stands right now. Like the last thing, the last time I heard is that
[00:16:27] Russia was still selling energy at a large scale to Europe, but I'm not sure really if that's
[00:16:32] changed. And I'm also not sure if Russia is going to be able to maintain the level of the economy
[00:16:36] they had with Iran either because of the, you know, potential Iran deal. I don't know what that's
[00:16:40] going to be. So I just, I'm not up to date with that. So I can't really tell you whether that's
[00:16:45] probably going to happen. But I find it to be very unlikely that Russia is going to bomb them.
[00:16:48] I think it's not going to happen. Pearl Harbor actually had no intentional
[00:16:52] kamikaze attacks. It was later in the war. They started them. Really, my understanding is,
[00:16:57] you almost got me off topic. You have to understand that I grew up, all of my history
[00:17:03] teachers were football coaches, and all they wanted to do was teach us about how their father
[00:17:08] beat the Nazis. I know a lot about World War II, and also my dad grew up that way. So, yeah.
[00:17:13] Yeah, but let's not let's not get into that. I'm not going to go through and let's not argue too much. Okay, because we have again, we're very, very busy today.
[00:17:22] So let me scroll down and find these other ones. We fucked around and found out, I guess so. So this is Ukraine as well. And I mean, I mean, this looks like an oil refinery, right?
[00:17:32] There it goes. It's burning. Damn it. The whole plant is on fire. The whole fucking thing. Wow. Wow.
[00:17:41] Only the missiles fucking still hitting somewhere on the way in fucking yeah
[00:17:52] We fucked around and no way no way you even a Russian went and said we fucked around and found out oh my god
[00:18:03] Absolute fucking cinema
[00:18:05] Wow
[00:18:07] You did. You did. That's what happened. What a fucking frame. Your oil refinery is up in
[00:18:17] smoke and we fucked around and found out. You did. Yeah, and he's cooked the Putin sees
[00:18:24] this. Maybe, right? I mean, I feel bad for any like I almost felt bad watching Nick Shirley's
[00:18:29] video about Cuba because I didn't want to draw more attention and hopefully, you know,
[00:18:33] unintentionally excuse me you know like get those people the eye of sauron over
[00:18:39] there you know you actually said that yeah I know we got plenty of people that
[00:18:45] are Russian to watch the Honoholes are fucking coming with the fucking support
[00:18:51] Honoholes is this Honoholes I'm assuming is you create that's not like a racial
[00:18:56] is it? Did I just say a racial sore or like a Russian racial sore? Is it slur? Oh, Jesus
[00:19:05] God, I'm so sorry. I didn't know that. It's the first time I've ever heard it. I'm so
[00:19:10] sorry. I didn't mean it, okay? It's like going to be like one of the Japanese girls to read
[00:19:15] the N-word. Like, they didn't know. They didn't know. Okay, I didn't know. And so, all right.
[00:19:20] And then, okay, so the Ukrainians with the help of the Yankees, which, oh, I wonder who
[00:19:24] that is right that's that's gonna be us okay just a complete fucking conflagration
[00:19:35] oh that's a big word can't see it on video there's fire here yeah I can see
[00:19:45] the fire no actually you guys can't let me move this up yeah I see it's right
[00:19:49] there where my webcam was. Here he is, fuck. Yeah. I think the
[00:19:57] Ukrainian is going to force Russia to sign a peace deal with
[00:19:59] these attacks. I think that I really don't know what's going
[00:20:04] to happen because I think that there is, I think that right
[00:20:07] now nobody really knows what's happening with Iran. Nobody
[00:20:11] knows if the Iran deal is going to stand. They don't know if
[00:20:14] Iran's going to become more malleable by the United States.
[00:20:18] if Iran will effectively have the same type of concessions that Venezuela did in order to
[00:20:23] remove these sanctions, like for example, no trading with Russia and China as much.
[00:20:27] And so like we don't really know yet. And no one knows. Yeah, I don't think the peace deal is
[00:20:33] going to hold, but I could be wrong. I don't really know. So my point is that I don't think you
[00:20:38] can really predict the like, I mean, I think everybody's almost everybody's predictions of
[00:20:44] the Ukraine war so far have been wrong. My best guess is that Putin feels like he can't pull out
[00:20:52] because if he pulls out that means that he lost and I think that he effectively runs a dictatorship
[00:20:57] and so I can't see a world where Putin leaves. No, really? Really? I mean, I'm being honest.
[00:21:04] I can't see a world where Putin leaves Ukraine without land concessions.
[00:21:09] I don't see that happening. I think Putin would rather sacrifice millions of his own people
[00:21:15] Then project that Russia lost the conquest of getting greater Russia and like reclaiming USSR lands
[00:21:22] Like that's my best guess, but I'm really not an expert in this. I don't really know what I'm talking about
[00:21:28] I'm just kind of giving you like okay. This is kind of what I'm thinking, right? So that's it. They would kill him
[00:21:33] I think that it's possible. It definitely is because like he's a
[00:21:37] a, like, you know, he's like, Putin is like, he has really great in a way, like he has
[00:21:43] really great PR, especially he used to, right? I mean, this guy, you know, he would go in
[00:21:48] and fucking, and apparently a Russians told me, like I talked to some Russians about this.
[00:21:52] And like they said, like a lot of this is kind of a performance, but like to an international
[00:21:55] audience, they don't really know that, like including myself, I didn't know that. We're
[00:21:59] like Putin goes in and like sets the, you know, the business owners or the factory owners
[00:22:02] straight. Remember, like where he says, like, you know, I didn't see you sign this, you
[00:22:06] you know, here, you know, sign it right now in front of me,
[00:22:09] you know, give me back my pen, you know, that whole clip,
[00:22:11] right? And like this totally farms people internationally.
[00:22:14] And he does look like a fucking boss doing this, right?
[00:22:16] Absolutely does.
[00:22:18] I wish Trump would act that way.
[00:22:19] But anyway, so Soviet style, yes, definitely.
[00:22:22] So like you have that, then there's like all the photos
[00:22:25] of him like riding a horse with a shirt off,
[00:22:27] doing Jiu-Jitsu, you know, he was like a KGB agent,
[00:22:30] et cetera, right?
[00:22:31] So like, I mean, he had a lot of like,
[00:22:32] I mean, he was a cool guy in a way, right?
[00:22:34] kind of was a cool guy. And so, like, I do think that like PR like that matters. And
[00:22:41] the image, because if you look at, for example, linen or Stalin, I feel like linen and Stalin
[00:22:46] are two other great examples of people that had just such a strong image. They were such
[00:22:50] strong personalities, such strong figures that, you know, again, that kind of ties people
[00:22:55] together. And, you know, the moment that you lose your grip on that, and you're no longer
[00:23:00] projecting that power, I think that you know it's like you know people just turn on you really fast.
[00:23:06] So that's what I think. And Lenin was a manlet by the way. Yeah, he's a pretty short guy,
[00:23:11] it's my understanding. I think Stalin was about average, maybe like six foot, something like that,
[00:23:14] yeah. I don't know. But then I probably get a power mongering. Well, yeah, I'm just telling you
[00:23:22] that works though, right? This is fucked, we just fucked up, man, that is not gonna be, but yeah,
[00:23:28] I don't want Putin to see that holy shit look at I didn't know we had this many videos look at some of these
[00:23:36] Wow
[00:23:47] I really like that one go a Jetsu
[00:23:58] I don't know what it means yet, but I'm gonna have to think that one out.
[00:24:06] I am.
[00:24:07] No, it's good.
[00:24:08] Is this a list?
[00:24:09] Yeah.
[00:24:10] Oh my god.
[00:24:11] I mean, for such a targeted attack, I mean, this must have been against a specific person,
[00:24:21] right?
[00:24:22] It's gonna be read in the document today.
[00:24:28] I am, I figured, so I'm gonna read the document.
[00:24:31] I just wanted everybody to know,
[00:24:32] just in case somebody comes in and asks.
[00:24:35] I wanna give people like an hour and a half or so
[00:24:37] to pile in, that way people aren't like,
[00:24:39] oh, I missed it or something like that.
[00:24:41] And then we're gonna start reading it.
[00:24:43] So I'm gonna try to abbreviate a lot of the normal stuff
[00:24:45] that I talk about, and then we're gonna move
[00:24:47] into that topic, right?
[00:24:48] And so that's currently what the idea is.
[00:24:53] So I know obviously you're like, oh, okay, today's the day,
[00:24:55] right?
[00:24:56] And like it's gonna it'll it'll make my stream probably like probably eight hours today, right? But like
[00:25:02] cares
[00:25:04] What the wait what the fuck?
[00:25:07] That's like loony tunes
[00:25:15] The lid yeah, we'll get look at the lid watch what the hell
[00:25:21] Look at that. Did they blow up a UFO? I wonder what that is. Oh, that's so sad. Wow. Holy shit.
[00:25:42] God wait that's oh my god just got here what happened
[00:25:53] Ukraine is is droning and bombing Moscow like not you know some other random
[00:26:03] bumfuck city near the Ukrainian border right next to it I guess Moscow is kind
[00:26:08] of close like I mean not not super close but like yeah that's what's happening
[00:26:12] it's a big deal it's really big deal
[00:26:23] holy shit they're attacking you over find a reason particular well then yeah
[00:26:28] they're trying to disrupt their economy then
[00:26:32] that is fucking crazy the lit dude dude this is some loony toon shit oh my god
[00:26:47] wow you guys see that Russian air defense is a joke I mean they should you
[00:26:57] You know, we've got, I mean, I guess, so they already had the iron curtain, but then now
[00:27:02] Israel has the iron dome, so they kind of stole that from Russia.
[00:27:07] And we're going to have the golden dome.
[00:27:09] What do they, they have like, I mean, the red dome sounds like that's a China, right?
[00:27:13] So they've got to have like a new, like, what's, I don't even know what they can call it.
[00:27:19] Yeah, the wooden dome.
[00:27:25] the plywood dome.
[00:27:29] Oh no.
[00:27:31] Tim Steele Dimmodome?
[00:27:34] Yeah, I guess so.
[00:27:35] Oh my God.
[00:27:38] The baridome, the porous dome.
[00:27:39] Oh man.
[00:27:40] Okay, here's another one right here.
[00:27:42] This is the refinery right here, Moscow,
[00:27:44] the capital of Russia.
[00:27:45] I don't think people understand the stupidity
[00:27:47] of striking deep into Moscow how this is.
[00:27:49] The odds for World War III just raised significantly.
[00:27:51] I think that this doesn't really raise the odds
[00:27:54] as much as this person is indicating.
[00:27:56] I think that Putin is already stretched really thin,
[00:27:59] and I think that a full military commitment
[00:28:01] isn't something that he's willing to do.
[00:28:03] Like I'm, as I've said, I think that really,
[00:28:06] maybe I'm the only one that feels this way,
[00:28:08] but it's really been phenomenal and surprising to me
[00:28:10] to see how resilient the Ukrainian people have been,
[00:28:14] you know?
[00:28:15] It's fucking insane.
[00:28:17] Let me see, I can pull some of these other ones.
[00:28:24] Yeah, Russia has a lot of fucking bombs, bro. They do have a lot of bombs, but you know, Ukraine has a lot of interceptors
[00:28:30] Because they're also being reinforced by the eu and also by america and and israel too israel's helping them as well
[00:28:37] So really you have like ukraine is
[00:28:41] Like they're getting a lot of help from other countries
[00:28:45] They don't i mean, i don't know it seems like they do but again i don't want to argue about it
[00:28:54] All our old stuff. Yeah. Well, I mean, that's their old stuff
[00:28:57] I mean, I'll tell you the point where I thought that things looked really bad for Russia
[00:29:01] so there was a point where Russia had a bunch of their airplanes just sitting out on like an airfield and
[00:29:09] Ukraine sent drones into Russia in like these specials. So basically what they did
[00:29:15] I don't want to get too far off topic
[00:29:17] But like here's pretty much what they did is like here's like the supply box, right?
[00:29:21] And so like this is behind like a truck. It's like a supply thing like this is the you know
[00:29:27] This is the truck right and so what they did is they had
[00:29:31] Like you know inside of this
[00:29:33] this is like a secret compartment and then there were a bunch of drones that flew out of here and then they blew up
[00:29:40] Like all of it like it was like their version of the pagers attack that
[00:29:45] Israel did right and I felt like when that happened operation spiderweb
[00:29:50] Yeah, I think that's what they called it. I could be wrong. But so anyway, they did this the Trojan trucks exactly
[00:29:56] So they did this and they destroyed, you know Russia's multi-million dollar planes
[00:30:03] Just like like nothing, right?
[00:30:05] They I mean, there was no defenses or anything and I remember whenever that happened
[00:30:09] I realized like actually Ukraine could come out ahead of this could come out its head. I
[00:30:13] until until I saw that I was like much more
[00:30:17] like
[00:30:19] Semistic about that happening, but like when that when I saw that I was like what the fuck man. That was crazy
[00:30:24] That'd be interesting. Yeah
[00:30:29] World War 3 is happening Germany's already preparing for 2029 Ukraine's pretty much has nothing to lose at this point
[00:30:34] Germany is I think Germany's World War 3 is gonna happen inside of Germany. I mean they have their own problems
[00:30:40] They have a lot of their own problems
[00:30:42] You can't come ahead, they're only the last half of its population since independence.
[00:30:57] We'll see what happens, right?
[00:30:59] And what is this here?
[00:31:00] Can I find it?
[00:31:01] So, by the way, I'll pull somebody up.
[00:31:08] This is a complainer.
[00:31:09] doesn't know anything about complexure is full of opinions so why would I I don't
[00:31:15] want to respond to somebody who just keeps calling me stupid you could
[00:31:19] present an argument or something like that like you could easily present an
[00:31:24] argument but like instead of this you're just you just keep calling me stupid and
[00:31:27] wrong I'm not interested in hearing somebody calling me stupid and wrong I
[00:31:32] have no problem with you presenting a different perspective but I have I have
[00:31:35] no interest in just being insulted regularly. I don't want to deal with that.
[00:31:45] CrybabyKolinsky. CrybabyKyleKolinsky.
[00:31:49] Is that Crybaby with a K?
[00:31:52] Shares you with a video says you were the wrongest person in history for your 2% tag.
[00:31:56] Yeah, I mean, Kyle's an idiot, it doesn't really matter.
[00:31:59] I mean, it's pretty obvious that like it's not billionaires that are out inside the 7-Eleven robbing you.
[00:32:09] Damn!
[00:32:16] Holy shit!
[00:32:19] They popped him the fuck off!
[00:32:24] God damn!
[00:32:29] when there's a little drone.
[00:32:31] I mean like, here's the problem though.
[00:32:35] I don't see any universe where this interceptor missile
[00:32:39] where this interceptor missile is not 5x or at least a 10x, if not more,
[00:32:45] than uh, the drone.
[00:32:48] Right? I mean like, it's costing them a lot of money to do that.
[00:32:52] That shit was so fast. Yeah, it was pretty fast. I mean, sure.
[00:32:56] But true. Yeah, a hundred X easy exactly right and so you're gonna kind of bleed these people out by making them do that
[00:33:03] I mean this was the concern that you know people had in the Iran war with Israel and that's why they were so aggressive with attacking their
[00:33:11] Missile launchers Moscow burning operator. What's going on? Holy fucking shit, man. This is insane
[00:33:18] So that's the one that we already saw I'm trying to see if there's any new versions of this and then oh
[00:33:23] I guess Zelenskiy made even a post about this explaining it. So what did he say exactly here?
[00:33:33] Let me see can I find what he said about it and
[00:33:44] This is just him talking about like basic just random stuff, it's not super important last night our long-range say long long range excuse me
[00:33:53] Our long-range sanctions once again reached the Moscow region for the second time this week.
[00:33:59] Moscow oil refinery was hit.
[00:34:01] Targets were also struck in the Rostov region and the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine.
[00:34:07] This is a fully justified response to the Russian attacks on our cities and communities,
[00:34:11] and another important result of our warriors' work against facilities that sustain Russia's war machine.
[00:34:19] I thank our Defense and Security Forces of Ukraine for their coordinated efforts
[00:34:22] the security service of Ukraine, the N-Main Systems Forces, the Special Operations Force,
[00:34:27] Defense Intelligence, and Missile Brigade. In the recent days, all of our partners have noted
[00:34:32] that the precision and effectiveness of our mid-range missiles strikes. I don't know why I'm
[00:34:38] not reading correctly. Today, what is this here? I think it's because he doesn't speak English,
[00:34:44] and so it's like it doesn't read well to me. But like, anyway, effectiveness of our mid-range
[00:34:50] strides and long-range sanctions. It's time that we're ended and Russia must take the
[00:34:53] necessary steps in diplomacy. So there it is. This is a new one too. Dyslexia. Well, I
[00:35:01] can usually assume what people are going to say and then like the dyslexia is like not
[00:35:05] really as visible, but reading things that are ESL or reading things that are translated
[00:35:09] really fucks me up because it doesn't read the way that like a you know normal
[00:35:13] English reads
[00:35:23] you put a comment underneath yeah this is some of the other ones the one
[00:35:27] inside does not seek diplomacy let's be real we've had deploy we've had
[00:35:33] diplomatic conclusions to almost every single war even World War one ended
[00:35:37] with diplomacy. World War II ended with some level of diplomacy. How much money did we
[00:35:42] give? Like after we fought Mexico, we gave Mexico money. We gave, yeah, I mean, that's
[00:35:52] not even true, including World War II. Yeah, I saw a post by Palmer Lucky talking about
[00:35:57] that where like, they said, oh, well, we didn't have diplomacy with the Japanese. But it's
[00:36:02] like very clearly there was agreements and, you know, diplomacy that was done. That's
[00:36:06] That's why the emperor wasn't like executed or something like that.
[00:36:09] My understanding is I think he went into exile, right?
[00:36:11] And like this is very clearly to preserve a degree of like, you know, national, um,
[00:36:15] you know, like, uh, I don't know, honor, right?
[00:36:20] That's why the emperor wasn't bombed.
[00:36:22] Yeah, exactly.
[00:36:23] Like we could have just blown up the emperor, right?
[00:36:25] We could have done that.
[00:36:26] We didn't do that.
[00:36:27] So I think that it's just, it's just not true.
[00:36:29] I see what you're saying though.
[00:36:30] I understand what your point is.
[00:36:32] I don't think that's accurate though.
[00:36:34] Anyway, let me see if there's any more of this that's worth looking at somebody said you had a follow-up post about this
[00:36:38] Let me go ahead and double-check and so oh, this is the same. Yeah, this is the same one
[00:36:48] Man
[00:36:54] Man, how about that?
[00:36:56] How about that? That's crazy
[00:36:58] Holding all the cards. The time is kind of interesting with the oil flowing toll-free from the straight Ukraine targets Russian oil, etc
[00:37:06] Well, I don't know exactly. I mean, maybe maybe it's because you know Iran
[00:37:10] I guess I mean you could make a 4d argument, but I don't really I
[00:37:15] Don't know enough about that to like have any sort of like real like yeah, that's what's happening, right?
[00:37:20] I really don't know so we'll see if there's any more of these here if I can find it and
[00:37:24] And so, Asman Gold viewers really are this dumb.
[00:37:27] Like, what is this here?
[00:37:28] I've never had a billionaire steal my bike.
[00:37:29] What is this?
[00:37:31] Oh, people are still there.
[00:37:32] Yeah, they're still mad about what I said about this.
[00:37:35] And the question now is how dumb are Asman Gold viewers?
[00:37:37] I've never had a billionaire steal my bike.
[00:37:39] And so, this is, and then this is the response
[00:37:41] is that they really are this dumb.
[00:37:43] So, what I think is really funny about this is that
[00:37:46] there's never, ever, ever, ever
[00:37:49] any sort of response to this, right?
[00:37:51] There's never like an argument against this.
[00:37:54] it's just simply you're stupid and you're wrong and you're dumb
[00:37:57] the reality is that i'm not stupid i'm not wrong and you're dumb
[00:38:01] so think about this
[00:38:03] what about like you know if you go to a store
[00:38:06] what is the real problem that you're going to have their somebody robs your
[00:38:09] they're gonna be by the two percent of the gonna be top two percent
[00:38:12] it's gonna be the bottom two percent now you can say that the bottom two
[00:38:16] percent are created by the top two percent but i think that's not always
[00:38:19] correct
[00:38:20] i think that there is a subset of the population
[00:38:23] that is so mentally ill, deranged, completely unfit for society, and they're basically subhuman
[00:38:30] animals that if you allow these people out into the public, they will kill everybody
[00:38:35] else. Because these people are psychotic, they're mentally ill, they're psychopaths,
[00:38:41] and the only way that you can deal with these people is by locking them up. That's the only
[00:38:46] thing to do. And it's not socioeconomic conditions that make, for example, kids that kill, you
[00:38:52] know like their pets as kids that grow up and then they kill people like that's not socio-economic
[00:38:58] that's mental and so those are the people they're gonna have the much more immediate and dangerous
[00:39:04] effect on your life because they're the ones they're gonna rob you they're the ones they're
[00:39:08] gonna steal your stuff they're the ones that are going to and then there's also like you have
[00:39:12] the second order effects of allowing these people in society right so like for example whenever you
[00:39:18] have somebody who's been arrested 30 times, you have what the equivalent is of millions
[00:39:23] of dollars of tax money that's being spent to basically micromanage this stupid bad person
[00:39:30] where this person really should have just been sent to a prison and just been left there
[00:39:35] to rot.
[00:39:36] And so the problem is that, you know, you want to talk about taxing billionaires and
[00:39:39] taxing millionaires, well, what happens whenever all that tax money is just being allocated
[00:39:44] to micromanaging retards because you won't put them in jail.
[00:39:47] Well, then the problem doesn't go away,
[00:39:50] it doesn't get solved at all.
[00:39:51] Like we have a criminal justice system
[00:39:54] that you're being reductive though, I'm really not.
[00:39:56] I think that to an extent, both takes are reductive.
[00:39:59] The top 1% and the bottom 1% are not responsible
[00:40:02] for everybody's problems, obviously, right?
[00:40:04] I think the reality is that most people are responsible
[00:40:06] for their own problems and it's multifaceted.
[00:40:09] But I think that if you're going to distill it down,
[00:40:11] your everyday experiences, your everyday,
[00:40:13] like the reason why the toothpaste is locked up in CVS is because bottom two
[00:40:19] percenters come in and they steal makeup and they're not stealing makeup and
[00:40:24] toothpaste to eat it to survive they're stealing it to resell so they can buy
[00:40:28] drugs televisions and you know like fake nails that's way what's happening and
[00:40:33] so like it not wrong no I'm not and so a lot of people are upset about this and I
[00:40:38] think the reason why is that you know people have no problem hating the rich
[00:40:42] but they do have a huge problem hating any of these bad actors that are poor
[00:40:46] because they view it as punching down. But the reality is that a lot of these
[00:40:50] people deserve to be punched down. Like they're awful. They need to be put in
[00:40:53] prisons and in institutions. And I think also another component is that you know
[00:40:58] if these if any of these people that are like criticizing me or they're angry
[00:41:02] about what I'm saying, if any of these people had to live around or deal with
[00:41:06] any of these people, they'd be calling the police and they'd be losing their mind.
[00:41:09] You've never and also Jeff Bezos has created like you probably you're probably getting Amazon delivery regularly
[00:41:15] You're getting Amazon delivery all the time. So like where is the where's the hostility there?
[00:41:21] I mean like you're you're literally gaining this huge advantage and this is this is great
[00:41:25] Like Jeff Bezos has improved my life
[00:41:26] He has because he's created a company that has provided a service to me that I find to be valuable
[00:41:32] That's just really the way it is. And so I see this and I hear it and I just think that it's like very
[00:41:37] It's like just it's you know, you have populism. This is like slopulism, right?
[00:41:42] It's you know, I
[00:41:44] Guess like slopulist slopulism whatever you want to call it. It's thoughtless
[00:41:50] Ideology that just is basically blaming a person because you don't want to actually look at where the problems are coming from
[00:41:56] Right. That's it divide and conquer. Well, I mean, it's not really dividing and conquering
[00:42:00] I mean you just like you should absolutely divide out the people that are violent
[00:42:04] You should absolutely divide out the people that are stealing bikes like of course and so there is there any response to this at all
[00:42:10] They think oppression means being mildly inconvenienced at Walmart while purchasing razors or being asked to change while leaving a gas station
[00:42:18] That's exactly correct. I don't want to deal with this and I want to put the animals that make my society like this
[00:42:24] I want to institutionalize every single one of them and I want to force them into mandatory labor
[00:42:30] So they can pay their fair share to society because of how much money we have to spend and they should be thanking God
[00:42:36] That I'm not executing every single one of them. That's what I think
[00:42:41] Because that's what would have happened in any other point in history
[00:42:44] If you're going around stealing things out of stores your head would be on a fucking platter. You'd be dead
[00:42:50] So that's really that that's I feel like I'm a nice guy. I
[00:42:54] Don't want to put up with these animals
[00:42:57] I'm tired of it
[00:43:00] Fuck this. No
[00:43:03] That's it. Like, yeah, exactly that that's the way I feel
[00:43:06] That's actually the way I feel. Yeah, yeah, 100 you are exactly right in your associate. Yeah, Merce Merceful streamer
[00:43:12] Jesus just fucked that eighth amendment, right? Oh, I don't see how it's unusual punishment. What do you mean?
[00:43:18] We've been doing it for thousands of years. What's unusual about something that's been happening for thousands of years?
[00:43:23] No, it seems totally fine
[00:43:26] Yeah, what do you mean? I
[00:43:28] I don't get it. Yeah, exactly. Roach King. Yeah. I mean, what do you mean? And so anyway, let's read some of the other replies.
[00:43:35] Kyle's always a, you know, he's always got good replies. And so amendments can be amended. Yeah, exactly, right?
[00:43:41] And we're only at time for this field today. I had the first docket for the JD on Israel. Okay.
[00:43:46] My editors are like, bro, please, please, please. You don't have to argue with it. Okay. Kyle's an idiot who cares about Kyle.
[00:43:53] Give us a fuck. And so anyway, let's move on. All right. That's five. Yeah, we've got we've got other stuff to do today
[00:43:59] All right guys
[00:44:01] Let's move on
[00:44:03] Anyway, JD Vance directly calling out the Israeli cabinet members from their personal attacks on Trump. Okay, let's see this
[00:44:09] All right, let's move on
[00:44:11] mm-hmm
[00:44:15] Now I saw the Axios report
[00:44:17] You know that the yahoo is fuming
[00:44:20] that's not reflective of the conversations that I've had with him but
[00:44:23] maybe he's saying something to somebody else that he's not saying to me. What I
[00:44:26] will say, and this does bother me, is that you've seen people within BB's
[00:44:31] cabinet who have come out and attacked the deal and in some ways very
[00:44:35] personally attacked the president of the United States. And I guess my message to
[00:44:39] them would be, we butter your fucking bread. We keep you alive. We give you
[00:44:45] money, we defend you, we share intelligence with you, we bomb the fuck out of Iran for
[00:44:51] you.
[00:44:52] If it wasn't for us, Iran would be bombing you fucking constantly.
[00:44:55] Shut your fucking mouth and whenever we say jump, you say how high.
[00:44:59] That's what I think you should say, JD.
[00:45:02] But let's hear the political version of this.
[00:45:05] Twofold.
[00:45:07] Number one, Donald J. Trump is the only head of state in the entire world who has sympathy
[00:45:14] period
[00:45:19] maybe zeesen ping
[00:45:20] maybe him you know as a too
[00:45:22] like that those are the only two heads of state
[00:45:25] everybody else they have uh...
[00:45:27] there that their their states in their countries exist because we allow them to
[00:45:31] exist
[00:45:33] to the nation of israel at this moment in time
[00:45:37] and he happens to be the head of state
[00:45:38] of the world's superpower uh... if i was in the cabinet of the israeli
[00:45:42] government
[00:45:42] I might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in the entire
[00:45:48] world.
[00:45:49] And the second message I would give to some of those cabinet members-
[00:45:52] That is- I like this.
[00:45:55] Exactly.
[00:45:56] Members, BB, to his credit, has not gone down this path, but to some of these cabinet members
[00:46:01] in Israel who are attacking the President of the United States, the other thing that
[00:46:04] I would say is that over the last three months, two-thirds of the defensive weapons that have
[00:46:10] protected your homeland have been built by American hands and paid for by
[00:46:15] American tax dollars. So he's using he's saying the political way of saying
[00:46:23] exactly what I was saying which means that probably behind closed doors they
[00:46:28] are probably saying the exact things that I'm saying. We own you. In the
[00:46:35] immortal words say thank you you should be saying thank you the problem for
[00:46:43] Israel is not Donald J. Trump and anybody in Israel who thinks their biggest
[00:46:49] problem is the president of the United States needs to wake up and smell the
[00:46:53] reality of the situation that country is in thank you all what a fucking guy
[00:46:59] Bro, like what a guy fucking exactly
[00:47:04] But that's it
[00:47:06] Don't have the cards. I know man and what is this here? I thought you said Israel owns the US because of a pack
[00:47:11] I think Israel exercises power politically in the United States through a pack and I don't like that
[00:47:17] That doesn't mean that I think Israel owns the United States
[00:47:20] I think that other countries try to exercise power places like Qatar or China also try to exercise power
[00:47:26] I think that the problem with Israel is that the way people don't have it like
[00:47:32] Israel is not an enemy, but Israel is also not America
[00:47:36] Israel is an ally, but they are not the same as us and that's I think the difference right nobody likes fans
[00:47:42] I don't know I like I like this. I certainly do
[00:47:46] Let me go ahead and turn this up again. Sorry about the volume guys
[00:47:49] of me personally seeing some progressive criticisms of me personally saying what experience
[00:47:55] and seeing some progressive criticisms of me personally
[00:47:59] saying, what experience does the vice president of the United
[00:48:02] States have with hostile high stakes negotiations?
[00:48:06] And I would point those progressive critics
[00:48:08] to the fact that just two days ago, I
[00:48:09] spent over an hour on the view.
[00:48:11] So.
[00:48:25] I love how like by the way, I don't know if anybody's noticed this but ever since like
[00:48:36] for the last like year or six months, very obviously Rubio and Vance have just started
[00:48:43] randomly telling jokes and saying stupid shit like Trump does.
[00:48:49] Like you know, I you know, how's it a long as it been going on Rubio since before at
[00:48:53] What was it like fucking OJ had icy toners or something like that randomly fucking out of nowhere if you don't know now you know like I mean come on I
[00:49:04] Actually have a great experience in very hostile negotiations and I've used that I mean look Joy
[00:49:10] Behar is way tougher than the Iranians and she you know what's crazy is I'm not sure if he's lying I
[00:49:18] Mean you have on one side a seasoned
[00:49:21] you know, fucking religious extremist cleric psychopath, but on the other hand, you have
[00:49:29] a white liberal woman in America. And I don't know who's going to come out ahead there.
[00:49:34] I really don't. It's a hard one.
[00:49:36] We and I are best friends now, so we're going to get to a good place here. We're going to
[00:49:41] get to a good place. We're already at a good place. It's just a question of some progressive
[00:49:45] criticisms of me personally saying what experience does the vice president of the United States
[00:49:51] have with hostile high stakes negotiations and I would point those progressive critics
[00:49:56] to the fact that just two days ago I spent over an hour on the view.
[00:50:00] So I actually have a great experience in vei-
[00:50:03] Man.
[00:50:04] And uh, post-rattle up the Zeruby box, yeah, uh, oh my god, the view with Les Testosterone,
[00:50:09] that's really funny.
[00:50:10] That's actually, okay, that's even, okay, that's good.
[00:50:13] Alright, let me see, I'll look at this here.
[00:50:15] Give me a minute, we turn it up.
[00:50:18] He said, amazing Prime Minister, we have a little dispute over Lebanon, I say you can
[00:50:25] do a little softer touch, you don't have to knock down a building every time somebody
[00:50:30] walks into it, that's from Hezbollah, but it's been an amazing partnership, but he will
[00:50:35] say we're the big partner, he's the very small partner, and that's true.
[00:50:39] We're the big spoon.
[00:50:43] We are the big spoon.
[00:50:46] they need to remember that remember that so yeah he came to the country and he
[00:50:54] begged Barack Hussein Obama the president not to do the JCPOA hit him with
[00:50:59] the Hussein he said it could be the end of Israel and it would have been if I
[00:51:03] didn't come along and Obama didn't listen to him maybe actually went to
[00:51:08] Congress and pleaded with them and he got nowhere and they had this horrible
[00:51:14] deal. It was horrible for Israel, horrible for Israel. And that's where it stood. And
[00:51:23] then I came along and I terminated that deal. I had very little time left, you know, it
[00:51:27] was a short-term deal. You know, with countries, you need hundreds of years. You don't need
[00:51:32] eight years and nine years. This isn't like you're signing a lease on a candy store in
[00:51:37] corner. You need hundreds of years. This was a short-term lease. It expired long ago. Had I
[00:51:46] let it run, it would have been around. A lot of people wouldn't have been around. Yeah,
[00:51:50] but Israel would have been terminated. Marco knows how wrong he is. Listen, if Marco needs to run in
[00:51:54] 2028 or 2032 and finish the crusade against the barbarians that are occupying Iran, then I think
[00:52:04] that it's time for a new crusade. I think that I think that's absolutely right. But you know,
[00:52:09] at this current point in time, you know, President Trump is in charge. That's the way it is. And
[00:52:14] hopefully they're doing the right thing. I don't know if they are or not. I don't think anybody
[00:52:18] knows. I think people that are reading into his expressions and everything, I think these are the
[00:52:24] same people that think that they're body language experts and they can tell who committed the crime
[00:52:28] and then they're always wrong. I don't think this has anything or doesn't mean anything.
[00:52:33] It's amusing for people that don't like it to talk about, but I don't think it really
[00:52:37] has any actual fucking validity, right?
[00:52:41] Let's be honest, okay guys?
[00:52:43] I think the whole Middle East would have been terminated.
[00:52:45] You saw that when everybody...
[00:52:47] Yep, there it is.
[00:52:49] The same body language expert to ignore Biden.
[00:52:51] Yes, exactly.
[00:52:52] You know, Mark looks like hitmen picking out a target.
[00:52:55] Maybe, I don't know yet.
[00:52:56] Yeah, we're gonna have to find out.
[00:52:57] Okay, let's see here.
[00:52:59] You send the Vice President. If it works out, great, you look like a genius for sending him.
[00:53:08] And if it doesn't work out, it's the Vice President.
[00:53:11] I like that idea, sure. This way if it works out, I'm going to take the credit.
[00:53:15] If it doesn't work out, I'm blaming JD. You better be careful of JD.
[00:53:19] He's going to turn his plane around and get the hell out of here. Yeah, I like that idea.
[00:53:23] I think it's a good idea. Thank you very much, everybody. Thank you.
[00:53:27] Yep.
[00:53:30] Marco looks miserable?
[00:53:31] I don't know.
[00:53:32] Maybe something happened.
[00:53:33] Maybe he's stressed out about something.
[00:53:35] Well, I don't know.
[00:53:36] Where the fuck now?
[00:53:37] Who knows?
[00:53:38] Yeah, Marco's in a giggle.
[00:53:39] Yeah, he's probably stressed.
[00:53:41] And I always think that a high-end official has a headpiece
[00:53:43] telling him about the important info at all times,
[00:53:45] regardless if they're on stage or not.
[00:53:46] Maybe, I don't know.
[00:53:48] And Marco's dealing with Cuba?
[00:53:50] I don't know.
[00:53:51] And so I guess that's what it is.
[00:53:53] So yeah, I'm really not sure where things are going to stand on this.
[00:53:56] I have no idea. I think it's kind of funny to see this happen, warns Israel. Yeah, Israel is your only ally.
[00:54:03] We are the only ones on Israel's side.
[00:54:07] Everybody else hates Israel. Now, why do they hate Israel? I don't know.
[00:54:12] But at the end of the day, I've told you guys this before. Israel is an ally.
[00:54:17] I think Israel, it's great that Israel brills up Teres, and I'm happy they're blowing up Teres.
[00:54:22] But at the end of the day, Israel is on the other side of the world.
[00:54:28] They're over there.
[00:54:29] And also, like, if we're already getting along with Syria, we're already getting along with Saudi Arabia, with Qatar,
[00:54:36] then, I mean, us needing Israel to be like a Western foothold, it's less important, right?
[00:54:43] Like, I think we should decouple from Israel more in general.
[00:54:46] But, like, this is nothing that has to do with Iran.
[00:54:48] It's just a general opinion I have, right?
[00:54:51] and uh... israel's annoying well if they think if if israelis think that
[00:54:56] they're running shit i don't like that
[00:54:59] not like that at all
[00:55:01] i want to hear that shit
[00:55:03] and uh... you want to go up into saudi arabia well i don't know i mean how
[00:55:06] many how many
[00:55:07] uh... conflicts and entanglements are they gonna get us into right i have no
[00:55:11] idea
[00:55:12] and so uh... anyway
[00:55:14] and american israel friends america doesn't necessarily have to join all
[00:55:17] these rules wars i have no idea
[00:55:19] but anyway that's the way i feel about it let's see if there's anything more
[00:55:22] about this at all
[00:55:23] and people in their system but
[00:55:25] yet you see
[00:55:27] people in their system and give your and smoke rich who've attacked the deal
[00:55:30] and i guess my response to them would be
[00:55:33] what is your exact proposal
[00:55:35] and you know your your country of of nine million people
[00:55:39] you can't just kill your way out of solving every single national security
[00:55:44] problem you have
[00:55:45] look at
[00:55:46] that's why you need us
[00:55:48] well but yeah you seem and and the thing is that
[00:55:52] let me see if i get it didn't mark levin come out and talk about nuclear
[00:55:56] bombs
[00:56:02] let me see if i can pull this up
[00:56:06] now where is it
[00:56:09] yeah okay here we go
[00:56:11] this is i it's from russia today so i wouldn't believe this necessarily but
[00:56:15] this is what's being you know spread around
[00:56:19] it is right as some very very powerful weapons
[00:56:23] that is that has not used
[00:56:26] i don't know this first hand is going on a read about it
[00:56:31] it's a secret that's not so secretive
[00:56:34] and they've had him for decades
[00:56:39] israel will survive
[00:56:42] period
[00:56:44] but israel has a that's great yeah uh... yeah if israel nukes tehran
[00:56:49] that would you know what that would really make everything better
[00:56:52] that's gonna make everybody like you
[00:56:55] that's going to get everybody on your side
[00:56:57] absolutely and also by the way it's pretty crazy to hear him
[00:57:02] eluding to yeah very few people know about this the samson option
[00:57:06] this is uh... a unique thing that this is something people might not all pull
[00:57:10] this up. There's a lot of people that don't know about this. There's a lot of people too
[00:57:18] that like think that I may this is why Rubio was so serious. Okay, let me see if I can
[00:57:21] find it. The Samson option is nickel is Israel's unofficial nuclear deterrent strategy of massive
[00:57:31] retaliation as a last resort. It would involve launching nuclear weapons that the country
[00:57:35] faces an existential threat, such as being overrun or facing imminent destruction by
[00:57:40] invading forces. So Biblical references, strategic purposes, this is, I think again, it's kind
[00:57:46] of similar to the Soviet dead hand. This is pretty much the same thing, right?
[00:57:52] Dr. Falling for Fake News, pulling up from your brave. And so, what is this here? Can
[00:57:57] I find it? Probably just ban that guy. Just ban that guy. If you're interested in having
[00:58:04] a conversation, you can just simply present your opinion. You don't need to tell me that
[00:58:08] I'm wrong so I can pull you up so you can give me your special little viewpoint. I have
[00:58:13] no interest in hearing it. I don't want to give you unique special attention. You're
[00:58:17] not special. There's a lot of people that disagree with me in chat. You're going to
[00:58:22] have to deal with it. They'll pull me up. People are fucking annoying. Yeah, you're
[00:58:26] just being fucking annoying. We're too busy today. We don't have time to deal with every
[00:58:29] persons you know like your your little annoyance right and so this is why
[00:58:34] Rubio was upset let me see if I pulled up
[00:58:38] President Trump said we'll finish one talking about Iran and he said then Cuba
[00:58:43] is next. President Trump said we'll finish one talking about Iran and he said
[00:58:47] then Cuba is next. Is Cuba next? I don't know.
[00:58:51] In Colombia he has mentioned Colombia three times this week. Why is it so
[00:58:55] important the election day in Colombia for President Trump. You guys have to ask Mark
[00:59:00] about Cuba. That's not... Look, our view... Go ahead and say it, but let me just actually
[00:59:09] ask this guy's question. Fundamentally in Cuba, it is a system that hasn't worked. They can't
[00:59:15] make any money. What do you mean it hasn't worked? What do you mean the one company that
[00:59:20] runs everything that takes everybody's money and kills them if they complain. Wait, wait,
[00:59:26] that's not working? No way! I thought that was flawless!
[00:59:34] Their economy is frankly probably in the worst shape in the Iranian economy.
[00:59:38] It's nice in worst shape than the Iranian economy and the thing is that he's right by like multitudes.
[00:59:45] the Iranian economy we've had to like we had to do so many sanctions on them and
[00:59:51] everything you've got to remember the Iranians are really smart they are like
[00:59:55] hopefully you know not too smart but like you know they're smart guys emails
[00:59:59] from our source a very edgy there's a crisis you end up having a desperate
[01:00:03] refugees or desperate people are smart people can't feed their families trying
[01:00:07] to flood into our country we want the people of Cuban to be happy and
[01:00:10] successful we're actually talking to the Iranian or excuse me the Cuban
[01:00:14] government right now about how they could change their ways to change that
[01:00:17] we're gonna see what they do and obviously
[01:00:19] if if they do one thing we're gonna do something
[01:00:22] if they make smart explain what's wrong with using the samson option
[01:00:25] because you are uh... that basically killing millions of people that are
[01:00:30] innocent
[01:00:31] for no reason other than spite
[01:00:35] what's wrong with dropping nuclear bombs in the cities in the locations of other
[01:00:39] countries
[01:00:40] just willy nilly
[01:00:42] yeah i wonder what's wrong with that
[01:00:46] it's evil and and again like i'd
[01:00:50] i see why they have it i understand why they have it it's not like it's
[01:00:54] impossible to understand where they're coming from
[01:00:56] but is this something that's good no
[01:01:00] you have to remember this is
[01:01:01] like i'm an american
[01:01:03] i have a very very simple uh... perspective on things
[01:01:07] if america's doing it it's good
[01:01:09] if somebody else is doing it it's bad
[01:01:11] so if we did that it would be good if israel does that it's bad
[01:01:16] and if iran did that it would be even worse than israel doing it because
[01:01:20] we're more against iran
[01:01:22] just that simple
[01:01:24] visions were have a much better relationship with that i don't know
[01:01:26] obviously
[01:01:28] yes terrible logic no it actually uh... you'll find that if you look at history
[01:01:32] it actually tracks really well
[01:01:34] it tracks extremely well
[01:01:38] what do you mean
[01:01:39] and so anyway isn't cuba situation because america though right cuba
[01:01:43] america is the reason why cuba is killing people for disagreeing with
[01:01:46] them politically into now cuba situation is because it's run by communist
[01:01:50] psychopath murderers
[01:01:52] that's the reason why america didn't make it any better exactly but you know
[01:01:56] there's also a reason why the cuban government is preventing america for
[01:02:00] making it better
[01:02:01] uh... from actually improving it
[01:02:03] it's because they don't want to lose their power grip that they've had for
[01:02:06] eighty years
[01:02:07] that's the reason why
[01:02:10] well if you're not just continuous and the ira gc
[01:02:12] and uh... i i have no idea i mean i i i'd be who the fuck knows i have no clue
[01:02:16] at all
[01:02:17] and so anyway uh... yet cuba's cut by no i'm glad to see this and uh...
[01:02:21] hopefully that's what happens
[01:02:23] and uh... anyway it's a nuclear deterrence is most pure form you
[01:02:26] destroy us will destroy the world don't start ship and will be ship
[01:02:30] i don't see here's the thing right is like i don't blame israel for doing that
[01:02:34] but i don't want israel to do that does that make sense
[01:02:37] like you have to understand like i can understand why they do something without
[01:02:41] necessarily agreeing with it
[01:02:43] so yeah uh... the fact that he's going out in mark levin is actually going on
[01:02:47] saying this directly
[01:02:49] and uh... that's fucking insane man it is
[01:02:52] and uh... i i don't really know about this guy i'm not like a really big fan of
[01:02:55] this guy i he seems like kind of an israel first type of guy
[01:02:59] but uh... we'll see what happens
[01:03:02] america should be the only country with nuclear bombs i know that
[01:03:05] Yeah, I think everybody knows that. The only people that don't know that are foreigners.
[01:03:09] And who cares what they think? The girl that Flash Charlie Kirk is going viral again, she got fat.
[01:03:15] She got fat, really? That's what they do, isn't it? That's really what they do. Oh, wow.
[01:03:25] Oh, wow. What a little piggy.
[01:03:29] Oh, no.
[01:03:31] This is apparently the same woman who flashed Charlie Kirk.
[01:03:34] She reappeared in a video by abolition rising
[01:03:38] and said something disgusting about Charlie.
[01:03:40] Abolition rising, yeah, my opinion of abolition
[01:03:44] is rising too, but maybe not the same kind of abolition.
[01:03:48] I won't repeat this, but you can skip the 10-06
[01:03:50] in YouTube video and hear the comments for yourself.
[01:03:53] So this is the girl before, and she obviously is,
[01:03:56] she's pretty cute, she's attractive,
[01:03:58] she's skinny and this is, I mean, she just porked out.
[01:04:03] She blimped out, bro, like she went hog wild.
[01:04:09] God damn, like this is, it's just,
[01:04:13] whenever I see this, like isn't this scary?
[01:04:15] Like as a guy, like don't you get afraid to get married?
[01:04:19] Like what happens if you get married to this girl
[01:04:21] and then this is what happens, right?
[01:04:26] Like, I mean, that's nuts.
[01:04:28] the blimp maxing i know
[01:04:32] by your mom before and after you're born yell i do that's straight you leave
[01:04:35] you have to leave her that's right
[01:04:37] yeah if your wife gains weight you have to leave her
[01:04:40] okay so what's this year
[01:04:42] so this is the original clip
[01:04:45] do you feel
[01:04:46] uh... proud of yourself for debating college kids uh... who are unprepared
[01:04:51] to speak in front of an audience like yourself
[01:04:56] on your thirty years old we we can agree your thirty years old
[01:05:02] do you think that's a little bit silly
[01:05:03] are you a voter
[01:05:05] i am a voter also i vote you vote so i'm talking to voters of this country that
[01:05:09] will determine the future of western civilization
[01:05:11] that's also by the way
[01:05:13] do you really think that all people have it together any better
[01:05:17] like that the thing is like all people are stupid too
[01:05:21] but you've seen these interviews with these of these old people at these
[01:05:23] these protests are like, oh, Donald Trump, he's going to make every, he's putting all
[01:05:28] the brown people in jail and he keeps arresting people that are black and we can't let that,
[01:05:35] it's just dumb as fuck.
[01:05:36] There's just as stupid as everybody else.
[01:05:38] Yeah?
[01:05:39] Wait, hold on, how is it any different than a professor talking to you?
[01:05:44] Than a professor talking to you?
[01:05:47] Who are you?
[01:05:48] Well, I'm not looking at her coffee, it's shaking.
[01:05:52] enough for you to come up to a microphone.
[01:06:07] Oh man, that's bad.
[01:06:10] Actually, when I first saw this ad, I thought it was like an improv comedy thing. It looked
[01:06:15] so ridiculous that I didn't even think it was real.
[01:06:19] well no you can see look how popular trump is on your campus how does that make you feel
[01:06:26] that that's not comedy
[01:06:28] that that is a five alarm fire for kamala harris because she's probably gonna lose
[01:06:31] pennsylvania
[01:06:35] and look who was right
[01:06:37] look who was right
[01:06:44] That's nuts.
[01:06:47] No, I just want to be clear.
[01:06:50] Is there something wrong with talking to voters?
[01:06:54] No, there's nothing wrong with talking to voters.
[01:06:56] Well, that's what we're doing here today.
[01:06:58] It's an open mind.
[01:06:59] I think that you push a dangerous agenda.
[01:07:01] Such as?
[01:07:03] Your stance on abortion rights, for example.
[01:07:07] These hoes really want to kill their kids.
[01:07:11] They really want to like I
[01:07:14] Like the thing is that like I'm pro-abortion
[01:07:16] But like with the amount of foids that can't stop thinking about abortion. I almost want to take it away from them
[01:07:23] Just because it makes me annoyed. I don't want to see them. I don't want to see them happy. I
[01:07:29] Do like it's annoying bro like I but y'all been so annoying recently like the last like probably five or ten years
[01:07:37] I y'all been so annoying, but I don't know if they can have abortions anymore
[01:07:41] Mazzo just turned that shit off.
[01:07:46] And you said, well, I'm worried about some laws Congress should pass.
[01:07:49] I've asked, what laws are you talking about?
[01:07:52] Can you be specific?
[01:07:53] She got a titty, yeah.
[01:07:54] I'm sorry, I'm very nervous.
[01:07:56] But this is what you do.
[01:07:57] This is what you do.
[01:07:58] You take people and you put them under the spotlight and you...
[01:08:01] Well, hold on.
[01:08:02] I didn't ask you to come up here.
[01:08:05] You voluntarily came to the front of the line.
[01:08:07] You didn't have to do that.
[01:08:08] You're purposely antagonizing people on campus, asking people to come up by spreading your
[01:08:13] weird agenda.
[01:08:15] How?
[01:08:17] What agenda is that?
[01:08:18] I'm confused, though.
[01:08:20] I love how the way that she explains herself.
[01:08:22] I just wish that, I wish the chatters would do the same thing to me, right?
[01:08:27] I mean, we never have that happen.
[01:08:29] So define foid.
[01:08:30] So a foid is a female, number one has to be a girl.
[01:08:35] That's the F, right?
[01:08:37] So it is a girl that is, there is like an evil perversion of the feminine, let me think.
[01:08:49] There is a female who is feminine, but at the same time that feminine mindset has been
[01:08:58] poisoned by aggressive masculinity, hostility, resentment, and everything.
[01:09:07] a Karen like so so this is the like and I've shown this before I don't want to go too far
[01:09:13] into this because we've got a lot of things to go through today so there's an evolutionary
[01:09:18] chart so like I'm just gonna go ahead and do this real quick um give me a second
[01:09:29] Charmander
[01:09:48] What is it? Okay, Charmeleon got it. Alright. Charmeleon, okay, and then a Charizard. Okay,
[01:09:59] so Charizard, right? So this is the basic evolution, okay? Now we have Floyd, and you
[01:10:09] have a Karen and that you have swamp hag so this is the evolution right is that
[01:10:20] they go from foids to Karens and they go from Karens to swamp hags and that's
[01:10:26] what happens this is the evolutionary chart of these these people I've asked
[01:10:31] what laws this is what they do void versus fem cell foids basically are
[01:10:37] FEM cells, they're the same. So anyway, so what's she saying now?
[01:10:43] But, you know, I'll give him credit for at least trying to have a productive conversation,
[01:10:48] unlike this next girl.
[01:11:00] Now, real quick, maybe you should do that first time you get some exercise.
[01:11:07] Shut up fatty. Shut up fat. What are you talking about? What are you talking shit for?
[01:11:13] That's a pretty disgusting thing to say in general. Is that it? But what makes it even worse here is that
[01:11:19] this girl sexually assaulted Charlie when he visited the University of Pittsburgh a couple years ago.
[01:11:25] I'm gonna be honest. I don't even think that she did that on purpose. And here she is
[01:11:30] joking about doing it again to his corpse.
[01:11:33] Did you really not think about what would happen if you said yes?
[01:11:57] Did she get all this?
[01:11:58] Oh my god.
[01:11:59] Because you can't really tell.
[01:12:01] Hey, what if you decided that instead of trying to do these got to things, they're not very funny.
[01:12:06] Have you ever been that funny?
[01:12:08] I'm not out here to be funny.
[01:12:10] Right.
[01:12:11] And we were having a conversation and then you came up and started asking me if I've ever made a woman come.
[01:12:18] Oh my God.
[01:12:20] So who's actually being a national, right?
[01:12:23] So what if I just said, listen, abortion is this grave,
[01:12:28] is this grave murderous sin and some people feel guilt and shame and deal with it in different ways.
[01:12:34] The way you're seeming to deal with it is different than others, but we all do it in different ways.
[01:12:40] But say Christ came to forgive sinners, even sinners like you.
[01:12:44] You know, bro, he is rage baiting her so hard with the Bible. Like, this is a classic, right?
[01:12:50] Because you remember exorcisms, this is what they would do, is they would start talking about the
[01:12:55] the Bible and then the demons would start coming out and we'll see if he's doing
[01:12:59] one right here live. Let's find out.
[01:13:02] That's how much he loves.
[01:13:04] I'm so worth saying that. People who don't subscribe can't break the legend. That was a law to say.
[01:13:09] No, I'm saying that the law is against murder.
[01:13:11] That's not what I said. The law is against murder.
[01:13:13] Well actually, yeah, I completely believe that this is a Christian country. It's based off of Christian law.
[01:13:18] Western culture is Roman law through Greek philosophy and Christian morality and all that comes together
[01:13:24] together to make a social system and if you don't want that you can go and live in another
[01:13:29] country that's not a Western country and you're going to get repeatedly treated like a second
[01:13:33] class citizen raped sexually assaulted and basically treated like shit constantly and
[01:13:39] if it was up to me I'd be sending these people over there on first class flights.
[01:13:43] That's just me.
[01:13:44] That's just what I think.
[01:13:48] Like equally if we're going to have a law saying you're not allowed to murder humans
[01:13:51] it should apply to all humans. Simple.
[01:13:55] Well, I don't think, no, no, no, no.
[01:14:00] It's not even like again, the thing is that the big problem.
[01:14:04] So here's the problem is that these people can vote.
[01:14:07] That's the problem is like everybody understands that like very clearly
[01:14:11] like the sperm or an egg is not a viable
[01:14:16] bought like i did like i'm pro of like i'm pro abortion but i understand the
[01:14:21] arguments of being anti abortion
[01:14:24] i mean you have to be like how do these people not even understand the
[01:14:27] arguments so the logic there is that whenever you just have a sperm or you
[01:14:32] just have the egg
[01:14:33] it that if you just let it go through its natural course of the you know
[01:14:37] development that will never result in a baby but if you have a fertilized
[01:14:43] embryo, that will, if you let it go through its natural course, become a baby.
[01:14:48] So it's very different, and it's obviously different.
[01:14:51] These people know that if you can't understand that, then I feel like you shouldn't be allowed
[01:14:58] to vote.
[01:14:59] So that's dumb, so that's dumb, because sperm, you think a sperm without an egg can make
[01:15:09] a human?
[01:15:10] Then you just answered yourself.
[01:15:13] So all these...
[01:15:15] Exactly.
[01:15:16] Yeah, I mean, that's clearly it, dawg.
[01:15:20] Of course.
[01:15:21] Sperm are not humans.
[01:15:22] Human beings, I hate to have to be the one to do this.
[01:15:24] Human beings are created via sexual reproduction, but sperm has to meat the egg to produce a
[01:15:29] new human being.
[01:15:30] You know what's, this is such bad PR for these people.
[01:15:40] Because they just act like a like this is it I as I said guys
[01:15:44] I understand the Salem which trials more and more every single day and I start to think about you know what?
[01:15:53] Yeah
[01:15:56] Yep, I
[01:15:59] See
[01:16:03] You're the one that was suggesting it's millennial these are Gen Z off was murdered so that's
[01:16:10] Because it's a human being that's being terminated.
[01:16:15] So it's very clear.
[01:16:19] If there's a human being, that human being should be treated equally.
[01:16:23] What's your prerogative? It's obvious what his prerogative is.
[01:16:26] He doesn't want to have kids get killed that are unborn.
[01:16:30] Like, what do you mean, what's your prerogative?
[01:16:32] Like, how are they so stupid?
[01:16:35] Who are you, Katie?
[01:16:39] That's your ditty?
[01:16:41] Who are you ditty?
[01:16:44] No, no, no.
[01:16:46] No, not that kind of love.
[01:16:47] Loving your neighbor as yourself.
[01:16:49] Like loving my neighbor as herself.
[01:16:51] Like if it was right, if it was okay to murder people who died their hair,
[01:16:54] I would be against that law to protect you.
[01:16:57] To add a love.
[01:16:59] Because I want justice and I want equality.
[01:17:02] Yes.
[01:17:04] While choosing to act really cringy and weird is certainly a-tactic, this was the end.
[01:17:10] It is in affront to my freedoms that these people have any.
[01:17:17] It's crazy that I have to tolerate these types of people in my society and my culture.
[01:17:24] It is like, it is a disgrace. I am being, I am personally offended by this.
[01:17:29] I am. It's outrageous. It's a muzzlelet. I know. And Daddy never loved her. I wish, right? My
[01:17:37] boy Charlie Kerster and turned her into a landlale from beyond the grave. Oh my god, dude, that's
[01:17:44] so sad to see that happen to that girl, man. It really is. And then here's another one, too. I did
[01:17:49] see this one. I did. So Amanda Safried had to use a bodyguard amid MAGA outrage over calling
[01:17:56] Charlie Kirk hateful after his death. I'm allowed to voice my fucking feelings and be
[01:18:02] do it in a way not unkind necessary, but there's just an outsized fear and hatred and impulse
[01:18:09] to bash and tear down. I experienced a very small smaction of that. I want my kids to
[01:18:13] be able to feel safe and voice their opinions so long as they're not harmful. Well, I think
[01:18:18] that your opinions are harmful, so I don't think that your kids should be able to do
[01:18:21] that I've decided I've created my own criteria that based off of my criteria
[01:18:27] your opinions are harmful and they're bad and they need to be shut down so
[01:18:32] really everything that I do is justified because I've invented this that's
[01:18:38] right of course so I'm like what do I do what do I say and then all the
[01:18:44] sudden I find myself the fucking bodyguard at the airport and I'm like
[01:18:47] This is crazy. So you got upset. You were basically rationalizing killing Charlie Kirk or trying to downplay it or
[01:18:55] Make it seem more reasonable and like, you know, oh, he's a bad person
[01:18:59] So it's like not as bad then now you have a bodyguard because you're getting threatened. I'm I mean, is there anything more poetic than that?
[01:19:07] I mean, this is like a Greek play. This is amazing. I love this
[01:19:11] Again, you deserve it. You do you absolutely deserve it like why would you ever go out and do that?
[01:19:16] And the reason why, and I'm very glad to see these people getting pressed, I am, I'm glad
[01:19:23] to see these people getting pressed because they've been doing this and they've had a
[01:19:27] complete monopoly over this violent rhetoric and this violent language and more importantly
[01:19:32] this violent behavior for years and I think that they're only going to stop whenever it
[01:19:36] starts happening to them because they think that, you know, anytime that it happens to
[01:19:40] somebody else it's acceptable but when it happens to them it's bad.
[01:19:44] i think that what's really funny now and this is what i'm so glad about the
[01:19:48] internet for
[01:19:49] is that we're no longer playing pretend
[01:19:52] we're no longer pretending to care about these people were no longer
[01:19:55] pretending to care
[01:19:56] about their well-being we're no longer pretending to care about their you know
[01:20:00] their safety or their and you know any of this
[01:20:04] uh... these people would have you killed
[01:20:06] they would have you killed
[01:20:08] and they already did with charlie kirk and then after they killed charlie
[01:20:11] kirk they laughed about it and said he deserved it
[01:20:14] so i'm not really going to go and uh... you know shed a tear over this
[01:20:18] happening that's a universe exactly
[01:20:21] so that's the way i see it
[01:20:23] you know dot dot dot dot on our community pressure yeah i guess what
[01:20:25] happens man
[01:20:26] and that's crazy mean it's wrong to harm people for just their opinions the
[01:20:30] things that you were justifying there can't be an ever less aware statement
[01:20:33] in human history
[01:20:34] well the problem is that these people don't realize the
[01:20:38] this is why i think it's important to be to do like i i can actually i can't
[01:20:43] say what i think
[01:20:45] i can't say what i think
[01:20:47] i think you can easily assume and you would probably right
[01:20:50] but i i i i i can't i can't say what i think
[01:20:54] but i will say that you know you get what you fucking deserve
[01:20:57] i'll definitely say that
[01:20:58] she's forty by the way yeah it's a forty-year-old woman exactly remember
[01:21:01] these people want your dad your children raped and brainwashing they think
[01:21:04] it's funny
[01:21:05] yep the sam hide quote i remember it very very well
[01:21:08] and there's a lot of those right they want to police your opinion like they
[01:21:10] do in the u they absolutely do
[01:21:12] and so uh... yeah there's been this by the way and we you know what i said
[01:21:16] before is that we don't have to live like this take a look at this
[01:21:23] choose your
[01:21:26] you know it's good
[01:21:29] today's
[01:21:30] destruction
[01:21:31] flexor commitment to public safety
[01:21:33] accountability
[01:21:36] future harm
[01:21:37] Every week we are going to find all the vehicles, we are going to find those others in here.
[01:21:41] We will hold them accountable for what we are going to have.
[01:21:43] And you can see here, what's left is those giant cars that sit here the whole time.
[01:21:48] This is what's going to happen.
[01:21:50] This is what's going to happen.
[01:21:53] Is that the Honda Civic?
[01:21:55] Oh no!
[01:21:58] There's your car right there.
[01:22:00] Hey, you want it back? Here you go.
[01:22:02] Yeah, it's being bought with a safe.
[01:22:04] Oh my God.
[01:22:06] And also a brand new crash as their new one. Let me see. I can pull it up and I
[01:22:11] Got a look at maybe a couple more of these and then I we've got to go and get ready for the the report
[01:22:15] Snap out. Oh my god
[01:22:18] What is this string why is the chest so slow did you get rated? Yeah, well, no, I'm potting
[01:22:26] You know straight why is the chest so slow did you get rated? Yeah
[01:22:29] 20k viewers who rated. Do you remember that? Do you remember that, bro? Like from literally years ago. Oh my god
[01:22:39] Well, no, I'm botting right. Um, I got rated and I'm but here it is. Okay. Let me check. Yeah, can I find this?
[01:22:46] This is so funny
[01:22:48] 10k viewers who rated
[01:22:58] when you are as personal
[01:23:04] 20 month subscriber bro you're so fucking like all right I got turned this up because it is really really funny give me a minute sorry I want to make sure this is loud enough to where you guys can hear it
[01:23:15] I
[01:23:28] When you are asked personally 20 month subscriber, bro, you're so fucking annoying Jesus
[01:23:45] it's just so frustrating anyway when your ass like oh god when your ass like
[01:23:55] oh this shit so there's some history to this you know straight why is the chest
[01:24:05] so slow did you get rated yeah man some things never change
[01:24:13] Well, no, I'm botting. I got rated and I'm botting. That's why the chat is so
[01:24:20] slow. Yeah, it's mostly bots. We know. I have like, I think it's just you and
[01:24:29] probably like eight other people in here and they all hate me. Yeah, it's a
[01:24:32] tech town, more Pegasus, my editors, what do you think? Who else is watching them?
[01:24:40] uh... nukstakhu
[01:24:42] uh... let's see uh... uh... ethan
[01:24:46] well bro like one of the other three company think
[01:24:49] odd cheese i have no idea
[01:24:51] that's about it
[01:24:54] and you know for shot
[01:24:55] uh... every other every other aspect of this is just like completely made up by
[01:24:59] uh... wm e the democratic national convention
[01:25:02] uh... uh... the the bnc
[01:25:06] and uh... israel is another uh... big supporter of the bots to make it seem
[01:25:11] like uh...
[01:25:13] i have a lot more
[01:25:13] popularity than i actually do
[01:25:15] as a matter of fact in the real world most people just they love whatever your
[01:25:19] politics is
[01:25:21] and i suspect it's like very uh... far right you know i mean but it's not even
[01:25:25] far right it's actually totally just
[01:25:27] uh... normal
[01:25:36] actually crashing out bro like why why are you crashing out politics right apolitical
[01:25:49] politics like purging all the migrants purging all the migrants just just you who would say
[01:25:58] that right like uh uh abolishing women
[01:26:06] finally finally we can agree on something
[01:26:13] abolish see like i was talking about getting rid of their way to just i said i shouldn't vote
[01:26:18] but like now we're talking about getting rid of them entirely
[01:26:23] you know like i went around some of these middle eastern countries on google maps and what women
[01:26:27] out a lot in these places right and it's like you just see like it's a nice diner and there's like
[01:26:32] just 20 fat dudes sitting around nobody has a frown nobody is sad everybody is so happy
[01:26:39] they're talking to each other everything's great not a woman in sight
[01:26:47] like that's what everyone believes but they're too afraid to say it out loud
[01:26:51] warm water port what does that mean okay oh we have a hype train by the way if
[01:26:58] you want to keep this is so fucking sad oh my god oh by the way we've got a hype
[01:27:10] train oh my god Jesus I give money now carry the motherfucking flame level to
[01:27:19] four minutes. Hype train, ladies and gentlemen, the nation of Qatar. Oh my god, he's actually
[01:27:31] becoming an old man. He is. He's becoming an old, he's becoming a boring old man. I
[01:27:41] can't believe this is this. It's literally, I'm watching it happen. I'm watching it happen
[01:27:47] in real time. This is really sad.
[01:27:52] You know I was thinking about this. Everybody kept making fun of him for what he was wearing
[01:27:58] and now he only wears suits. Isn't that weird? That's crazy, right?
[01:28:07] Get some subs.
[01:28:08] Oh, five. Hype train at level 10. We're burning through it. At level 10, we unlock, for the
[01:28:15] people's broadcasting service we unlock
[01:28:18] the carrying of the flame
[01:28:21] uh... people are getting so slowly all these box in the chat
[01:28:26] this is a receptive audience is a great interview i think everyone in the
[01:28:29] rooms in case you're interested really great work
[01:28:35] all my this is this is so fucking but what all my god
[01:28:41] all my god this is
[01:28:44] This is insane.
[01:28:49] I don't know what to say.
[01:28:51] I really, actually, I literally don't even know
[01:28:53] what to say about this.
[01:28:54] This is crazy.
[01:28:55] Wow.
[01:28:56] And so how far we've fallen?
[01:28:58] I mean, just like that, trying to, try to, like,
[01:29:01] the thing is that like you go around
[01:29:03] and like you're gassing yourself up over like a hype train.
[01:29:07] Really, you're gonna do that?
[01:29:09] It's just so embarrassing, man.
[01:29:11] Like, who rated?
[01:29:13] I guess why do you never chew down high trains like that?
[01:29:15] Because I don't need your money. I don't need your money. I don't
[01:29:20] Hey
[01:29:22] She's miserable
[01:29:29] Oh my god, I've never seen a few of these man. These are funny and uh, yeah, it's just nuts man
[01:29:35] Like how does that happen? And uh, wow and it's pulling the elderly. Yeah, I guess so, right?
[01:29:42] And it's just shocking for me to see all this right and it reminds me of Borat now
[01:29:48] I guess so but yeah, I
[01:29:51] Don't even know what to say or what to do at all. Holy fucking shit and
[01:29:56] There's this bit. What is this here bitch? Oh my god. Is this like what is this the Civil War or something?
[01:30:02] Resident Evil 4 Greece. Oh Jesus. Okay. Well anyway, the Obama Obama Center ceremony begins with the stolen land
[01:30:11] acknowledgement oh my god let me see this
[01:30:15] we'd also like to take a moment to recognize the original inhabitants of
[01:30:19] the land upon which we are gathered today we honor the Anishinaabe the council
[01:30:25] of three fires the Ojibwe the Odawa and the Pottawanawe nations
[01:30:32] Yeah, didn't they lose?
[01:30:39] Like this is, by the way, I'm totally against this.
[01:30:43] I am.
[01:30:44] And the reason why is because like I actually, like I very much respect the Native Americans,
[01:30:50] I do.
[01:30:52] But I mean they lost the war.
[01:30:55] They did.
[01:30:56] Like we had a war, they lost.
[01:30:57] This is what happened.
[01:30:59] And it's not their land.
[01:31:00] We didn't steal the land.
[01:31:02] we just went over there, we killed them all, right?
[01:31:04] That's what happened.
[01:31:05] And so, again, and I feel like also, by the way,
[01:31:09] like, isn't that a really great argument
[01:31:11] for why mass migration is bad?
[01:31:15] Like, I mean, what happened to them?
[01:31:17] Like, they're not in a very good spot.
[01:31:19] I think that things kind of suck for them, right?
[01:31:22] And they're so pretentious, yes.
[01:31:25] And so, no, I'm very, very much against this.
[01:31:27] I don't like the stolen land acknowledgments.
[01:31:30] I think this is ridiculous.
[01:31:31] and uh... it's more by the way it is a it is a western version of original
[01:31:38] send that's it and i think it's really crazy to see something like that also
[01:31:42] this one let me see i'm gonna look at that
[01:31:44] okay we're gonna look at things like maybe a half hour more than i really
[01:31:47] want to uh... we gotta get ready for that uh... that event right obviously
[01:31:50] uh... hillary clinton cracks up after michelle obama was this year
[01:31:56] you were doing the people's work
[01:31:59] rescuing our economy
[01:32:01] expanding health care, ending a war,
[01:32:05] ordering the bin Laden raid, saving an auto industry,
[01:32:08] winning a peace prize.
[01:32:11] Keeping us safe.
[01:32:41] This is your final form you understand
[01:32:54] Being a safe from Ebola one Mike regulating the banks standing up for marriage equality
[01:33:02] Oh my god, and what's she dressed like that for oh?
[01:33:06] What the fuck is it like really? Oh my god
[01:33:11] And I don't even know what to say as a Cherokee Indian half of it. That's all in Lancet sub noxious. It's like pandering
[01:33:17] Remember what happened to your ancestors? Yeah, it's actually like yeah
[01:33:19] It's like do you really need to remind them that they lost all their shit every fucking time that you're gonna build a building?
[01:33:25] Like I don't know this is like this is in memory of whenever you guys got your ass beat remember that yeah
[01:33:31] Well, yeah, there it is. You got your ass beat now. We're building this how about that remember hey guys remember whenever y'all lost
[01:33:37] Okay, that was a while ago. Well, we have it now. This is the new here's the new Walmart
[01:33:44] Really you think I don't honestly some guys have changed this Cherokee Indian. It's like yeah, it's kind of true. Yeah, fuck and
[01:33:51] That's a skyscraper now exactly and I don't know if I stole your bike and rode it in front of your rental property every day
[01:33:58] Yeah, remember this yeah, I'm gonna dedicate this wheelie. Hey, remember this. This is your bike
[01:34:04] like
[01:34:06] Damn, why is she doing that? What's this bit like the cackling the cackling from
[01:34:18] Keeping us safe from Ebola
[01:34:24] Jesus Christ man, you can hear it. It's so loud. Can you imagine that she's nuts dude like the thing is that?
[01:34:32] that it's like, if Bill Clinton wasn't such an asshole,
[01:34:36] I'd really feel bad for him, I would.
[01:34:38] Like, you know, I have to deal with this bitch all the time.
[01:34:41] Like, she's eternally seven years old.
[01:34:43] Can you imagine, like, every time, like,
[01:34:45] I feel like that's one of the reasons
[01:34:47] why nobody really got mad about Bill Clinton
[01:34:49] for cheating on her.
[01:34:50] It's because she was still obnoxious.
[01:34:52] Like, everybody like, yeah, of course, right?
[01:34:54] I mean, I get it, sure.
[01:34:56] And then look at this here.
[01:34:57] Look.
[01:34:58] now holly new jersey cancels fourth of july firework show over fears of teens rioting
[01:35:11] i'm really curious what the actual argument is behind just not rounding all these people up
[01:35:17] and putting them in a jail i what what's the argument against that
[01:35:22] Why? Why? I mean racism? I don't care about that. Did you care? It's doing anyway.
[01:35:34] It's not racist? I don't think this is stupid. It's so dumb.
[01:35:40] Trump.
[01:35:41] Oh my God.
[01:35:42] Oh, they're on that guy's car.
[01:35:50] Why, like, Donald Trump, I thought we voted for Donald, why we, I mean you guys, I didn't
[01:35:55] vote, but I would have voted.
[01:35:57] If I knew Donald Trump would send a National Guard in on these people, I would, bro, I
[01:36:03] would build a time machine and go back in time and vote for him.
[01:36:07] i want the national guard called
[01:36:09] i want to i want temporary uh... you know camps for all these people
[01:36:14] i do
[01:36:24] it's really really nuts man
[01:36:26] and uh... so reverse cuba
[01:36:28] yeah pretty much exactly
[01:36:30] and uh... good job now you have her chicago uh... just rejected the bill
[01:36:33] make parents responsible pay fines for the teens doing shit
[01:36:36] well we got a we got a we got a federalize these places we do
[01:36:40] like we want to civil war for a reason the civil war happened in one to
[01:36:43] specific direction
[01:36:45] and uh... i feel like we have a like it more like this is federal government
[01:36:48] you can't let people like this go around the back by fucking animals like we
[01:36:51] talking about
[01:36:52] so now is no reason to do that at all
[01:36:55] the problem of us yet exactly on the new jersey it's much in new york infili
[01:36:58] kids that come down for summer and do this is not actual new jersey kids they
[01:37:02] live an hour away
[01:37:03] honestly brah I'm not that surprised and I believe you but why don't care where
[01:37:06] they're from I care if they're doing it like what the fuck we put them in the
[01:37:09] ship for it's ridiculous
[01:37:11] why is it predominantly black people because they think they can get away
[01:37:14] with it and I think that to an extent I think it was all white people doing
[01:37:17] this I think they'd be more willing to go after him
[01:37:20] I think the reality is that yeah you look at these teen takeovers it's
[01:37:23] obvious that it's all black people like not all but say only ninety eight percent
[01:37:27] black people right
[01:37:28] overwhelmingly black people doing this right
[01:37:30] and why is it it's because we allow it
[01:37:33] is because we allow it
[01:37:35] and they do whatever they want because any degree of like well you know large
[01:37:40] scale law enforcement
[01:37:41] is seen as racism because you can arrest black people for causing problems
[01:37:46] because that's racist it's ridiculous it's totally ridiculous
[01:37:50] i don't know what this is
[01:37:53] we are going to put it in the population
[01:37:55] well i mean it doesn't take a huge population to go and clog up a fucking
[01:37:59] street does it
[01:38:00] I mean, you don't have to be a whole lot of people to do that and, uh, yeah.
[01:38:06] And that waste Americans, drones, good nothing.
[01:38:08] What is this here?
[01:38:09] You know, when a war Trump, I don't know.
[01:38:11] This isn't a war.
[01:38:11] Like, what do you mean by that?
[01:38:13] And let me see here.
[01:38:16] Anyway, it seems like a guy seems like a weirdo.
[01:38:18] I banned him and a blender solution.
[01:38:22] I think that, you know, really, it's actually racist to not arrest black people
[01:38:26] because they're black.
[01:38:27] I think it is.
[01:38:28] And so the reason why I think it's a huge problem is that what's happened, I think, in a lot of minority communities is that you've had a lot of people who think that it's racist to go after crime.
[01:38:39] And because different demographics commit crime way more, right? I mean, this is obvious.
[01:38:44] Like Asian Americans are like 20 times less likely to commit a crime than a black person, right? I mean, this is, it's not even remotely closed.
[01:38:52] clothes. It's not like it's two to one or three to one. It's like 20 to one. It's insane.
[01:38:58] So instead of actually trying to solve this problem and improve it and try to get those
[01:39:03] people, like, you know, the logic there in my mind, I hear that statistic and I think
[01:39:08] to myself, wow, we need to have more police over there. Wow, we need to go and get more
[01:39:14] of these people so everybody else that's not like that can be safe. Like that's my mindset
[01:39:19] whenever I see this. But other people's mindset is that, oh my God, this means they're being
[01:39:24] overpoliced and it's racist. No, I'm pretty sure burglaring somebody isn't racist. That's
[01:39:31] it. Accountability for minorities equals racism. Yes, exactly. And to hire a bunch of black
[01:39:36] cops in the areas they're willing to enforce the law, they can't call it racist. They'll
[01:39:39] just do it anyway. It doesn't matter. They'll just call them Uncle Tom's or something like
[01:39:43] that or Uncle Ruckus or some other bullshit. So no, that's it. And I expect the Asian
[01:39:48] crime numbers to go down if you remove the Asians in Pakistan? Well, I'm not sure about
[01:39:52] that. But like, yeah, just in general, oh, here's another one. This is another genius,
[01:39:56] another wizard.
[01:39:57] I want to still ask about two sweets specifically, because I think they are relevant to the
[01:40:01] race. The first is all deportation is wrong. Now, in Congress, obviously, that comes with
[01:40:07] a lot of questions about immigration enforcement. And even as Democrats might agree with calls
[01:40:11] that you have shared to things like abolish ICE, I don't know if they're necessarily
[01:40:15] there on things like all deportation is wrong. Is that something you still believe?
[01:40:18] That phrase yes. I still believe that all deportations are wrong.
[01:40:22] Even if we're talking about illegal entry to the country or someone who may have
[01:40:26] committed a crime? So when we're talking about things like illegal entry, we're
[01:40:30] actually talking about administrative laws, right? We're not talking about criminal law.
[01:40:34] Let me concede the question of what does that matter? Like this is it's actually crazy that
[01:40:38] we've let these people, like I want to let you guys know that whenever I say that democracy
[01:40:47] is the number one threat to America, I truly mean it.
[01:40:53] The Constitution was never written with the intent of allowing everybody to vote.
[01:40:58] It was never written like that.
[01:41:01] This was never the goal, because they knew it was bad, they knew it was a bad idea.
[01:41:07] Why are we letting this happen?
[01:41:10] I get why you say that.
[01:41:12] I know.
[01:41:13] The people who...
[01:41:14] Yeah, who cares what type of law it is?
[01:41:18] Who have not committed a crime.
[01:41:20] Because I think that that's not really the question.
[01:41:24] If we're saying all deportation is wrong, though, that would seem to also include people who
[01:41:28] were convicted of breaking U.S. criminal law.
[01:41:30] Is the deportation of those people wrong?
[01:41:32] Yes.
[01:41:33] And the reason I say that is because we have a criminal system.
[01:41:37] It isn't perfect, but it exists, and it is one that if we accept as the process by which
[01:41:43] we want to engage with these issues, the issues of harm, the issues of criminality, or what
[01:41:48] have you, then we need to make sure that it is one that isn't also discriminatory on the
[01:41:54] basis of where people were born, right?
[01:41:57] To subject someone who has committed a crime to both a criminal system and then additionally
[01:42:03] to an immigration system that all-
[01:42:05] Okay, I guess we just kill them then.
[01:42:09] All right.
[01:42:11] I mean, I guess that's what we're gonna have to do.
[01:42:13] So if you don't want to deport them,
[01:42:16] then, and we don't want to send them back,
[01:42:18] I guess we kill them.
[01:42:20] All right?
[01:42:22] That's not what I wanted to do.
[01:42:23] I thought we could just send them back.
[01:42:25] But if that's the rule you want to make,
[01:42:28] I guess that's what happens.
[01:42:32] Okay.
[01:42:32] It also detains them in the very same facilities that criminal detain, people who are convicted
[01:42:39] of criminal convictions are also held, right?
[01:42:43] And then deported and ripped away from everything they know and love, that is also punishment.
[01:42:48] And that is punishment not on the basis of the crime they committed because they already
[01:42:51] served their time when they were processed through the criminal system, it is double
[01:42:55] punishment.
[01:42:56] And if we truly believe that double jeopardy is something that is unconstitutional, something
[01:43:01] That is an ethical some we need to be tied double jeopardy is like a it's like an understatement
[01:43:06] We need to be like that's like it. We need to talk triple jeopardy quadruple jeopardy
[01:43:11] AOE jeopardy
[01:43:13] You do something wrong. You're an immigrant your whole family gets deported
[01:43:17] That's called AOE jeopardy
[01:43:21] That's how it is
[01:43:23] And that is against the principles of equality in this country. We cannot subject people to that on the basis of where they were born
[01:43:30] And so there it is then these are the reasons why and then hutch. What the fuck are we doing here?
[01:43:37] these people by the way I
[01:43:41] There's no reasoning with any of them, right?
[01:43:44] There's really not but I do want to see that like there is a there's a
[01:43:47] Contingency of these people that are out there that actually think that they believe this stuff now
[01:43:52] They don't actually believe this stuff
[01:43:54] They don't really believe any of this like if you actually really took this apart and reasoned it out
[01:43:59] It would immediately fall apart, right?
[01:44:01] I mean, I don't really even want to waste time on it because it's so stupid, but like well hutch
[01:44:06] The thing is like with hutch, right is that he is a he is an American Democrat, right?
[01:44:11] These people are not American Democrats. They don't see themselves as Americans
[01:44:15] They don't like America like they think that America sucks and they want to do everything that they can to subvert America
[01:44:22] So that's the goal, right? They're just saying buzzwords exactly
[01:44:25] trying to apply laws and rights for a few citizens of the country and not
[01:44:28] illegal may awesome
[01:44:29] uh... americans exactly the uh... bitches wrong so many levels to the
[01:44:32] partitions is still procedure not a criminal on double jeopardy is nothing
[01:44:35] to do with this
[01:44:36] that you why would you even argue with this person do you think that they care
[01:44:39] about any of that they don't give a shit about any of that
[01:44:42] you should just laugh at them and then say you know what if you think this is
[01:44:44] bad when i do it even worse now
[01:44:46] like there's no reason to even give these people the time of day
[01:44:50] like you you make a mistake by trying to engage with them as if they're trying
[01:44:54] to have an honest conversation. They're not. They're just retards and they should be ignored.
[01:44:58] Right? The goal that you should have is, how can I take away these people's rights to vote?
[01:45:05] That should be the only focus that you have. And if we can do that, then we don't have
[01:45:10] to worry about them. That's the only real solution. That's the only actual way to solve
[01:45:15] it. That's my opinion. That is my opinion strongly. And people are okay. Yeah, you can't
[01:45:23] argue with these people. You're just mad she's right. I'm so mad. You're right. And I think
[01:45:29] an IQ test is a good way. Oh, I do a lot of stuff. I would. But, oh, here we go. This
[01:45:35] is also very odd.
[01:45:37] These BBC journalists are all trying to do the Asian squats. It's a resting position
[01:45:45] frequently used by people in China, Japan, and much of Asia.
[01:45:48] You could probably be here for a while.
[01:45:50] Videos of tourists trying a squat are popping up online.
[01:45:53] So why can some people comfortably rest like this while others struggle to get into it?
[01:45:58] Asian American Marchu, a mobility coach, says the Asian squat isn't about genetics.
[01:46:03] The reality is this squat is everybody's squat because before the advent of chairs, before
[01:46:10] everybody had western-style toilets in their bathrooms, you had to be able to do this to
[01:46:17] use your chamber pot. But in the last 150 years or so, you got to sit higher and higher
[01:46:24] doing your business and you no longer practice getting into this position.
[01:46:28] This position is known as a deep squat. The feet stay flat on the ground and the back
[01:46:32] of the thigh rests against the calves. In Asia, people rest like this while waiting
[01:46:37] for a train or relaxing with friends. It's also a movement that most people can do naturally
[01:46:42] as children before gradually losing it.
[01:46:45] Is that true?
[01:46:46] say this skill can be useful for mobility later in life.
[01:46:49] What the fuck?
[01:46:50] As he's older, being able to get down and up from the floor is a life-saving skill without
[01:46:57] exaggeration.
[01:46:58] But physiotherapists say a deep squat isn't the ultimate goal for everyone, especially
[01:47:02] for people with existing knee, hip, or back pain.
[01:47:05] Goddamn!
[01:47:06] People can't do this?
[01:47:07] This is it.
[01:47:08] That's insane!
[01:47:09] Holy fuck!
[01:47:10] Can't even believe that!
[01:47:11] I can do this on 30?
[01:47:12] I don't even know.
[01:47:13] Oh, by the way, so important, important here. So the girl yesterday, so do you remember this
[01:47:21] retarded hag? She was the one that started making the video laughing at and making fun of
[01:47:28] Rupert Lowe's rape gang report. Let me see if I can scroll down and find it. I don't know if I can.
[01:47:34] I guess maybe she did she delete the video? Maybe she deleted. Oh, this is it, right?
[01:47:39] Yeah, this is the girl. Remember her? Okay. So she made a follow-up video.
[01:47:47] If you're going to attack somebody for not supporting survivors of grooming gangs,
[01:47:51] you might not want to pick somebody who literally founded an organization called the survivors,
[01:47:55] which is dedicated to supporting survivors of grooming gangs.
[01:47:58] You're trying to delegitimize a legitimate thing by trying to add in a bunch of administrative
[01:48:03] protocol and meaningless semantic arguments. You fundamentally disagree with what Rupert
[01:48:12] Lowe is saying, and so you're trying to unravel it because of that reason. That's the reason
[01:48:19] why it's HR logic. Everybody knows what you're doing. That's why you're getting hate. People
[01:48:23] can see right through it. She charges money for survivors to sign up. Is that true?
[01:48:30] That is who I am. I founded it last year. We have two aims, support survivors of grooming
[01:48:35] gangs, investigate grooming gangs so that we can find out exactly what has happened and
[01:48:39] how to stop it.
[01:48:40] No, it's not. It's probably like you're doing that, but you're probably doing it in a way
[01:48:44] that protects from any sort of like racial connection, religious connection, ethnic connection.
[01:48:51] You're not really doing this, right? You're doing this to hide the information, not to
[01:48:56] find it.
[01:48:59] This time last year I was invited onto Rupert Lowe's Rape Gang Inquiry Panel.
[01:49:03] I attended one meeting.
[01:49:05] It was Shambolic.
[01:49:06] They did not know what the inquiry was for.
[01:49:10] Much of the meeting was out.
[01:49:11] What do you mean?
[01:49:12] Everybody knows what it's for.
[01:49:14] How is it that everybody in the Internet knows what it's for but somehow you think they don't
[01:49:17] know what it's for?
[01:49:18] He said what it was for.
[01:49:19] Actually taken up with discussing that.
[01:49:22] What's they going to do with it?
[01:49:24] They didn't know.
[01:49:27] There was no attention given to safeguarding.
[01:49:30] Myself and Sammy Woodhouse and Matt Enderby-Shentzden all were very vocal about the need for safeguarding
[01:49:37] in that meeting we were dismissed by a-
[01:49:39] Yeah, because you're just a bunch of hags trying to introduce HR policy.
[01:49:43] We're trying to get shit done.
[01:49:46] I don't want to listen to a Karen Ocracy, the council of Karen's that are trying to
[01:49:50] like fucking micromanage shit the fuck out of here.
[01:49:53] Tired of that shit.
[01:49:55] It's a waste of everybody's time.
[01:49:58] That's the Harrison.
[01:50:00] There was no methodology.
[01:50:01] There were no tender reference.
[01:50:03] You cannot conduct an inquiry without those things
[01:50:05] because you need to have a question before you
[01:50:08] can find the answer.
[01:50:09] The question is that, are these rapes
[01:50:11] and are these bad actions being committed
[01:50:13] by an overwhelmingly and predominantly
[01:50:16] non-English group of people?
[01:50:18] And why is it happening and how is it happening?
[01:50:21] It's actually really simple.
[01:50:22] Everybody knows what the inquiry was about.
[01:50:25] Like this is, it's so crazy how dishonest these people are.
[01:50:29] It's unbelievable.
[01:50:31] They already had their answer, and they worked backwards.
[01:50:34] It's not how you do an inquiry.
[01:50:37] Survivors were actively harmed by this inquiry in two ways.
[01:50:41] Firstly, directly.
[01:50:42] So there was one survivor who engaged with it,
[01:50:45] who was traumatized by that experience.
[01:50:48] In fact, because she was silenced,
[01:50:49] she wasn't allowed to engage with it.
[01:50:51] Yeah.
[01:50:53] She attempted suicide.
[01:50:55] Another survivor who tries to...
[01:50:58] So let me get this straight.
[01:50:59] The reason why she attempted suicide
[01:51:01] is because they asked her about getting raped,
[01:51:02] not about her getting raped.
[01:51:04] Huh, okay, sure.
[01:51:06] Give evidence was ignored and not helped.
[01:51:11] She self-harmed to the point of hospitalization.
[01:51:14] The third was invited to give testimony before the panel
[01:51:18] And was then dropped to the very last minute. She believes because she's not white. She's mixed race
[01:51:24] So you just made this up. Okay got it. She's now in crisis
[01:51:29] All of that was completely avoidable. So the inquiry has harmed survivors
[01:51:34] Inquiry is also I think that the rapes harm the survivors more. I
[01:51:40] Think the rapes were worse
[01:51:42] I'm sure that, you know, like maybe asking the question made them cry.
[01:51:47] Maybe it's true.
[01:51:48] Maybe you're right.
[01:51:49] I think the raping's worse.
[01:51:50] On the survivors whose testimony is it has put into its report.
[01:51:54] It's just me.
[01:51:55] Because it has put those testimonies alongside claims that cannot be verified.
[01:52:00] And therefore...
[01:52:01] Well, why can't they be verified?
[01:52:03] It's because the police are instructed not to create information that could allow them
[01:52:07] to be verified.
[01:52:08] That's the problem.
[01:52:10] has discredited those testimonies. Now, I think that everybody who gave testimony should
[01:52:18] be applauded for doing so. It's a very brave act. But it needs to be done in a context
[01:52:24] in which people can look at the testimony and trust it. Otherwise, the obvious outcome
[01:52:28] is that people say, how do we know this is true? And this is already happening to you,
[01:52:32] so far. So they're lying. Okay, got it.
[01:52:35] I've already seen posts online saying 250,000 girls doesn't seem very likely.
[01:52:42] In fact, I think it's more than likely that in itself is an issue that we don't now know
[01:52:48] the scale of this because they have muddied those waters.
[01:52:51] So you think that it wasn't that many people?
[01:52:54] Why do you think that?
[01:52:56] What happened to believe all women?
[01:52:58] Well, again, and like this is what people like this do.
[01:53:01] So, this is a technique that Karen's used, is that they create endless administrative
[01:53:07] procedures and red tape, so that they can effectively protect themselves from consequences
[01:53:13] of bad behavior by insulating through all these procedures.
[01:53:18] This is prime Karen behavior.
[01:53:21] This is 90 IQ, like fucking bottom of the barrel, you probably shouldn't even know
[01:53:26] what electricity, like this, this woman should be digging potatoes out of the ground with
[01:53:31] her bare hands. This is what somebody like this should be doing. The fact that she's
[01:53:37] born into an era with electricity is a front to all of civilization that we have to deal
[01:53:44] with this. Nobody should have to deal with this.
[01:53:47] And as I say, the survivors who have given testimony are now being disbelieved, which
[01:53:53] is awful for those girls and should never have been allowed to happen. So I laughed
[01:54:00] at the writers and and and don't don't don't don't misunderstand us she's
[01:54:04] attacking the process because she disagrees with the conclusion
[01:54:09] that's the main reason why she's doing all of this
[01:54:13] is that she's she's not doing this out of like some sort of scientific
[01:54:16] concern
[01:54:17] she doesn't like the conclusion and she's trying to attack the methodology
[01:54:24] because
[01:54:26] the writers of the report
[01:54:27] contemptible
[01:54:28] laughable people
[01:54:30] They have actively harmed survivors.
[01:54:33] They have made a political farce out of survivors' very real suffering.
[01:54:38] It's a farce.
[01:54:40] None of this is OK.
[01:54:42] What's a farce?
[01:54:44] None of it is in any way acceptable.
[01:54:48] This is what I think this is another type of Karen language.
[01:54:52] Is nothing like this is acceptable or is it OK?
[01:54:56] this is the language and the mindset of a Karen. And let me explain the reason why.
[01:55:02] You are appealing to the idea that there is a rule-based system that everybody has to follow.
[01:55:09] This is not the way that things are done. They're just not. Like when the rule-based system fails,
[01:55:15] when it's used against you, when it's maliciously co-opted, then you have a problem. And that's
[01:55:21] what's happening. And frankly, if I had not laughed, I would have gone into a
[01:55:28] whole slew of very blue language because it's disgusting, it's contemptible, and
[01:55:34] I was very frustrated, and so I laughed. The outcome of that laugh is that people
[01:55:42] have gone on to the website of the survivors, which again, that website is
[01:55:47] purely about supporting survivors of grooming games, making sure that we know what the real
[01:55:53] truth is. They've gone on that website, scrolled past all of that content in order to tell
[01:55:59] me that they're going to kill me.
[01:56:01] Oh, wow. That's so sad. Oh, no. Let's all feel sorry for you. No. What you did is you
[01:56:12] You tried to invalidate an inquiry into a large-scale industrial rape complex that's
[01:56:19] happening inside of your country.
[01:56:22] And you did it because you didn't like the conclusions that it had.
[01:56:25] You were being paid by the opposing political party of these people, like this is documented
[01:56:31] as well, and now you're facing consequences for it.
[01:56:35] I don't give a fuck what people tell you.
[01:56:37] I really don't.
[01:56:38] I don't think anybody cares.
[01:56:40] i i don't even i i i can't i i don't even care enough to pretend the care
[01:56:46] i don't
[01:56:47] gives a shit
[01:56:50] that's what we put on the least in this country
[01:56:55] to be abundantly clear i have never asked the red gang inquiry for money
[01:57:00] what actually happened was that when i saw that they were not doing the job
[01:57:04] properly
[01:57:05] i thought that the step in and do the job
[01:57:07] now do you imagine that charlie danz does not get paid for his work
[01:57:11] sam sami which has absolutely gets paid for work and rightly so
[01:57:14] if people work they ought to get paid for it
[01:57:17] so i was not asking for money i was not asking for anything for the survivors
[01:57:21] my organization
[01:57:22] what i was saying was that i have a team of experts
[01:57:25] we are happy to step in and do the job
[01:57:28] why would anybody trust you
[01:57:31] you have no like there's no credibility that you would have
[01:57:35] like a team of experts i'm not interested in what the experts opinions
[01:57:39] are
[01:57:40] the job needed doing
[01:57:42] didn't need to be asked to be doing it's already done absolutely anybody
[01:57:46] it needs to be somebody
[01:57:48] you actually knew what they were doing
[01:57:50] who's an expert in the field
[01:57:53] see this is what a ninety iq
[01:57:56] uh... former potato digger
[01:57:58] uh... this is the way that they think
[01:58:01] you think that you need to be an expert in order to
[01:58:04] look at information and figure out what's going on
[01:58:09] to anybody who's an average intelligence or even slightly above average
[01:58:13] intelligence
[01:58:15] we can immediately figure out what's happening here it's instantaneous like
[01:58:19] if you if you if you're above like a hundred and five iq you can instantly
[01:58:23] figure out what's happening
[01:58:25] but stupid people like this
[01:58:27] have to constantly rely and basically be protected by processes
[01:58:33] because they're unable to actually think for themselves
[01:58:37] that's it
[01:58:41] who was qualified
[01:58:44] none of this is in any way controversial
[01:58:48] special
[01:58:49] if you're dealing with an extremely serious topic which we absolutely are
[01:58:53] you want the best people on the job
[01:58:56] i was willing to go out and find those people for them
[01:58:58] why would you want that i was not saying that i don't see more obviously
[01:59:01] compromise. They don't know what they're doing.
[01:59:04] Health would write the report. I think the fact that the mob that has come for me is
[01:59:12] extremely anti-Semitic is very telling. None of any of this...
[01:59:17] Nobody cares. Nobody gives a shit anymore. I don't know who you're talking to. Like,
[01:59:30] who cares
[01:59:33] then shut the fuck up and get off the internet
[01:59:36] because anything to do with me being jewish and i just happen to be jewish
[01:59:41] i have had
[01:59:43] a slew of anti-semitic abuse that's terrible while you six hours
[01:59:48] imagine how bad it was for the people that got raped
[01:59:52] probably worse than that
[01:59:55] some of it quite graphic
[01:59:56] all night
[01:59:57] a lot of
[01:59:59] references to ovens and gas.
[02:00:01] Oh no!
[02:00:03] What Rupert Lowe has unleashed on this country in the form of Restore of the Party, which
[02:00:09] let's be very clear, has taken survivors' testimonies and used them as a political vehicle?
[02:00:15] Absolutely that's the goal.
[02:00:17] You are completely correct in that analysis.
[02:00:20] The goal is to use their stories to raise awareness to the problems of mass migration
[02:00:26] and then basically convince people that it's a bad idea and then shut it down and reverse it.
[02:00:32] That is exactly what the point is. Duh. Like, I, of course.
[02:00:40] It's extremely dangerous.
[02:00:43] For them.
[02:00:46] He has completely polarized the discourse. The people who support him are a mob, frankly.
[02:00:55] Good. Good. That's right. Yep. The polarized discourse. See, this is it. These are people.
[02:01:02] Remember what I said about how these people constantly appeal to consensus? Oh my God,
[02:01:07] you can't be polarized. Oh my God, you can't be upset about this. Oh my God, people are getting
[02:01:12] really angry. This is it. Some of them speak very violently, as in they eat threatened violence.
[02:01:22] I'm hearing that that's crazy imagine about well what about the people that are violent
[02:01:30] that yeah what about that because like I feel like that's kind of that that's the one that's
[02:01:34] really bad and this is remember what I said before about how these people don't understand
[02:01:41] things until it happens to them this is the reason why I kept saying like you know I would put all
[02:01:47] these I would I would find the gated communities that had the highest rates of voting for bringing in
[02:01:53] migrants and I would raise money and buy houses in their communities and I would put 10 migrants
[02:02:00] with machetes in their fucking houses I would and I'd say like there it is and none of them have a
[02:02:05] job have fun and you know what outside do I put cameras on all the street lights so people could
[02:02:13] could watch it happen.
[02:02:15] No?
[02:02:17] That's just me.
[02:02:21] They are being quite abusive to people there.
[02:02:25] That's fine.
[02:02:27] None of this is okay. None of it is good for our country.
[02:02:31] None of this is how we get out of this mess.
[02:02:34] And I would really implore people to look very closely at Rupert Lowe,
[02:02:37] ask the Harrison, Charlie Downs and Harrison Pitt and ask themselves if these people are
[02:02:43] really the people that they want to save this country.
[02:02:49] They're not.
[02:02:50] Yes.
[02:02:51] Not.
[02:02:52] Okay, so you don't actually want people to think about this.
[02:02:55] So you see it like this is it.
[02:02:56] I want you to think for yourself.
[02:02:58] No, they're not.
[02:02:59] This is not the right way to think about it.
[02:03:01] You don't want people to think for themselves at all.
[02:03:03] Of course not.
[02:03:05] They don't care about survivors, they don't care about women, they don't care about girls,
[02:03:13] they care about using survivors in order to get ahead.
[02:03:17] And yeah, I'm going to laugh at them for that because it's disgusting, contemptible and
[02:03:21] laughable.
[02:03:22] Oh wow, that's too bad.
[02:03:23] You can go and, you know, like, again, begging for pity, begging for attention, oh my god,
[02:03:30] they're being anti-semitic.
[02:03:31] And then you also, only some accounts can reply.
[02:03:35] The irony is that I was supposed to go to Liverpool today and set up a support group
[02:03:38] for grooming gang survivors, but I had to cancel to spend the day on the phone with
[02:03:41] the police.
[02:03:42] Oh, man, that's too bad.
[02:03:44] Oh, geez.
[02:03:46] This is it.
[02:03:47] And nothing would have happened if she herself, yeah, didn't decide to go on the internet
[02:03:50] and laugh about the inquiry.
[02:03:51] Yeah, she didn't.
[02:03:53] People say that thing for yourself.
[02:03:54] Don't want you to think that.
[02:03:55] They just want you to agree with their position, exactly.
[02:03:57] And it's really crazy.
[02:03:59] So why do you try and partake in the project that she says was only done to gain political
[02:04:03] favor?
[02:04:04] It's because, again, I don't really care what many people like to say.
[02:04:08] I'm glad that she's getting so much hate and pushback.
[02:04:10] I think she deserves it.
[02:04:11] I think that more people like this do deserve it, because, again, they will only stop behaving
[02:04:20] this way when they become targets.
[02:04:23] And I think that they're making themselves targets, too.
[02:04:26] And you have to keep in mind the evil that these people truly are.
[02:04:31] going around and they're fucking and they're basically they're telling people that this
[02:04:37] stuff isn't happening. They're literally trying to run cover for rape gangs. Like there's
[02:04:42] not like a, oh my god, it's not fair to do this to somebody who cares what the fuck happens
[02:04:47] to somebody like that. I certainly don't. And I don't think anybody else does either.
[02:04:51] And she knows that the amount of like moral posturing, let me look at the activity. So
[02:04:56] These are the replies, let's see this.
[02:04:58] Your organization charges survivors a fee to join.
[02:05:12] Oh my God.
[02:05:16] Wow.
[02:05:18] Okay, I'll be right back, give me a second.
[02:05:20] I told you, well I didn't really believe it,
[02:05:22] it was so ridiculous, give me a second.
[02:05:25] He's bathroom.
[02:06:25] Okay, give me a minute, sorry about that, I had to get myself a drink for later, not
[02:06:52] right now. Okay, skaters make ah, that's crazy bro charging people money to be part of your
[02:07:03] survivors group. Oh man. Yeah, well maybe that's the reason why she's mad about the report is
[02:07:09] they're cutting into our money. Maybe that's it. I've got to link to the membership page
[02:07:13] for a survivors group. Yeah, can somebody send that to a mod and I can look at it because
[02:07:18] I would like to see this. I would. Oh my god. Who does that? That's insane.
[02:07:27] Sorry about that. My mic was... Sorry, sorry, sorry. I didn't realize the mic was farther away.
[02:07:32] I was thinking about fixing my hair and it didn't really work very well, but I did the best I could.
[02:07:38] And so anyway, I wasn't laughing at rape gang survivors. Oh my god. This is like a photo from
[02:07:46] the Great Depression. It's in her bio. Let me see if I can pull it up. Donna Rachel.
[02:08:00] British Jew, the survivors.org.uk. Okay, join us. Let me see what happens if I click that.
[02:08:10] for survivors. Survivor membership is $5. Choose your membership tier so you can be a survivor
[02:08:21] or a supporter. Oh my god. Well, you know, it's just on their website. Yeah, that was pretty easy
[02:08:38] to find. I thought this was going to be like some kind of random thing that was off on another place
[02:08:45] or something like that. Do they charge the, I don't know if they do or not. Is there a third
[02:08:50] option? No, it seems like there's not. And that's it. Let me go back over here. Can I find it?
[02:08:56] Is there any more of this that's worth looking at? And then, and it was told not to make a
[02:09:01] because it's threatened. What is this you haven't spoken to him. I've been told that Ben actually was
[02:09:09] told quite clearly that he would be in danger if he attended Michaelville. He was threatened.
[02:09:17] I'm not a tweet that I saw the other day, but I was still a UK member, Alissa Porter.
[02:09:22] Oh my God, this guy might be in danger. Think about all the British people that live there
[02:09:28] that are in danger right now
[02:09:31] think about that
[02:09:32] all know they're gonna be in danger that's terrible
[02:09:36] quote retweets let me look and see the other ones i was a wrapping a rape
[02:09:39] games arriving
[02:09:40] for survivors excuse me
[02:09:42] uh... there's nothing you could possibly ever say to take back what you
[02:09:44] did it wasn't just a laugh we saw through you we saw who you are you can't
[02:09:47] hide the face of evil once it's revealed
[02:09:50] and it was truly terrifying i wasn't laughing at rape gang survivors yes you
[02:09:54] were you vile bitch
[02:09:56] I am so happy to see people like this. Oh, and there it is. When we win, do not forget
[02:10:01] that these people want you broke dead, your kids raped and brainwashed, and they think
[02:10:05] it's funny. Exactly. I wish that more people thought like that. I do. Like, I feel like
[02:10:11] nobody's willing to think like this. Nobody's willing to act like this, and they're not
[02:10:15] willing to act on it. They're such pussies. She's so good. Yes, total care and obliteration.
[02:10:21] And I like the sound of that.
[02:10:22] That sounds like a great idea.
[02:10:24] And yeah.
[02:10:26] And she's one of the few, I guess so.
[02:10:29] Asmone, pull me up.
[02:10:30] I say it again, you're gonna get programmed.
[02:10:32] So here comes the inevitable victim act
[02:10:34] after being fined down.
[02:10:35] Yeah, what is this here?
[02:10:36] If I can find it, writes Jew in her bio,
[02:10:38] writes, yeah, makes a video laughing
[02:10:40] at the Rape Gang Inquiry, Rupert Lowe did this.
[02:10:42] Exactly.
[02:10:43] No, you disgusting freak.
[02:10:46] You're the best example of removing women's rights.
[02:10:51] Yeah, okay, I'm gonna look at a couple more things and then we've really got to get into the inquiry, right?
[02:10:55] We do. I said I was gonna do it. I've already kind of delayed a little bit too long
[02:10:59] So let me just go through and make sure I look at these other ones
[02:11:02] but yes, obviously only some accounts can reply and
[02:11:05] That's the reason why I'm going to talk about it and keep in mind that once people see you bleed
[02:11:11] They know what they're doing is working
[02:11:14] Keep that in mind
[02:11:16] It's always good to know it's working
[02:11:18] Great. Great, guys. Elon tweeted about you today. Did he really? Let me see what he said. I'm not
[02:11:28] sure about that. I have no idea. Let me see if I can pull these up. Oh, by the way, little bonus
[02:11:33] event. Alleged ringleader behind drone attack plot for the White House UFC event was ID'd as an illegal
[02:11:38] immigrant. Well, wow. No way. That's amazing. Who could have guessed that? And
[02:11:48] somebody said that I was going to look at something. I totally forgot, like,
[02:11:51] even what it was. They mentioned something. What was I going to look at?
[02:11:54] Sorry, I immediately already got distracted. I totally forgot what I was
[02:11:59] going to say. Elon's tweet. Right. Okay. Let me see if you said something. Where'd it go?
[02:12:08] And this is some other bullshit. I mean, yeah, exactly the cut
[02:12:16] I'm not seeing it right now
[02:12:20] I'm still scrolling
[02:12:27] It was 18 hours ago, is that right?
[02:12:30] Maybe I scrolled past it or something. I have no idea. Let me he missed it
[02:12:35] Okay, let me see if I can I'm just gonna do a little bit more slowly. Okay
[02:12:38] I'll be a good boy. I'll do a little bit more slowly. Usually I just scan and I'm able to find things
[02:12:44] But maybe it's something that was like made. Oh
[02:12:47] Big announcement. Oh, this is it. Oh, wow, it's got 152,000 likes. Holy shit. Yeah, somebody did tell me about this
[02:12:53] Okay, yeah, so I want to be honest like I wasn't sure if I was gonna do the the big the rape gang inquiry thing today
[02:13:01] And then I I ended my stream and I looked on Twitter and I saw this post this post has 54,000 likes
[02:13:09] So now it's like okay. Well now you have to do it. Okay, like I was like, ah, you know, maybe I'll do it
[02:13:16] Maybe I'll not do it, but then I saw that now. I was like, okay. Well now I'm like required. It's necessary
[02:13:22] Okay, 30 million views. That's a lot of people seeing it. Okay pressures on so yeah
[02:13:27] i'll i'll get it locked in just a few minutes and we'll get started it's
[02:13:31] going to be quite an endeavor by the way it will be very much an endeavor
[02:13:35] so uh... and and again i i i take it on willingly and i'm i'm glad to do it i
[02:13:39] think it's going to be a good thing
[02:13:41] and uh... a lot of reading for me to it is to be crazy amount of crazy amount of
[02:13:44] reading but that's okay
[02:13:45] he just said live on stream here we're reading the entire e you are sorry u k
[02:13:49] uh... rate gang inquiry report word for word on stream
[02:13:52] with this huge audience of three point four million twitch followers this is
[02:13:55] going to reach a massive number of people
[02:13:57] no more relying on mainstream media again
[02:13:59] two minutes on switch tomorrow this one's important well i appreciate it
[02:14:02] and thanks a lot yeah thank you very much
[02:14:05] and uh... yeah holy shit great basketball measure fighting against the
[02:14:08] establishment of a door
[02:14:09] sex audiences way bigger than that also true so true so true
[02:14:13] uh... his youtube channel is more than five of four point five nine followers
[02:14:17] uh... million followers
[02:14:18] so uh... my
[02:14:20] uh... the like there there have been some months on youtube if you can't so
[02:14:23] of our fan channels and everything.
[02:14:25] And like third party channels,
[02:14:27] we get like basically a billion views
[02:14:29] just on YouTube a month.
[02:14:31] Like we have an, like there are some short channels
[02:14:34] that just post stuff of me.
[02:14:35] I don't know what they did this month,
[02:14:36] but I know like last month and a month before
[02:14:38] it was like 300 million views on like each one of them.
[02:14:41] It's fucking insane.
[02:14:42] There's a huge amount of people that are watching.
[02:14:49] That's awesome.
[02:14:50] Yeah, it is.
[02:14:51] There's no time seeing people glaze your numbers
[02:14:53] Well, I don't really think about it or talk about it a lot. I don't I don't really find it to be like I
[02:14:58] I had to be kind of you know like improper, right?
[02:15:01] It's not really what you're supposed to do, but you know, it's true this treatment on blue sky exactly
[02:15:07] Why are Brit leaders so silent? You should never hold it against the people in Britain and in the UK and in the EU at large
[02:15:15] For not speaking out against this the reason why is that they could be held accountable legally?
[02:15:20] legally, and that's why I'm doing it instead. I have no problem doing it. The thing is that
[02:15:25] the EU and the UK, Germany, France, all these countries, Spain, we have a shared cultural
[02:15:34] heritage. We do with these cultures. This is all of Western civilization. And what happens
[02:15:40] and what, and Ellen Britton is an Ellen America. We do not want to have any of these countries
[02:15:46] have anything bad happen. Same as Australia, Italy, yep. I'm not leaving anybody out.
[02:15:51] I'm just not naming everybody. That's all. So yes, obviously. And so this is the reason
[02:15:57] why it matters. And normalizing it over there normalizes it over here. And so that's the
[02:16:02] reason why somehow as many gold a World of Warcraft gamer burrow became one of the most
[02:16:07] important political figures online. I love how it drives the refards crazy. Well, I don't
[02:16:11] know about the most important. I just talk about stuff really. That's about it to me.
[02:16:15] I don't think it's that crazy at all.
[02:16:17] But those who enabled this, what is this here?
[02:16:19] Can I find it?
[02:16:20] I don't know if I wanna scroll down for that,
[02:16:22] for obvious reasons.
[02:16:23] But yeah, this tip, and also Elon is right about this.
[02:16:28] This report is just the tip of the enormous
[02:16:29] iceberg of evil, because keep in mind that
[02:16:33] this is what they were able to discover
[02:16:35] without having the, this is also crazy to say.
[02:16:38] Let me see if I can pull it up.
[02:16:40] This is also like without having the resources
[02:16:43] to look into the data on the back end, right?
[02:16:46] And what is this?
[02:16:47] Oh yeah, okay, we'll watch this really quickly.
[02:16:50] But yeah, anyway, this is,
[02:16:52] that kind of understands the enormity of the scandal.
[02:16:53] We don't even know the true scale.
[02:16:55] Yeah, this is definitely infinitely worse than Epstein.
[02:16:57] Yeah, it obviously is.
[02:16:58] I think it's pretty clear that's true.
[02:17:00] But let me scroll down and look at some of these other ones.
[02:17:03] These rape gang findings are the Dwarf-thows
[02:17:06] of Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
[02:17:07] Yes, exactly.
[02:17:08] And this is the reason why, from now on,
[02:17:11] Anybody who's ever crying about Jeffrey Epstein,
[02:17:14] if they didn't draw attention to this rape gang scandal,
[02:17:17] I don't wanna hear anything about Jeffrey Epstein.
[02:17:20] I don't wanna hear anything about Donald Trump.
[02:17:22] If you're calling any of our elites
[02:17:24] or anybody that's running our government pedophiles,
[02:17:27] like these are the same people that are defending Iran,
[02:17:29] when Iran is allowing you to have child marriage,
[02:17:32] like they have literally no principles,
[02:17:34] never allow them to try to like morally ram
[02:17:38] their bullshit down your throat.
[02:17:40] never let it happen
[02:17:42] absolutely not
[02:17:44] that's a blunt fucking truth yeah exactly right it definitely is
[02:17:48] and uh... this is not the political point is your morals they don't
[02:17:52] and so anyway let me see here
[02:17:55] and i can't ban mark collett i'd i don't know really what this is this is
[02:17:58] something different
[02:17:59] and uh... children rape in the u k yeah it's just it's very very weird right so
[02:18:04] this is something five two hundred fifty thousand women are being raped by
[02:18:08] by Muslim, but it's okay.
[02:18:10] Again, an utterly ridiculous thing.
[02:18:12] Oh, my God.
[02:18:13] Upsetly ridiculous thing.
[02:18:15] As I've said repeatedly, the vast majority of sexual crime
[02:18:18] against women in the UK, in Parliament,
[02:18:21] donkeys the vast majority of sexual crime against women
[02:18:25] in my country is committed by white men.
[02:18:28] Oh, here we go.
[02:18:29] You've got per capita.
[02:18:30] I have had a fair comparison.
[02:18:32] It's disproportionately committed by Muslims against white Christian
[02:18:36] was raised to be a high-level
[02:18:39] five day on bro he let him know
[02:18:42] all my god one absolute shat
[02:18:44] pierce is such a liar i know
[02:18:47] and uh... it's very very annoying to see that happen and uh... pierce is a full
[02:18:51] on cock i mean many thousands and it is so he made this week i guess is this is
[02:18:54] today yeah
[02:18:56] uh... many thousands of young girls were raped and abused are grooming game
[02:18:59] scandal but the two hundred fifty thousand victims to this take was
[02:19:02] invented and according to this independent report massively exaggerated
[02:19:06] well i don't think it's massively exaggerated you go in these areas like
[02:19:09] where they
[02:19:10] i mean they're coming from countries where they do this all the time like it's
[02:19:13] pretty simple this is what's going to happen
[02:19:15] like i mean again
[02:19:16] you you have to understand that
[02:19:19] you can't rely on and you can't trust any form of media
[02:19:24] that isn't controlled by somebody who's normal
[02:19:28] like any form of mainstream media
[02:19:30] any of these independent like i think that the best example of this is the a c l u
[02:19:35] the a c l u used to be a necessary organization inside of america
[02:19:40] it's called the american civil liberties union
[02:19:42] and uh... you know i donated to the a c l u in like two thousand and ten right
[02:19:47] like we're talking a very long time ago
[02:19:49] so i've been a big supporter of theirs because they actually cared about
[02:19:53] freedom of speech
[02:19:54] they would go and protect people's rights to for example march as the k k k
[02:19:58] they would go out there and protect people's rights for example to
[02:20:02] go out and make political speeches
[02:20:04] that were not necessarily liked by a lot of people but it's been co-opted by
[02:20:09] activists so you have to understand that all these institutions have been
[02:20:13] corrupted by people
[02:20:14] that are using them to subvert you
[02:20:16] so anyway uh... no i'm not interested in reading your independent report right
[02:20:21] of course not
[02:20:22] and uh... this is why crime stats are still off yet exactly and all you need
[02:20:26] to do by the way
[02:20:27] is look at some of the different listings of people that are you know like
[02:20:30] this many white or black for example in america
[02:20:33] and you'll see that there are constantly people that are obviously not white
[02:20:37] they're being labeled as white why is that happening
[02:20:39] why is it that you don't have the same amount of people that are accidentally
[02:20:42] labeled as black
[02:20:44] because like you logically would be able to just simply
[02:20:47] i mean you could have an a i do this or you could just simply have it
[02:20:50] be no entry right
[02:20:52] but it's defaulted to white because
[02:20:55] it makes it easier to skew statistics so the real numbers
[02:20:59] are a lot worse. Maybe it's not an accident. It's not an accident. Of course it's not.
[02:21:08] In Canada, is the only record the race of the victim? Yeah. I mean, so I'm not interested
[02:21:13] in like, you know, selective statistics, right? I have no idea and no interest in that. There
[02:21:18] never used to be enough for their own categories before. Yeah, I guess so. So even the nice,
[02:21:22] they have a form where they can only check white. I don't know about that, but I haven't
[02:21:25] about that. Anyway, okay. Gentlemen, this has been a very long time coming. I think that
[02:21:39] there has been a huge issue. It's time. It's time. It's time. We're going to go through
[02:21:43] all of it. So there has been a huge concern for many years now about the rape gangs in
[02:21:51] the UK. This is not something that's exclusive to the UK, but it seems like it is the worst
[02:21:56] there, or at least that's the perception. And for many years, we were told that this
[02:22:01] wasn't happening, or if it was happening, it was happening with everybody, and there's
[02:22:07] nothing you can do about it, or there's no reason to draw a correlation. And information,
[02:22:14] statistics, discussing this has been shut down completely by the media.
[02:22:19] Recently, Rupert Lowe, the leader of the Restore Britain Party, came out and he basically
[02:22:27] we they commissioned, I was gonna say we, I'm not really involved, but they commissioned
[02:22:33] a basically report on figuring out at least the tip of the iceberg of how bad this stuff
[02:22:40] really is.
[02:22:42] And so this is a very long report, it's extremely in depth and I'm gonna go through the entire
[02:22:48] thing on my stream. I have a little bit of dyslexia. I'm going to say things the wrong
[02:22:56] way. Get used to it. That's what's going to happen. I think this is that important and
[02:23:05] I feel like it's, you know, it's like if I'm streaming and I'm talking about this stuff
[02:23:09] all the time and I don't use my platform to do something like this, what was it all for?
[02:23:17] I even do this. Why even do this? So that's the reason. Anyway, no stupid comments. I'm
[02:23:23] sure I'll have a few stupid comments. It's just, it's inevitable. You're gonna have to
[02:23:26] get used to it. Okay, Red Gang Inquiry Report, and this was released by the way. It was released
[02:23:32] three days, two days ago, excuse me, to 42 million views so far, just on this post alone.
[02:23:40] So you could assume that over 50 million people probably are aware of and know about this.
[02:23:47] So these are the contents, these are the acknowledgments.
[02:23:49] Alright, so let me go back.
[02:23:51] I'm going to make sure I have everything lined up here and that way you guys can read
[02:23:55] it all and I'm going to move my camera over.
[02:23:58] I think that should be good.
[02:24:00] And you know, there's a little bit of dead space, so we're just going to kind of keep
[02:24:03] it here.
[02:24:04] I think that should be good.
[02:24:05] How's this, guys?
[02:24:06] i think this is good isn't it
[02:24:12] smaller camera i did i i i i refrained that this is good alright great
[02:24:17] it's a great first
[02:24:27] acknowledgments
[02:24:29] every witness who volunteered your testimony whether survivor parent was
[02:24:32] a lower politician or expert showed courage that made this inquiry possible. Their contributions
[02:24:38] have ensured that the truth is now a matter of permanent public record. Rupert Lowe's
[02:24:43] MP energy and commitment ensured that the Rape Gang inquiry took place. He has been
[02:24:48] unwavering in his devotion to make sure that this rotting stain on our company's history
[02:24:53] has remained firmly in the public eye. Deep gratitude is extended to the entire inquiry
[02:24:59] team, led by Sammy Woodhouse, Nat Inderby Shinton, Marlon West, Deborah Sudbury, and
[02:25:06] Julie Ballin, who worked tirelessly to bring the evidence together to support every survivor
[02:25:10] who came forward.
[02:25:12] A special thank you is owed to MP's Esther McVeigh, Timothy Nick Timothy, I was going
[02:25:17] to say Timothy McVeigh, Carla Lockhart, for taking the time to sit on the inquiry panel.
[02:25:22] Dr. Mark Dury has been extremely generous in enriching the report that follows with
[02:25:26] his expert knowledge.
[02:25:27] wait a minute guys, I thought there were no experts.
[02:25:30] So, and we are grateful to Charlie Downs,
[02:25:34] Joshua Firm, Harrison Pitt,
[02:25:35] Graham Smith for their editorial oversight and council.
[02:25:39] And last but not least,
[02:25:41] we thank the untold thousands across Britain
[02:25:43] who made all of this possible
[02:25:45] by donating to ensure that this inquiry could take place.
[02:25:49] This was the equivalent of,
[02:25:51] and basically the result of literally,
[02:25:54] probably hundreds of thousands of people coming together
[02:25:57] and asking for this to happen
[02:26:01] and i want to say obviously people get subs or anything don't feel like you
[02:26:04] have to get any subset rather you guys do
[02:26:06] you know vote in a certain way i need no money i'm completely self-funded i've
[02:26:10] always been self-funded
[02:26:11] i am a ridiculously rich and that you don't need to ever support me
[02:26:16] you can support these parties in these people directly and your money would be
[02:26:19] better spent doing that than giving it to me i appreciate it i appreciate the
[02:26:23] primes and everything else
[02:26:25] never forget that
[02:26:27] never forget that i'm totally fine and i do this as a public service
[02:26:31] i i i'm in it for the love of the game
[02:26:34] and anyway forward
[02:26:35] britain doesn't have a racism problem it has an immigration problem
[02:26:39] as is the case with many decent hard work in britain's this is by rupert low
[02:26:44] i was unaware of the sheer scale of the evil that has been continued and it
[02:26:48] continues to be perpetuated by chiefly pakistani muslim men against vulnerable
[02:26:53] young white women and girls in communities up and down our country.
[02:26:57] But a single court transcript from one horrific case amplified by Elon Musk early last year
[02:27:03] set in motion along overdue national reckoning on the matter that inspired over 20,000 British
[02:27:09] patriots to help fund our rape gang inquiry.
[02:27:13] What follows as a comprehensive report on its findings is essential that all related
[02:27:18] court documents are securely preserved, both for legal and for historical reasons.
[02:27:23] I'm grateful for everyone who is on the team who has contributed to exposing this demonic
[02:27:27] chapter in Britain's history, a combination of paralyzing fear of racism, accusations,
[02:27:34] and the scramble for votes from imported foreign subcultures.
[02:27:41] Imported foreign subcultures meant that the pure evil was allowed to metastasize, nor
[02:27:47] is the horrendous ordeal over. The root cause was immigration, beginning with the British
[02:27:53] Nationality Act of 1948 and escalating under Tony Blair from 1997 onwards. Believing proud nations
[02:28:02] to be responsible for the mid-20th century destruction of Europe are post-war leaders
[02:28:07] embraced diversity and multiculturalism. This is what I was telling you guys about how they
[02:28:11] mind-fucked everybody because of Hitler and the Nazis. Hitler and the Nazis were bad,
[02:28:16] but that doesn't mean that wanting to preserve your culture is also bad.
[02:28:20] And the problem is that they threw the baby out with the bathwater
[02:28:23] and imposed a new form of original sin that is exclusively applied to white Europeans.
[02:28:30] It's ridiculous. And white westerners, I think that's not true because Americans,
[02:28:35] the same thing happened. And so that's the big problem. The report establishes beyond
[02:28:40] any doubt that this is an open society. This open society obsession has in fact enabled untold
[02:28:46] barbarism on its own. Oil and water do not mix, and cultural differences going back centuries
[02:28:53] are the genesis of this problem. And keep in mind with these cultural differences,
[02:28:57] in Pakistan if they had done these rapes, they would have been fucking killed.
[02:29:02] So there's a reason why they left Pakistan. There's a reason why they left these other
[02:29:06] countries. It's because they'd be killed for doing that over there. And obviously I'm not
[02:29:10] saying these countries are great and just, but like there's a reason why they're coming over to
[02:29:14] Britain and it's even worse. They do that. Recently, they killed three of them, but anyway,
[02:29:22] I urge all, I'm not saying Pakistan's a great place, I'm not saying that. I'm just making
[02:29:25] sure that people understand that we are now worse than Pakistan. Pakistan is even doing
[02:29:31] a better job dealing with this than we are. That's how bad it is. I urge all Britons to
[02:29:36] read this report in full. Lettons need to be learned and prosecutions need to follow
[02:29:40] for the appalling cowardice of those responsible for refusing to resist such
[02:29:44] horrors. And I think that's a huge component too. It's not enough that you
[02:29:48] put the rapists in jail. The enablers have to go to jail or worse because they
[02:29:52] are the ones that not only did they act in their best interest like all the
[02:29:56] invaders did, but they on top of that did it and they betrayed their own
[02:30:00] countrymen and they betrayed their own people and their own country
[02:30:05] entirely and their position too. They're elected and put in a position to help
[02:30:09] the population, and they used it to rape the population, I don't think that you can
[02:30:13] forgive that.
[02:30:14] I don't.
[02:30:15] I don't think that there's a way.
[02:30:16] There's not a prison sentence, I think, that forgives that.
[02:30:19] There's only one sentence, I think, that forgives that, and that's the death penalty.
[02:30:22] That's what I would do.
[02:30:24] And bring back the guillotines, bring back the axes, you know, the executioners.
[02:30:29] That's how you need to handle these people.
[02:30:31] And anyway, let's keep going.
[02:30:32] So we can't have too many asides, okay?
[02:30:34] It's going to be a long stream, so just get used to it.
[02:30:36] Strap the fuck in.
[02:30:38] And so the strongest possible penalties up to and including death exactly, that is exactly
[02:30:44] what I was saying, must also be sought for yet these to be properly punished and indeed
[02:30:48] punished for all their vile, unspeakable crimes.
[02:30:52] The world is a dangerous place to live, not because of people who are evil, but because
[02:30:56] of people who don't do anything about it.
[02:31:00] Man is the cruelest animal.
[02:31:02] Oh, man.
[02:31:04] Albert Einstein in nature, man.
[02:31:07] that. Okay. I like the sound of that. And by the way, I say this every day. I say it
[02:31:16] every day. He's right. Absolutely so true. Introduction. The Red Game, so this is this
[02:31:21] is introducing the what we're going to be talking about. The Red Game, in Korea, is
[02:31:24] now concluded its first phase of work is established to examine one of the most horrendous scandals
[02:31:28] in the long history of our country. The systematic targeting of vulnerable girls overwhelmingly
[02:31:33] white British, by predominantly Pakistani Muslim gangs across towns and cities up and
[02:31:38] down the nation. The evidence presented throughout the hearings confirmed with a long been known
[02:31:42] but repeatedly denied by many in the political class. The inquiry welcomed girls, boys, men,
[02:31:48] and women of all races and religions to testify their experiences to gain a complete picture
[02:31:53] of the rape gang phenomenon. The Casey report of 2025 stated that disproportionate numbers of men
[02:31:58] from asian ethnic backgrounds i'm sure they're coming from from japan
[02:32:03] i'm sure they're talking about the japanese and the koreans
[02:32:06] that must be it
[02:32:07] uh... asian ethnic backgrounds were among the suspects for group-based child
[02:32:12] sex-boy to uh... exploitation
[02:32:14] uh... bernice casey quoted local report showing that a significant proportion of
[02:32:18] those convicted
[02:32:19] were of pakistani and or muslim heritage the crimes stretch back generations
[02:32:25] and this is again something that he said manifested nineteen forty eight
[02:32:28] and then it was accelerated in nineteen ninety seven that was in you know
[02:32:32] earlier
[02:32:33] the rate gang inquiry was necessary because of the state and its intuitions
[02:32:37] have failed catastrophically over the decades
[02:32:39] and uh... what is this here can i find it
[02:32:41] uh...
[02:32:43] police social services schools the n h s licensing authorities and governments
[02:32:47] have allowed these gains to operate within punitive
[02:32:49] and i think that's the main issue to is that not only have they allowed this to
[02:32:53] happen
[02:32:54] but they knew it was happening and they just didn't want to look into it
[02:32:57] there was a demonstrable lack of political will to confront them because
[02:33:01] they wanted the votes
[02:33:03] that's the reason why nobody would call the sound
[02:33:05] it wasn't even because they were evil it's because they were greedy
[02:33:09] uh... the labor party but it's both don't don't get it don't get me wrong
[02:33:13] the labor party initially refused a public inquiry altogether only on
[02:33:16] the on the real interesting
[02:33:18] under considerable pressure
[02:33:20] it will be many years before this inquiry is complete and there's no
[02:33:23] no guarantee that it will adequately address the politically sensitive, ethno-religious
[02:33:26] nature of this phenomenon, despite now pushing for an inquiry in opposition when the government
[02:33:32] and the Conservative Party did very little.
[02:33:34] The rape gang inquiry was survivor-led, meaning that every day on the panel sat with Sammy
[02:33:39] Woodhouse, a survivor-turned-activist herself, alongside a variety of experts, attended whatever
[02:33:45] their specialist-subject format formed and the focus of our efforts to get to the truth.
[02:33:50] examined distinct areas of the scandal in turn so that a maximally full picture
[02:33:54] could be established. Parents and carers described their experiences, instances
[02:33:59] of pregnancy, abortion, and children born of rape were laid bare. Whistleblowers
[02:34:05] who had previously ignored and gave evidence, who had previously been
[02:34:09] ignored, gave evidence. Policing and justice failures were documented.
[02:34:13] Social care, NHS, National Health Services, that's in Britain, that's their
[02:34:17] health care service, national health services, including, I think that's what it's called,
[02:34:23] right, including sexual health and mental health. Because imagine, I bet getting raked
[02:34:27] would fuck with your head, right? Imagine that. Education, taxi licensing, demographic
[02:34:32] trends, cultural and social issues, and ideological obstructions to justice were all scrutinized
[02:34:38] without restriction. Nothing was off the table. Misguided political correctness and cultural
[02:34:44] sensitivities played no part in the proceedings. The promise made to every donor was honored
[02:34:50] and full. The truth was pursued and justice was our only objective. Survivors were finally
[02:34:55] given the platform that they had been denied for so long, and were central to the inquiry.
[02:35:00] The full scale and nature of the crimes can now be placed on the public record. The true
[02:35:04] horror of what took place is no longer hidden. Although the inquiry lacks statutory powers
[02:35:10] and this is a huge component. And that's why Elon said that this is the tip of the iceberg.
[02:35:15] It's because the real problems and the real extent of this can only be seen from the internal
[02:35:22] documentation that they will not reveal to the public. And so this is the this is the
[02:35:28] lowest of the lowball that it could possibly be. Although it lacks statutory powers, the response
[02:35:35] was overwhelming. Politicians, whistleblowers, experts, family members, and many others came
[02:35:38] forward, those in a few prominent positions who declined to give their evidence did so
[02:35:42] knowing their refusal would be noted.
[02:35:45] This report sets out the findings and makes clear recommendations for how the problem
[02:35:49] of rape gangs can be eradicated.
[02:35:51] The country now knows the full truth.
[02:35:53] The country has been given the basis for justice.
[02:35:56] The country has the roadmap to ensure these crimes never happen again.
[02:36:02] Well, well, well.
[02:36:05] Oh boy.
[02:36:12] Do they not have Freedom of Information Act, as according to it?
[02:36:14] Well, it doesn't matter whether they have it or not, because it just simply wouldn't
[02:36:17] be given.
[02:36:19] I think that you're very, very strongly underestimating the evil works that are at play here.
[02:36:25] The executive summary.
[02:36:26] So this is basically what the overarching thing is.
[02:36:30] The Rape Game Inquiry examined the systematic targeting of vulnerable girls over one way
[02:36:34] by British, by predominant Pakistani Muslim gangs
[02:36:36] across the towns and cities across the United Kingdom.
[02:36:38] The evidence put to the inquiry confirms
[02:36:40] that the scandal constitutes one of the most horrendous
[02:36:41] failures in the history of the country.
[02:36:44] Organized networks of perpetrators
[02:36:46] built coordinated operations that transported victims
[02:36:49] between locations, supplied them with drugs, alcohol,
[02:36:53] and recorded abuse for distribution and blackmail,
[02:36:57] and passed girls between multiple adult men.
[02:37:00] These crimes have been committed for decades
[02:37:02] since the 1950s by Pakistanis in particular
[02:37:05] and have affected every region in our nation.
[02:37:08] And beyond that, it's all across Europe.
[02:37:11] So this is, and keep in mind,
[02:37:13] we haven't even started.
[02:37:15] This is just the beginning.
[02:37:16] We're on page eight of 219.
[02:37:19] So lock the fuck in.
[02:37:21] We're gonna be here for a while.
[02:37:22] So the scale of these crimes committed is staggering.
[02:37:25] It was previously established that at the very least,
[02:37:29] 250,000 white young girls were subjected
[02:37:32] repeated rape, gang rape, trafficking, torture, pregnancy, forced Islamic conversion, and lifelong
[02:37:39] trauma. The true number is probably higher. The perpetrators bear primary responsibility,
[02:37:44] yet the institutional failure has enabled them, excuse me, for decades must also be confronted.
[02:37:51] In court records and official, in my opinion, the institutions are the main problem. Are
[02:37:57] you going to go after the cookies or the cookie factory? Obviously the answer is both, but
[02:38:01] focus on the cookie factory first. That's the way I see it. The court records in the
[02:38:05] official inquiries around 87% of those convicted in this group-based child sexual exploitation
[02:38:13] cases bore distinctively Muslim names. The vast majority of men involved in these gangs
[02:38:18] were not convicted. Dr. Tash Harji and his mom with the Oxford Islamic congregation believes
[02:38:24] the true proportion of gang members who are Muslims to be around 95 percent.
[02:38:31] This figure far exceeds the Muslim share of the overall United Kingdom population.
[02:38:35] The overwhelming majority of the rate gang networks consisted entirely of men from Muslim
[02:38:40] backgrounds predominantly Pakistani heritage.
[02:38:44] Although smaller groups from Somalia, Iran, Syria, Turkey and other Muslim origins were
[02:38:51] also involved.
[02:38:52] I'm surprised there's not more from Africa, but I guess that's kind of a separate, it's
[02:38:56] a separate branch on the same tree.
[02:38:58] The inquiry heard harrowing testimony from the survivors and their families.
[02:39:02] The method used to groom children typically followed the same process.
[02:39:06] And this is how they got them locked in, right?
[02:39:08] This is what it was.
[02:39:09] The girls as young as 11 were initially befriended by a young Muslim man who treated the young
[02:39:13] child like an adult and would then start providing them with alcohol, drugs and cigarettes.
[02:39:19] After a few months, the girls would then be collected from school gates, care homes and
[02:39:23] streets and taxis.
[02:39:24] So they're literally getting spawn camped at a middle school.
[02:39:27] That's what's happening.
[02:39:28] You have white British girls getting spawn camped at a middle school by predominantly
[02:39:34] Pakistani rapists.
[02:39:35] This is bad.
[02:39:36] Anyway, let's see here if I find the other ones.
[02:39:42] What is the other one?
[02:39:43] Okay.
[02:39:44] Sorry, I was reading something else.
[02:39:45] Yeah, what the actual fuck?
[02:39:46] Not a good thing to do.
[02:39:49] They were taken to houses, flats, restaurants, flats, by the way, are apartments, just in
[02:39:54] case anybody didn't know.
[02:39:56] Restaurants and hotels where they were raped repeatedly by groups of men, tortured, filmed
[02:40:01] for blackmail, and told they were white trash or kfar.
[02:40:05] Kfar are non-Muslim.
[02:40:06] It's actually just super simple.
[02:40:08] It's like their version of Goyim, basically, who merited punishment.
[02:40:12] So basically, they were being told, you are being punished because of your identity.
[02:40:18] We are raping you and recording it and ruining your life and causing you lifelong trauma
[02:40:24] because of your identity, because of your religion on purpose.
[02:40:29] Many people became pregnant, many became pregnant while still children.
[02:40:33] So you have 12-year-olds that are becoming pregnant by this.
[02:40:36] Some miscarried under trauma, others endured coerced abortions.
[02:40:41] Some gave birth to children who were later removed by the state.
[02:40:44] We found that the same unspeakable crimes occurred, and this is where the healthcare
[02:40:48] group also bears responsibility.
[02:40:51] Why didn't the healthcare people ever report this?
[02:40:54] Why didn't they help with this?
[02:40:56] Why didn't they do any of that?
[02:40:57] I don't know why, but for some reason they did.
[02:41:00] And it's awful, but there it is.
[02:41:03] We found that the same unspeakable crimes occurred for at least 149 local authority
[02:41:07] districts, close to 40% of such districts across the United Kingdom.
[02:41:12] page 14 for a full map. Survivors describe daily rapes of red rooms, extreme torture,
[02:41:18] trafficking between cities, and institutional disbelief that compounded their suffering.
[02:41:23] Some girls were even trafficked to the Middle East where they would endure Islamic marriage.
[02:41:28] We talked about that yesterday. You can see here. Why didn't they take DNA samples? Because
[02:41:32] they didn't want the answers. Simple, obviously. What's the answer? The simplest answer is
[02:41:37] probably the correct one. If you're not stupid, you can instantly figure out why these things
[02:41:41] are happening. The demographic and cultural drivers are clear. Perpetrators from Pakistani
[02:41:46] Muslim and other Muslim backgrounds operated under an honor and a shame-based clan code that
[02:41:51] treated non-Muslim girls, especially white working class girls, as property available for sexual
[02:41:59] use. This pattern was reinforced by the eight theological and legal aspects of Islam. They
[02:42:04] include the doctrine of Muslim superiority drawn from chronic perverses that position Muslims at
[02:42:09] at the top with a duty to correct non-believers.
[02:42:12] The gang members' justification for their crimes can be found in the Islamic principles
[02:42:16] of loyalty and disavowal known as the, I can't pronounce that.
[02:42:21] It demands enmity, and that's anger, hostility, aggression, towards non-Muslims, and the superiority
[02:42:28] of men over women.
[02:42:30] Forced marriage combined with the absence of any fixed minimum age of consent.
[02:42:35] This is another good one here, combined with the absence of no of any fixed minimum age
[02:42:40] of consent.
[02:42:48] Means they want to fuck kids.
[02:42:51] That's right.
[02:42:55] These are the same people, by the way, that are talking about how bad our Epstein files
[02:42:59] are.
[02:43:00] Our Epstein files are your marriage records.
[02:43:04] i don't want to hear it
[02:43:05] at least we put them in jail
[02:43:10] crazy to see this
[02:43:13] next thing to all we get through it
[02:43:15] the perception of female sexuality as inherently dangerous a system of sex
[02:43:19] slavery the authority that authorizes sexual relations with non-muslim
[02:43:23] captives
[02:43:23] and religiously sanctioned social hierarchy that subjugates conquered
[02:43:27] non-muslims these aspects at filtered through elements filtered through the
[02:43:32] the clanish immigrant subcultures provided religious justification that enabled the systematic
[02:43:37] rape and even slaughter of white british girls.
[02:43:41] Were britain functioning effectively these girls would have received considerable safe
[02:43:45] protection.
[02:43:46] However, every one of our institutions failed them catastrophically.
[02:43:51] Police forces ignored repeated reports, criminalized victims instead of perpetrators, destroyed
[02:43:56] evidence and that's the reason why they say all the time, oh well let's look at the evidence
[02:44:00] because they know there isn't any because it was destroyed. That's exactly it. And
[02:44:05] allowed known rapists to walk free on bail. Social care services under undermined protective
[02:44:11] parents, placed children in trafficking hubs inside children's homes, closed cases with
[02:44:18] clear, despite clear indicators of exploitation, and retaliated against whistleblowers. The
[02:44:24] NHS recorded genital injuries, multiple sexually transmitted infections, and women as lit-
[02:44:29] Yes, children, excuse me, not women, children, as young as 13,
[02:44:34] pregnancies caused by rape, suicide attempts,
[02:44:38] yet discharged victims back to their abusers.
[02:44:41] Again, they identified rape, suicide attempts,
[02:44:46] and forced pregnancies.
[02:44:48] And then after that, they discharged the victims
[02:44:51] back to their abusers without safeguarding referrals
[02:44:54] or trauma care.
[02:44:56] this is an institutional evil
[02:44:59] this is not something that happened because five assholes from Pakistan did
[02:45:04] something wrong
[02:45:05] the people that are in Britain that run the government
[02:45:09] are the true evil they are the ones and it's the same probably in the other
[02:45:13] countries as well
[02:45:14] Britain is just the example being used today
[02:45:17] and if you think this isn't happening in America you're a fucking idiot
[02:45:21] this is happening here too it's just a little bit different
[02:45:24] Schools observed older men, this is it, schools observed older men collecting girls at the gate,
[02:45:31] heard disclosures of rape on school premises and responded by excluding victims rather than protecting them.
[02:45:41] The schools heard these girls were getting raped and they said, well we can't have that around here.
[02:45:45] That's inconvenient. Let's go ahead and get rid of these people.
[02:45:48] Look at that.
[02:45:50] And then this is yes, this is the rape culture. We all you know, you remember that the big the oh, it's rape culture. Well, here it is
[02:45:58] Taxi licensing authorities renewed permits
[02:46:00] Taxi licensing authorities renewed permits for drivers who form the logistical background of the networks that collapsed in the face of organized
[02:46:08] protests when basic safety measures were perceived or proposed political failure. It's not political failure
[02:46:15] It's political evil failure implies an attempt, but not success
[02:46:20] They were successful. They were successful in enabling all these people to get raped,
[02:46:24] and the thing that they got out of it were these votes.
[02:46:27] It's not them.
[02:46:29] Successful governments, successive governments, lacked the will to confront the ethnic and religious patterns.
[02:46:34] The Labour Party bears the particular responsibility.
[02:46:37] It initially refused the public inquiry and only relented under pressure by ordering process viewed with widespread skepticism.
[02:46:44] labor-dominated councils and mps were briefed on the gangs long ago but later
[02:46:50] denied the knowledge this is when this is for example
[02:46:54] the mayor of london city con
[02:46:57] said that he didn't know anything about this even if he even he'd already been
[02:47:00] briefed on this previously right
[02:47:02] and uh... what page we are we're on page ten
[02:47:05] on page ten you can see it right up there on the top
[02:47:08] so uh... yet there it is
[02:47:10] So the party prioritized electoral reliance on Muslim voting blocks and then blocked or
[02:47:16] watered down inquiries, suppressed ethnicity data, and framed legitimate concerns as far
[02:47:22] right agitation.
[02:47:24] This is the exact thing that I said was happening.
[02:47:26] When finally forced to act, the labor government produced a national inquiry whose tightly drawn
[02:47:31] terms of reference deliberately excluded systematic examination of the demographic, cultural,
[02:47:37] and religious drivers.
[02:47:39] That's the reason why they wanted to be the ones to do it, because they were going to
[02:47:42] cook the books.
[02:47:43] That's exactly it.
[02:47:44] And how do I know that?
[02:47:45] It's because that's already what they did.
[02:47:48] The Conservative Party, while in government, continued with Labour's approach and failed
[02:47:53] to impose mandatory ethnicity recording, so they would not record the ethnicities.
[02:47:57] Well, we can't find out if there's a pattern if we don't record the pattern.
[02:48:01] Well, that's convenient, isn't it?
[02:48:03] That's great.
[02:48:04] And to launch a full statutory inquiry, despite clear evidence from Rotterham and
[02:48:08] elsewhere. Scottish political parties have refused a dedicated inquiry and failed to offer
[02:48:14] offender ethnicity. Political correctness, fear of accusations of racism, and fear of
[02:48:20] losing electoral support from certain demographics have taken precedence over the protection
[02:48:25] of British children. And I think also this is to a degree reductive. British women are
[02:48:30] also victims of this too. They don't just rape and kill adults. They do it to kids,
[02:48:37] they do it to adults too.
[02:48:39] Whistleblowers, parents and survivors who came forward
[02:48:41] showed extraordinary courage,
[02:48:42] despite being met in the past with this belief
[02:48:44] and intimidation, not to mention threats, right?
[02:48:47] Not to mention getting the police on you.
[02:48:50] Isaac was right, of course I was right.
[02:48:51] I mean, obviously this is what's happening.
[02:48:53] Again, if you have over 105 IQ,
[02:48:56] you can immediately identify what's happening
[02:48:58] without even a second of hesitation.
[02:49:00] It's obvious what's happening.
[02:49:01] The perpetrators operated with impunities
[02:49:03] because the state enabled them.
[02:49:05] The evidence now demands immediate and decisive action to eradicate the problem, deliver justice
[02:49:10] for the victims, and to ensure these important crimes are eradicated from our shores.
[02:49:15] We now have a clearer sense of the problem.
[02:49:17] There are a number of measures necessary to resolve them, up to and including considerable
[02:49:22] changes to our criminal justice system, the passage of legislation aimed at targeting
[02:49:27] specifically gang-based CSE, and that's obviously, that's like just basically child exploitation,
[02:49:33] Sexual Exploitation, that's CSA, and a great amount of institutional overhaul.
[02:49:38] I think an institutional reckoning is what you really need, but yeah, this is okay.
[02:49:43] I'm going to reframe this really quick just so I can have, I'm looking at myself on the camera,
[02:49:47] to be honest, and I'm seeing that I'm moving over a little bit more, and I want to make sure it's
[02:49:54] a little bit more so I don't go off the frame. So I'm going to go ahead and just recalibrate this
[02:49:58] real quick. Okay, I think that's better. Yeah, I think that should be a little bit better,
[02:50:03] right guys? And so anyway, hot. It is actually hot in my room, but you know, that's the way
[02:50:07] it is. And so it is one of this. Let me see here. Okay, yeah, our detailed list of recommendations
[02:50:15] includes improved includes improved data recording on ethno religious patterns among offenders,
[02:50:21] far stronger sentencing and a comprehensive deportation effort, institutional accountability
[02:50:26] measures, multi-agency coordination, specialist training, and enhanced safeguarding through
[02:50:32] greater family involvement and closing to various gaps in British law through which
[02:50:37] so many victims fell through.
[02:50:39] Following the publication of this report, we intend to release the full witness testimonies,
[02:50:44] gather additional survivor accounts, identify those responsible in Parliament, and begin
[02:50:49] civil and private legal actions to ensure maximal accountability.
[02:50:59] Now we have the beginning.
[02:51:02] Rape gangs have exploited children systematically across every region of the United Kingdom
[02:51:06] for decades.
[02:51:07] The independent chair of the Center of Excellence for Children's Care and Protection, Alexis
[02:51:11] Jay, has identified the 1970s as the decade where immigrant rape gangs first began tormenting
[02:51:17] the girls of Britain.
[02:51:18] However, the British newspaper archive reveals the first recorded case of a specifically
[02:51:23] Pakistani rape gang dates back to 1955, when four Bradford-based Pakistanis were charged
[02:51:30] for raping a 15-year-old girl from Middlesburg.
[02:51:33] This was soon after former colonial subjects from the subcontinent, such as as much as
[02:51:38] the Caribbean, became eligible to enter the United Kingdom in non-trivial numbers under
[02:51:42] the British Nationality Act of 1948.
[02:51:46] This is, again, more original sin resulting after Hitler, after World War II, because
[02:51:52] World War II ended in 1945.
[02:51:55] This is three years later, and so it only took them six years to start doing this.
[02:52:01] What began as a singular and small-scale instances became systemic and systematic, excuse me,
[02:52:07] and industrial over time.
[02:52:09] These horrific crimes have only escalated in recent decades, especially following Tony
[02:52:13] Blair's 1997 victory and the start of the orchestrated mass immigration. With far greater
[02:52:20] numbers came greater opportunities for abuse. Perpetrators built organized networks that
[02:52:25] transported victims between towns and cities and passed girls between multiple adult men.
[02:52:32] In each of these areas, the same tactics were used. Girls as young as 11 were targeted with
[02:52:38] gifts, alcohol, drugs, and collected in taxis and school gates, care homes and streets and
[02:52:43] taken to houses, flats, restaurants and hotel, and raped repeatedly by groups of men, past
[02:52:49] between perpetrators, trafficked around county lines, and in many cases impregnated or forced
[02:52:54] into abortions.
[02:52:55] I understand that some of these things are a little bit repeated, but we're just going
[02:52:59] to go through everything regardless, so just too bad.
[02:53:02] And I think it's, you know, again, it's structuring, and that's just the way something like this
[02:53:06] would be.
[02:53:07] Most victims endured violence, were filmed for blackmail, or were told they were white trash or kafar who deserved punishment.
[02:53:14] The authorities, at every level, including the police, social services, health services, schools, licensing bodies, and politicians,
[02:53:24] knew the patterns, possessed the intelligence, and still failed to protect the country's children.
[02:53:30] They intentionally didn't do it. They didn't fail to do it. They didn't do it on purpose.
[02:53:36] The evidence establishes that a national security, a national scandal of repeated rape, trafficking,
[02:53:41] torture and pregnancy, forced Islamic conversion and lifelong trauma enabled by institutional
[02:53:46] denial, political calculation, and the fear of the accusation of racism took place over decades.
[02:53:53] The incidents of criminal activities listed in this report are drawn from court records.
[02:53:58] So this isn't just bullshit. These are court records. Official and unofficial inquiries
[02:54:02] across the country and witness testimony provided to the inquiry. They confirmed that this was
[02:54:07] never a series of isolated local failures. It was a coordinated nationwide pattern of organized
[02:54:14] child sexual exploitation that then repeated in town after town, city after city, from the far
[02:54:21] north to the south coast. The same ethnic and religious profile of the perpetrators was documented
[02:54:28] throughout almost all of the witnesses who contacted the inquiry.
[02:54:32] The scale of the rape gang phenomenon is endemic across the entirety of Britain.
[02:54:36] The 250,000 figure originates directly from a statement in the House of Lords by Lord Pearson
[02:54:42] of Rainock in the 14th of May 2019. Do the government accept that if we extrapolate nationally,
[02:54:50] the J report on Rotherham and other reports on Telford and Oxford, there appear to have been
[02:54:56] and upwards of 250,000 white young girls raped in this country, very largely by Muslim men,
[02:55:04] usually several times a day for years. He added that this number is probably an underestimate.
[02:55:12] And I think that it's definitely one. It absolutely is.
[02:55:18] That's pretty bad, right? Holy shit. 250k is a whole big city. That's right.
[02:55:23] and also think about like how many times it happened right because 250 times are the people that it happened to
[02:55:28] but like i bet it's probably this is
[02:55:30] Probably is millions right realistically i would assume so especially whenever you count other groups of people too
[02:55:35] Like it's not just the pakistanis doing this right and remember that weird freak that came up to that girl yesterday and kissed her on the cheek
[02:55:41] Without consent. He didn't even know who she was like uh, yeah
[02:55:44] I have a feeling that there's not only pakistanis doing this
[02:55:47] And the extrapolation has a greater support now due to further data that has been collected
[02:55:54] derived from scaling the patterns documented in major inquiries.
[02:55:58] Rotherham, the J report in 2014, at least 1,400 girls were abused between 1997 and 2013
[02:56:06] with some updated estimates exceeding this.
[02:56:09] Perpetrators were overwhelmingly Pakistani Muslim men.
[02:56:13] The Telford Inquiry, this is in 2022.
[02:56:16] than a thousand children, predominantly girls, over decades again with the same perpetrator
[02:56:22] profile.
[02:56:25] National Footprint.
[02:56:26] The grooming gang model has been confirmed in dozens of towns and cities.
[02:56:30] Our independent inquiry, led by Rupert Lowe, the MP, has heard evidence demonstrating coordinated
[02:56:35] operations extending to all corners of the country, but at least in 149 local authority
[02:56:41] districts.
[02:56:42] 149. Oh my god. This is nuts.
[02:56:52] Prodaminate girls, so they're raping boys too? Yeah, of course.
[02:56:56] I mean, it's important you add that too though, you're right.
[02:57:00] The Rothram-Telford scale is applied across the documented national distribution
[02:57:04] and multiplied to the extreme under reporting factor accepted by the official reviews.
[02:57:08] The total reaches 250,000 as a bare minimum.
[02:57:11] We are far from grasping the full extent of the grooming gang criminality and modern Britain
[02:57:16] It is reasonable to assume that since sexual abuse of all kinds tends to be underreported
[02:57:22] The number of times that a sexual abuser on average commits a sexual crime in America before they're reported is five
[02:57:30] By the way, so this is a well documented statistic
[02:57:33] So if you extrapolate that to you know another Western country, I think it's probably somewhere around there
[02:57:38] So, this is once again, holy shit, yes, that's correct.
[02:57:42] And talk about radicalizing, yes, this is a lot, five yikes, what have we become?
[02:57:47] Apparently a nation that allows its women and children to be raped.
[02:57:50] That's what you've become.
[02:57:52] But hey, at least you're not racist, right?
[02:57:53] That's what really matters.
[02:57:54] So, anyway, let's go back over here.
[02:57:56] The Independent has reported that almost 19,000 children were identified as sexual exploitation
[02:58:03] victims in England in one year alone, despite the reluctance of state actors to name the
[02:58:08] or tackle the problem of the rape gangs.
[02:58:11] After decades of abuse, victims must number in the hundreds of thousands.
[02:58:16] The full scale is not yet known.
[02:58:18] And also keep in mind the second order effect.
[02:58:21] Whenever you're a father and this happens to your daughter, this ruins your life.
[02:58:25] When you're a mother and this happens to your daughter, it ruins your life.
[02:58:28] When this is happening to your sister or your brother, this ruins your life.
[02:58:32] So that's really it. It's important to keep that in mind too.
[02:58:35] The full scale is not yet known.
[02:58:38] Every major review is emphasized and reported statistics severely underestimate reality.
[02:58:43] Are you really reading it?
[02:58:45] Yeah, of course. I said I would.
[02:58:50] I'd kill if this happened to my sister.
[02:58:52] Yeah, and then you'd be the one that was wrong.
[02:58:54] And then the person would be the victim.
[02:58:56] Baroness Casey, National Audit on Group B, Sexual Disploitation and Abuse.
[02:58:59] The audit explicitly states the scale and nature and characteristics of the group base sexual exploitation remain impossible.
[02:59:04] impossible to quantify precisely due to inconsistent data collection and historical suppression.
[02:59:10] Historical suppression, this is them trying to hide how bad it really is.
[02:59:14] That's it.
[02:59:16] Independent Inquiry into Sexual Abuse, IICSA, and multiple other local inquiries, is simply
[02:59:22] not possible to know the scale because the ethnicity, group, offending, and historical
[02:59:26] cases were routinely under-recorded or shelved to protect community cohesion.
[02:59:33] So that's right.
[02:59:34] They decided to hide and prevent this from being discussed because they didn't want people
[02:59:39] to make the community less cohesive.
[02:59:42] It was more important that the communities were not demonized than for people to not
[02:59:47] get raped.
[02:59:49] That's it.
[02:59:50] This is why they've been going after Elon.
[02:59:52] That's right.
[02:59:53] And they also go after me.
[02:59:54] That's why they make up all this bullshit about me too.
[02:59:57] This is why they're always trying to get me banned.
[02:59:59] And all this other shit.
[03:00:00] It's because they don't want to hear this.
[03:00:01] They don't want people talking about this.
[03:00:03] Is this just a month or a three year old in the crocodile or are you kidding?
[03:00:07] Yeah, I did see that. I don't know really what the details are.
[03:00:09] Overleaf is a heat map that portrays the various locations in which the inquiry can be sure the rope gangs are operated.
[03:00:15] It's likely the true extent is far worse.
[03:00:18] Rape gangs operate and have operated in at least 149 local authority districts across the United Kingdom.
[03:00:24] Suspected is the light red and confirmed is the dark red.
[03:00:30] Man
[03:00:36] If this was a cancer you'd say it was stage four
[03:00:40] I'll tell you that
[03:00:42] Not looking good at all. Can you zoom it out a bit? Yeah, sure. I'll zoom out so you guys can see the whole thing here
[03:00:48] Yeah, there it is. That's the entire thing
[03:00:52] That's how bad it is
[03:00:54] The scale, the tactics, the perpetrator profile, and the systematic inaction were almost always
[03:01:04] identical everywhere.
[03:01:05] Britain did not face dozens of separate local scandals.
[03:01:08] It faced one national scandal that the state allowed to grow for decades.
[03:01:13] London extends exposed as the epicenter of institutional denial with the grooming gang
[03:01:17] scandal.
[03:01:18] While northern towns faced public inquiries for the truth emerged, the capital maintained
[03:01:23] a wall of silence for years. The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, who repeatedly insisted
[03:01:30] that there were no grooming gangs operating in the city, as our inquiry heard from Susan
[03:01:35] Hall, the leader of the Conservatives in London. Assembling the rape gang phenomenon is in
[03:01:40] fact endemic within the capital. After challenging Khan on the presence of such gangs in London,
[03:01:46] Hall was inundated with calls from women and girls purporting to be victims from their
[03:01:51] Condescribes evidence from whistleblowers as malicious and politically motivated
[03:01:56] He told the London assembly that the problem was far more. Oh, it's so good. You know, no, you you don't understand
[03:02:04] It's super complicated. No, no, no, it's not just one thing. It's super super hard to understand
[03:02:11] It's far more complex in other parts of the country and that young people were being exploited through county lines
[03:02:17] rather than organize group-based child sexual exploitation.
[03:02:22] So, this is it.
[03:02:25] This is the thing that they tried to say, like,
[03:02:27] oh, this is some inaccuracy.
[03:02:31] Can't pass here to find what she means, of course.
[03:02:37] The statements were made despite the Metropolitan Police
[03:02:39] holding reports of young girls being plied with alcohol,
[03:02:42] drugs, and then raped by groups of men in hotels
[03:02:45] and other locations across the Capitol. A Daily Express investigation revealed that
[03:02:50] Khan had direct access to HM and Specter and could stabulatory documents directly detailing
[03:02:57] these patterns of the offending. He read the files yet continued to deny the existence
[03:03:01] of grooming gangs in public. So he knew it and he lied. That's it. Shadow Home Secretary
[03:03:11] uh... chris phillips uh...
[03:03:13] fill up excuse me
[03:03:15] as accused con a facilitating a cover-up and other politicians stated
[03:03:19] that both the mayor and the metropolitan police have begun to not deny
[03:03:22] grooming gangs in london
[03:03:24] campaigners including whistleblower maggie all over chris wilde
[03:03:27] had described the capital as the last bastion of denial and warned that the
[03:03:32] scale of abuse was more catastrophic than anywhere else in the country
[03:03:40] kind of obvious, right?
[03:03:43] Excuse me.
[03:03:45] And yeah, anyway, so why are leftists trying to defend it?
[03:03:48] Because it goes against their ideology.
[03:03:51] And it's because a lot of leftism has been taken over
[03:03:53] by a bunch of radicals, that's the reason why.
[03:03:59] Scumbags simply because it was made, people look bad.
[03:04:01] Yeah, I guess so.
[03:04:02] Evidence now is emerging and people confirm the warnings.
[03:04:05] In October, 2025, the Metropolitan Police
[03:04:08] announced a review of 9,000 child exploitation cases.
[03:04:11] The National Crime Agency launched an operation beacon port
[03:04:15] to examine thousands more files nationwide
[03:04:18] after initial assessments found human errors,
[03:04:21] mislines of inquiry, and cases wrongly dropped.
[03:04:25] London forms a significant part of the backlog.
[03:04:27] A former Metropolitan Police Detective
[03:04:29] has described the institutional child,
[03:04:32] a scale child prostitution and grooming in the Capitol
[03:04:35] with authorities aware but opting for inaction due to a mixture of incompetence
[03:04:40] laziness and corruption
[03:04:42] that's it
[03:04:43] london has the largest muslim population in all of britain con relies on
[03:04:47] significant electoral support from these communities what do you guys think
[03:04:51] the percentage of muslims in london that voted for him is what do you think it is
[03:05:00] guess 100% I'd say probably probably higher than that maybe probably baseline
[03:05:07] 100% yeah and let's see here as well as having an ethno religious motive to
[03:05:12] protect the public reputation of Pakistani Muslims in particular public
[03:05:17] reputation matters more than people getting raped excuse me widespread
[03:05:23] acknowledgement of organized networks of predominantly Pakistani men targeting
[03:05:27] vulnerable white girls would have shattered the narrative of community cohesion that successful
[03:05:32] one administrations none more than cons had permitted or promoted as for others in authority
[03:05:39] fear of being labeled racist paralyzed the metropolitan police and city hall in the same
[03:05:44] way that it was rothram and rockdale before them one anonymous whistleblower told us that
[03:05:49] boys as well as girls are an especially vulnerable target for criminal gangs typically albanian
[03:05:55] Somali or Turkish operating in the capital, yet the relevant body still refused to collect
[03:06:01] data on ethnicity, willfully rendering themselves blind to the very behavioral patterns that
[03:06:07] are supposed to aid law enforcement in the pursuit of justice.
[03:06:12] Wow.
[03:06:14] Why?
[03:06:17] Because they're racist and they're okay with white girls getting raped.
[03:06:22] That's the reason why.
[03:06:25] obvious that's why everybody knows this like I don't I don't even know what
[03:06:31] would be talking about it's obvious
[03:06:35] let's see here and Metropolitan Police review in the National Crime Agency
[03:06:40] operation and the witness accounts pouring into prove the group-based
[03:06:43] sexual exploitation has thrived in our capital city this inquiry record
[03:06:48] records the failure without reservation Khan and the senior leadership of the
[03:06:52] Metropolitan Police must answer for their role in the scandal until the
[03:06:56] Capitol confronts the truth with the same rigor now demanded. Elsewhere, the
[03:07:01] Children of London remain at risk and the state remains complicit.
[03:07:11] Oh boy.
[03:07:15] You guys ready?
[03:07:17] You think you are, but you're not. I've got to pull my hair up a little bit.
[03:07:21] It's super hot in my room.
[03:07:25] I don't know why.
[03:07:26] Like it's had to happen on the hottest day.
[03:07:29] It was so hot.
[03:07:30] Give me, give me.
[03:07:31] I gotta put this on.
[03:07:33] Very sad, yep.
[03:07:35] Get ready.
[03:07:36] Here we go.
[03:07:37] Yep.
[03:07:38] Lock in.
[03:07:39] All right.
[03:07:40] That should help a little bit.
[03:07:41] I don't know why it's so hot.
[03:07:42] Let me see if I can turn on the AC real quick.
[03:07:44] It's just crazy how hot it is in here.
[03:07:46] What does it say?
[03:07:47] I'm not sure if it's that is. 88 degrees.
[03:07:53] Oh my god.
[03:07:57] This is heat coming from.
[03:08:00] It's insane.
[03:08:04] Yeah, 88 fucking degrees, man.
[03:08:07] Hopefully they're going to be able to cool it down.
[03:08:10] The sun, you know what? It basically is the sun. Yeah, it's 88 degrees in my room right now.
[03:08:17] I turned it down to 68. It was already at 71. So hopefully it'll make it work even harder. I feel I'm feeling a little bit more of it
[03:08:24] So hopefully that's gonna help. Anyway, let's keep going. It's 104 in Austin. Let me see how hot it is
[03:08:32] It is 97 degrees outside
[03:08:37] It's pretty hot
[03:08:38] Do you want? Yeah, I know
[03:08:40] You know they see unit time for a new AC. I just got one. But anyway, let's move on
[03:08:44] There are thousands of survivors who have provided evidence to our Inquiry team.
[03:08:49] Below is a summary of some of the testimony provided by our brave witnesses who spoke
[03:08:53] at the Inquiry hearings.
[03:08:55] Some of the witnesses have remained anonymous for their own safety.
[03:08:58] The first one is Chloe.
[03:09:02] Throughout her early childhood, Chloe was pa-fewer in school, performed well academically, and
[03:09:06] enjoyed an act of social life.
[03:09:08] Although her parents separated when she was young, she describes her early uprings as
[03:09:11] relatively stable. Following the separation, full custody of Chloe and her older brother
[03:09:17] was awarded to their father despite his alcoholism. Her mother, on the other hand, was often
[03:09:22] absent from her life and became homeless following the separation. Chloe recalls a
[03:09:27] genuine, and by the way, her mom is homeless meanwhile there are migrants living in hotels.
[03:09:33] Isn't that crazy?
[03:09:34] What are the odds of that?
[03:09:40] Coley recalls a genuinely secure and supportive home environment under the care of her father,
[03:09:44] so things were okay.
[03:09:46] However, following his sudden death just before her 10th birthday, she moved in with her mother
[03:09:52] and her mother's new husband, a man she describes as a pedophile, who by whom she was sexually
[03:09:58] abused.
[03:09:59] Chloe's mother caught her husband assaulting Chloe on many occasions, but did little to
[03:10:04] stop it.
[03:10:05] On one occasion, Chloe's mother caught her husband in the shower with Chloe, and instead
[03:10:09] of intervening, she closed the door and walked out.
[03:10:12] At this time, Chloe was 10 years old.
[03:10:18] The abuse soon escalated to rape.
[03:10:20] Chloe's stepfather supplied her with alcohol and cigarettes to keep her quiet, and she
[03:10:24] began smoking cannabis.
[03:10:26] Around the same time, Kohli started truantying and spending time in the local town center
[03:10:31] with a friend unsupervised.
[03:10:34] She describes groups of Muslim men, primarily Pakistanis, aged 20 to 50, showing them attention,
[03:10:40] including wolf whistling and buying them alcohol.
[03:10:43] Many were taxi drivers who would take the girls into their cars and drive them around
[03:10:47] the town.
[03:10:48] At this stage, there was no sexual abuse, although the men's behavior was clearly inappropriate.
[03:10:53] Chloe and her friend in the final year of primary school.
[03:10:56] This is, again, these are elementary school girls, okay?
[03:10:59] Like you're talking about like fifth graders, all right?
[03:11:01] I guess maybe, yeah, like, yeah, fifth graders
[03:11:03] or sixth graders, depending on where you're at.
[03:11:06] Yes, excuse me.
[03:11:10] I'm talking a lot, so I'm not used to talking so much.
[03:11:14] Even from which I usually talk, this is a lot.
[03:11:16] And yeah, anyway.
[03:11:18] Well, yeah, Chloe and her friend,
[03:11:20] primary years, but enjoyed being treated like adults.
[03:11:22] Yeah, of course, right, because they're 10 years old.
[03:11:24] I mean, like obviously they felt like they were on top of the world.
[03:11:26] They were super important.
[03:11:28] You had these guys that were really nice to them.
[03:11:30] I think this makes sense, right?
[03:11:31] The grooming soon intensified.
[03:11:33] The provision of alcohol and takeaways
[03:11:35] was accompanied by emotional manipulation.
[03:11:38] With the men, many of whom were related to one another,
[03:11:41] presenting themselves as sympathetic friends to Chloe.
[03:11:44] Chloe describes this process as them mapping out
[03:11:47] are you a vulnerable person.
[03:11:48] Physical contact, including kisses and massages,
[03:11:52] became increasingly common.
[03:11:54] Meanwhile, the abuse by her stepfather at home worsened
[03:11:57] and her mother was all but absent as a guardian.
[03:12:00] At this time, Chloe had an aunt and uncle who lived nearby
[03:12:03] and she often sought refuge with them.
[03:12:05] She spent holidays with them during her earlier childhood
[03:12:08] and felt that she could trust them.
[03:12:09] On one occasion, she had visited them while truantying
[03:12:12] before returning home and spending the day
[03:12:14] where her mother and stepfather were at work.
[03:12:16] To Chloe's surprise, her uncle arrived at her house
[03:12:19] unannounced an hour later, and she invited him inside. After a brief conversation,
[03:12:24] Chloe's uncle sexually assaulted her. Chloe resisted, he relented, and left.
[03:12:40] Oh my god. This is a 10-year-old. This is a 10-year-old girl. What's happening here?
[03:12:46] She told her mother about the assault, and her mother reported it to the police.
[03:12:51] The police accused Chloe of lying, and no further action was taken.
[03:12:56] Until this incident, she had regarded her uncle as one of the best people in her life.
[03:13:00] Afterwards, there were no adults left that Chloe could confide in or seek support from.
[03:13:04] Increasingly isolated, she became more deeply involved with the groups of Muslim men that she encountered in the town square.
[03:13:10] One evening, Chloe's friend suggested that they travel to a nearby town where one of the men had a hotel room.
[03:13:16] They were picked up by the man who was drunk and under the influence of drugs, taken into hotel.
[03:13:21] When they arrived, the hotel staff saw them, but did not intervene.
[03:13:26] In the room, the girls were getting potent strain of cannabis, which left Chloe, then 11 years old.
[03:13:32] It's absolutely smashed.
[03:13:34] Chloe's friend was taken into another room by a group of men, and Chloe was groped by
[03:13:39] the man who remained.
[03:13:40] She resisted, and he hit her.
[03:13:42] The man did not attempt to sexually assault her again, and instead threw the girls, both
[03:13:47] of whom were still intoxicated, out of the hotel and refused to drive them back to their
[03:13:52] hometown.
[03:13:53] They were forced to walk back home.
[03:13:54] It was around midnight.
[03:13:56] Chloe did not want to go back to her home as she feared that her mother would beat her
[03:14:00] for being out late, so she stayed with her friend.
[03:14:03] In the early hours of the morning, Coley was collected from her friend's house by the police
[03:14:08] after her mother reported her missing.
[03:14:10] Coley lied to the police and her mother about where she had been.
[03:14:14] Coley's mother, quote, grounded her for a month, meaning she was stuck at home with
[03:14:18] her predatory stepfather, a period she describes as torture.
[03:14:24] After the month passed, Coley arranged to see her friend, who boasted that she had a new
[03:14:28] boyfriend.
[03:14:30] I thought she was eleven.
[03:14:33] Chloe left her house to meet her and the girls picked up by the boyfriend who is in
[03:14:36] fact a 25 year old Indian man.
[03:14:40] And his girlfriend is an 11 year old girl.
[03:14:43] Wow.
[03:14:45] It's pretty bad.
[03:14:48] Initially, Chloe thought the man was nice, posher than mother men that she had met in
[03:14:53] town center.
[03:14:54] That means that he's like more, you know, like a sophisticated, I guess you could say,
[03:14:58] right?
[03:14:59] It's a British term.
[03:15:00] He took Chloe and her friend to a shop where he purchased a bottle of vodka before returning
[03:15:07] before picking up one of his friends and taking the girls to a secluded location.
[03:15:12] During the journey, the men began pressuring the girls for sex.
[03:15:15] Chloe and their eleven, keep in mind they're eleven years old, Chloe stated, refused, stating
[03:15:21] that she was on her period, but the men replied that it did not matter.
[03:15:26] was falling and when they arrived, the boyfriend took Chloe's friend out of the car, leaving
[03:15:31] Chloe alone with the other man. He proceeded to rape her on the back seats.
[03:15:38] The incident took place in 2003. In 2022, Chloe took two men, took the two men to court, but
[03:15:45] neither were found guilty. From this moment, Chloe's life spiraled. At 12 years old, she
[03:15:50] began drinking heavily, smoking large amounts of cannabis and taking harder drugs, including
[03:15:55] ecstasy and anything else to block it out of our mind. She would drink before school
[03:16:00] just to get through the day. She's 12. Her attendance dropped significantly. She and
[03:16:05] her friend would spend school hours in the town center walking around until someone picked
[03:16:09] them up in a car. Somebody bought them alcohol or somebody gave them drugs. There were times
[03:16:14] when Coli would be missing for up to three days, during which time she was passed between
[03:16:19] drugs, abused, and raped. In every case, the perpetrators were Muslims, primarily Pakistani.
[03:16:28] On one occasion, Kohli was abducted by an abuser who was driving drunk and taken to
[03:16:32] a graveyard. He gave Kohli, still 12 years old, whiskey before forcing himself on her
[03:16:38] and raping her. He withdrew before ejaculation and forced the empty whiskey bottle into Kohli's
[03:16:44] vagina where it shattered, Coley admitted to herself to A&E, I guess I'm assuming that's
[03:16:51] like probably some sort of emergency room, but no questions were asked about how she
[03:16:55] had sustained such an injury. She was examined, the glass was removed from by the way her
[03:17:01] vagina where it was inserted forcibly by an adult man while she was 12 years old. We
[03:17:08] We have to make sure that we understand this.
[03:17:11] That's what happened.
[03:17:13] That's what happened.
[03:17:15] It's right here.
[03:17:17] Pay attention.
[03:17:18] Pay attention.
[03:17:19] Write this down.
[03:17:20] Remember it.
[03:17:22] She was examined, the glass was removed, and she was discharged.
[03:17:26] Coley was questioned by police due to her absence on a number of occasions.
[03:17:29] Each time, she was asked where she had been, who she had been with,
[03:17:33] and what she had been doing.
[03:17:35] she replied that she had been having sex with adult males and cars. Rather than
[03:17:39] opening an investigation and pursuing her abusers, the police dismissed Chloe as
[03:17:43] a prostitute. She's 12, by the way. They asked her whether she should she was
[03:17:49] consenting to the sexual activity. Was the 12 year old consenting? Oh, okay.
[03:17:54] That's a good question. Definitely.
[03:18:01] And sending the sexual activity and despite Chloe telling them that she
[03:18:04] did not know the definition of the word consent, they reported that she had been.
[03:18:09] Wow. The police found Chloe as well as other missing children in cars with the gang members
[03:18:14] on multiple occasions, but let the gang members go without so much as questioning them. On
[03:18:19] one occasion, Chloe was in a town center and was identified as a missing child by a police
[03:18:24] officer who questioned where she had been. The Chloe told this police officer about the
[03:18:29] full extent of the abuse and the response of the police officer was that nothing could
[03:18:34] be done and Chloe was let go. In response to her truancy and deteriorating behavior,
[03:18:40] the school regularly placed Chloe in isolation and compelled her to attend additional after
[03:18:44] school classes every day, probably better than her going home to be fair. This did little
[03:18:50] to improve her emotional state and she continued to spend time with her friend and her friend's
[03:18:54] boyfriend. This is the 25 year old Indian man. This went on for a number of years. The quote
[03:19:00] boyfriend would supply the girls with alcohol and drugs as well as introducing
[03:19:04] him to his friends who were exclusively south asian men on one occasion he took
[03:19:10] the girls to his place of work a textiles factory where he raped chloe
[03:19:15] but i thought
[03:19:16] all my god
[03:19:20] all my god
[03:19:22] and this so it's again the factory even probably had some idea that this was
[03:19:25] happening
[03:19:26] how do you have factoring you don't even know this is happening
[03:19:30] but i mean really
[03:19:32] how is this real it's in uh... london apparently this is what's happening
[03:19:36] and uh... dexter that were a great call we following this incident called we
[03:19:39] stopped spending time with the friend who up until this point had accompanied
[03:19:43] her throughout her exploitation
[03:19:44] by this time call he had become so accustomed to her lifestyle of spending
[03:19:48] time with muslim gangs that she continued to do so without her friend
[03:19:52] on one occasion that following other late return home her mother grounded her
[03:19:56] for two months, fearing further abuse from her stepfather, Chloe walked into a nearby
[03:20:00] social services office while her mother was at work and reported him.
[03:20:04] Chloe was interviewed by social workers about the abuse, after which her mother and stepfather
[03:20:09] were arrested and questioned.
[03:20:11] Both denied the abuse, so even her own mom was okay with this happening.
[03:20:17] That's it.
[03:20:19] Both were denied the abuse, was taking place, and were released without charge.
[03:20:23] Khoi made further appeals to social services and eventually was removed from the house
[03:20:27] and placed in foster care.
[03:20:29] She lived with a couple who cared for several other foster children through some she found
[03:20:33] to be snobby that stuck up and judgmental and found some simple instability with them
[03:20:38] but it did not last long.
[03:20:40] She was still living in the same town so when she went to the town center as she often did
[03:20:45] both alone and with the foster carers the Muslim gangs would recognize and target her.
[03:20:50] She remained the same at school because she remained at the same school because she now
[03:20:54] lived further away.
[03:20:56] The foster carers paid for taxis to take her there.
[03:20:59] She would ask the taxi drivers to drop her off near the school rather than attending.
[03:21:03] And then she would walk to the neighborhoods where the Muslim gangs spent their time.
[03:21:06] The gangs would take her into the taxis, ply her with drugs and alcohol, and then sexually
[03:21:11] abuse her.
[03:21:12] And this is all, by the way, all before 13.
[03:21:15] Oh my god.
[03:21:23] So this is why Purpurna left this, aren't talking about this, this is why you're the
[03:21:26] only one.
[03:21:27] It's because they don't care about rapes or whatever it's done by their pet minority
[03:21:30] groups.
[03:21:31] That's the reason why.
[03:21:33] And so around the age of 13, Chloe disclosed the social services that she was being sexually
[03:21:38] abused by gangs of Muslim men.
[03:21:41] In response, social services did not intervene, but rather talked to Chloe about contraception
[03:21:47] and sexual health.
[03:21:49] One social worker began regularly talking to Chloe to a sexual health clinic where she
[03:21:53] would diagnose with chlamydia in her throat and vagina, gonorrhea, genital warts, and
[03:22:00] pelvic inflammatory disease.
[03:22:03] Neither of the social workers nor the clinic staff investigated or reported on this or
[03:22:07] questioned it.
[03:22:08] The police were aware of Chloe's activities, but instead of targeting those responsible
[03:22:12] for her abuse, they routinely failed to question them, let alone pursue further action.
[03:22:17] When Chloe was found in cars and houses with them.
[03:22:22] Chloe was soon moved to a different foster placement with a far more protective carer.
[03:22:26] On one occasion, the gang came to the foster home searching for Chloe, and the carer fought
[03:22:31] them in the street to protect her.
[03:22:33] So they were literally farming this girl even at a new house.
[03:22:38] That's nuts.
[03:22:39] This is page 22 out of 219.
[03:22:43] Around the time Chloe turned 14, a social worker approached her about her ongoing sexual exploitation.
[03:22:48] Well, that's a surprise.
[03:22:50] This was one of the first times this has happened, and Chloe was relieved that her abuse was
[03:22:54] finally being addressed.
[03:22:55] However, rather than it offering a solution, the social worker instead told Chloe that
[03:23:00] the producers of Emmerdale were looking for a young actress to play a victim of a child's
[03:23:05] sexual exploitation and asked whether she would be interested in auditioning for the
[03:23:09] role given her experience.
[03:23:21] We know you've been getting raped.
[03:23:22] Do you want to get raped in a movie?
[03:23:25] I don't know about that.
[03:23:29] Seems pretty bad.
[03:23:30] Yeah, seems pretty fucking bad.
[03:23:34] It's sick?
[03:23:35] Yep, that's right.
[03:23:38] Following this exchange, Chloe, upset, angry, and in a state of disbelief, ran away from
[03:23:42] the foster home and after being abducted by a Muslim gang, was missing for six weeks.
[03:23:47] Over this period, she was trafficked across the length and breadth of Britain.
[03:23:50] She was taken to house after house and raped and abused by guy after guy after guy after
[03:23:55] guy.
[03:23:56] The men who abused her paid money to the gang, which then treated her as little more
[03:24:00] than a commodity.
[03:24:01] She was reported missing and our photograph was shown on TV.
[03:24:04] Her abusers remarked on this, you're that girl off the TV that's missing.
[03:24:09] But her whereabouts were never reported to the police.
[03:24:12] Koi describes a cycle of grooming, rape and drug abuse and alcohol abuse.
[03:24:16] This went on until eventually she was located by the police.
[03:24:22] When the police found her, she was in a car with a South Asian Muslim man.
[03:24:27] The man was let go without charge and she was returned to her mother's house.
[03:24:31] relationship with her mother had completely broken down by this point, so she continued
[03:24:35] to run around and her psychological state deteriorated further.
[03:24:39] Following another period of grooming and sexual exploitation by a Muslim gang, Chloe was taken
[03:24:44] into police custody and transported to a secure unit at a children's home.
[03:24:48] She describes the home as being like a prison.
[03:24:51] Every aspect of her life was controlled and surveyed, and she was routinely subjected
[03:24:55] to bodily examinations, including full cavity searches.
[03:25:02] What the fuck?
[03:25:04] Cole found the experience highly traumatic.
[03:25:07] She remained there for nine months, by which time she was almost 15.
[03:25:10] So keep in mind, this entire story and everything, this is her being 15 years old.
[03:25:16] Or before 15.
[03:25:18] That's right.
[03:25:19] This is, this is like, yeah, starts at 10 and now we're at, you know, 15.
[03:25:24] five-year span, and it's not over. She remained there for nine months during
[03:25:29] which time she was almost 15. Social services determined that she was well
[03:25:32] enough to be released and she was placed in foster care not far from where she
[03:25:37] had been living before. Kohi describes the new carers as positive and encouraging
[03:25:40] presence in her life, and in spite of her proximity to the sites of her abuse and
[03:25:44] exploitation, Kohi found stability and security in living in them. She enrolled
[03:25:48] in a full-time hairdressing and beauty course in college, and for the next two
[03:25:51] years, Coley describes her life as fantastic. As Coley approached her 18th birthday, social
[03:25:56] services noticed her, notified her that a foster carer would soon end. They identified
[03:26:02] a house for her, and after parting ways with her and her carer, she moved in and got a
[03:26:06] retail job to support herself. Despite having little experience, taking care of herself,
[03:26:12] Coley's life remained generally stable throughout this period. Eventually, Coley reestablished
[03:26:18] Contact with the friend who had been abused as a young child. That's the one with the 25 year old boyfriend
[03:26:24] She invited her over to her house and when she arrived
[03:26:26] She was accompanied by a group of Muslim men all of who remembered Chloe from past abuse
[03:26:43] Guess what happens next
[03:26:45] Immediately, Chloe's life was thrown back into chaos.
[03:26:50] The men refused to leave and in Chloe's words, it was no longer my quiet little house, it
[03:26:54] was their house.
[03:26:56] They smashed windows, kicked in doors, left the house in an absolute wreck, and sexually
[03:27:01] abused Chloe.
[03:27:03] One of the men, a previous abuser, pinned her down, pulled his trousers down, and sat
[03:27:07] on her face, orally raping her on her own sofa as the rest of the gang watched.
[03:27:17] Yep.
[03:27:19] Why'd she let him in?
[03:27:21] Because she's like an 18-year-old girl and she can't really stop them.
[03:27:24] That's the reason why.
[03:27:26] Yeah, there's no way to do that.
[03:27:29] I mean, you can't stop any of that. You can't do anything.
[03:27:31] I mean, it's just what's gonna happen, right?
[03:27:34] And there's no way to solve it at all.
[03:27:37] 18, yeah, a friend was in on it.
[03:27:39] I think the friend was probably being compelled to do it.
[03:27:42] I think that's what happened, right?
[03:27:43] I mean, these guys are manipulative, they're violent,
[03:27:46] they're aggressive, and so obviously,
[03:27:48] she's gonna do what they say
[03:27:49] because she doesn't wanna get hurt.
[03:27:51] That's the reason why.
[03:27:52] It's asymmetric power, yeah, exactly.
[03:27:56] Chloe returned to drugs, alcohol, or copes.
[03:27:58] She was still working on retail.
[03:27:59] Her ability to work was rapidly declining.
[03:28:01] No way, during one shift, one of her colleagues
[03:28:03] that she was friends with jokingly pinched her bottom.
[03:28:06] Chloe traumatized from years of abuse,
[03:28:08] punched him in the face in the middle of a shot.
[03:28:10] She was brought before management
[03:28:11] and tried to argue her case, but was fired.
[03:28:14] She left with no income, Chloe spiraled further.
[03:28:16] The Muslim gang was still occupying her house.
[03:28:19] And this is what I was saying before about how like,
[03:28:22] these are not socioeconomic factors.
[03:28:26] These are just people that are bad actors.
[03:28:28] That's it, that's all they're doing.
[03:28:29] There's bad actors.
[03:28:31] And so like, yeah, you're not gonna,
[03:28:32] You're not going to help these people by giving them money.
[03:28:36] They're just awful.
[03:28:38] So the Muslim gang was still occupying her house.
[03:28:40] And with nowhere to go and no ability to remove them,
[03:28:43] she remained there with them.
[03:28:44] They routinely drugged, abused, and raped her,
[03:28:47] including with objects, including soft drink cans, keys,
[03:28:50] and a baseball bat.
[03:28:53] Before long, they started to pay her bills
[03:28:55] to consolidate their presence in her home.
[03:28:58] On a number of occasions, they brought young children
[03:29:00] into Chloe's house to abuse them.
[03:29:02] Koli recalls a number of occasions when boys under the age of 18 from the Muslim community
[03:29:07] were pressured and bullied by their older friends and relatives into raping her.
[03:29:14] Let's read that one again.
[03:29:16] On a number of occasions they brought young children in the Koli's house to abuse them.
[03:29:21] Koli recalls a number of occasions when boys under the age of 18 from the Muslim community
[03:29:26] were pressured and bullied by their older friends and relatives into raping her.
[03:29:32] to passage. Yep. Koli was forced to commit crimes, including insurance fraud and the holding
[03:29:37] of drugs. On one occasion, she contacted the police to report an assault that was taking
[03:29:42] place in her house. And when they arrived, Koli was threatened with arrest rather than
[03:29:47] the gang members as the property was registered in her name.
[03:29:52] One evening, an associate of the gang from a neighboring town arrived in the house. A
[03:29:56] notorious sex trafficker. Wow, who could have guessed? Soon began taking Koli to bars
[03:30:01] and nightclubs in surrounding areas. There, he would spike her with heroin before handing
[03:30:06] her over to men who sexually assaulted and raped her. Chloe became addicted to opiates
[03:30:11] as her health deteriorated rapidly. She became anorexic, weighing just five stone at the
[03:30:16] age of 18. Five stone is like 85 pounds or something like that. It's very, very skinny.
[03:30:21] It's actually, I think, maybe 80 pounds. The use of heroin was a method of control used
[03:30:26] by the gang, and it left her with no ability to defend herself physically. Seventy? I didn't
[03:30:31] think 70 would be possible. Yeah, five stone. Wow. Her daily existence became a
[03:30:36] relentless cycle of rape, exploitation, and violence. Eventually a social worker
[03:30:41] visited Chloe and was shocked by both her appearance and the condition in which
[03:30:46] she was living. Concerned for her welfare, she took Chloe to an addiction
[03:30:49] clinic where tests revealed an extremely high concentration of opiates in her
[03:30:54] system. Chloe was described medication prescribed medication to manage her
[03:30:58] opiate dependency and gradually weaned herself off the drugs. Around this time,
[03:31:03] Coley reconnected with a childhood friend and her friendship soon developed
[03:31:06] into a romantic relationship. Her boyfriend became aware of the ongoing
[03:31:10] abuse and with the help of his father, paid off Coley's remaining rent and
[03:31:14] moved her out of her squalid house. Coley moved in with him, after which she
[03:31:19] got another job in retail. For a short period, Coley's life was relatively
[03:31:23] stable, but due to her unresolved trauma, she too soon returned to drinking
[03:31:28] heavily smoking cannabis and gambling. Her workplace was close to her first
[03:31:33] foster home and before long she came into contact with the members of the
[03:31:37] gang that had abused her at that time. The cycle of grooming, exploitation, and
[03:31:42] abuse soon resumed. Her relationship with her boyfriend broke down and out of
[03:31:47] desperation she re-established contact with her mother who left her
[03:31:50] predatory husband and soon moved back in with her. One night Chloe was out with
[03:31:56] members of the gang and drinking heavily upon her return to her mother's house her mother
[03:32:00] reported her to the police the police arrested Chloe of course they arrested Chloe duh absolutely
[03:32:14] yeah that makes perfect sense and while she was changing into her pajamas and she was
[03:32:20] taken to the police station drunk and half naked so even the and they did this to a girl
[03:32:25] that's been a repeated victim of sexual assault ever since she was 10 years old.
[03:32:29] So the police are basically doing the same thing that the gangs were doing.
[03:32:32] And she was kept in a cell until 2 a.m. in the following morning,
[03:32:36] at which point she was released. They did not provide her with any clothes
[03:32:40] or transportation back to her mother's house. She tried to contact her ex-boyfriend,
[03:32:44] but he did not respond. Chloe, then 19, was left stranded.
[03:32:49] She wandered around the neighborhood for several hours before encountering a gang member
[03:32:53] who had previously abused her. Cold and desperate, she got into his car and the following weeks was
[03:32:59] trafficked across the country. Oh my god. Oh my god. Oh wow.
[03:33:15] Eventually, Chloe Moot found a new house to move into. Despite their dysfunctional relationship,
[03:33:19] her mother agreed to sign the rental agreement as Chloe's guarantor, as Chloe then without
[03:33:24] income knew that she would not be able to afford the rent. After she moved in, she became aware
[03:33:28] of the fact that she was the only white British person in her neighborhood. Every other resident
[03:33:32] was South Asian. As a result, the gangs discovered where she was living and once again treated her
[03:33:38] house as if it was their own. The cycle of abuse continued and Chloe's emotional state deteriorated
[03:33:44] significantly. Chloe was taken to the hospital after a suicide attempt and while there,
[03:33:49] she discovered that she was pregnant. The father of the child, a Pakistani Muslim illegal migrant.
[03:33:58] Wow, who could have guessed? Moved into Khloe's home, Khloe was then subsequently
[03:34:04] coerced into converting to Islam and forced into marriage, both to legitimize the pregnancy in the
[03:34:10] eyes of her abuser, and to assist him in securing a visa.
[03:34:16] Wow.
[03:34:19] Cole's behavior became tightly controlled.
[03:34:23] She was forced to wear a hijab.
[03:34:25] She was prohibited from looking out the windows of her home.
[03:34:28] And if she misbehaved in the eyes of her husband, he would beat her black and blue, something
[03:34:34] that happened coincidentally every day.
[03:34:37] Well, that's why she's got the thing on, so people can't see it.
[03:34:40] Chloe's child was born with multiple health problems, including a defective kidney due
[03:34:45] to the deteriorated condition of Chloe's womb as a result of sexual abuse.
[03:34:50] Nevertheless, becoming a mother gave Chloe a renewed determination to get her life back
[03:34:54] on track.
[03:34:55] She reported the father of her child to the police after he assaulted the child.
[03:35:09] After he assaulted the child.
[03:35:12] Wow.
[03:35:15] That's not good.
[03:35:16] And yeah, let's see here, let me see here, assaulted the child.
[03:35:20] He was removed from the property.
[03:35:21] She stopped taking drugs.
[03:35:22] She was focused and for the first time the gangs left her alone.
[03:35:25] Yeah, because she was too old now, and she already had a kid, so they're going to move
[03:35:29] to another 10-year-old.
[03:35:31] And one evening she was out with a friend that lived across the road.
[03:35:34] Koli and her mother did not drink heavily, but her friend became heavily intoxicated.
[03:35:37] A group of Asian men started speaking to them and offered to take Koli and her friend home.
[03:35:42] Koli was suspicious of them, but for the sake of her friend, agreed.
[03:35:46] Instead of taking them home, however, they were taken to a hotel.
[03:35:49] Chloe, who was not drunk, protested and encouraged her friend, who was paralytic, to leave with her.
[03:35:56] Chloe warned her friend that what she suspected was going to happen, but her friend refused to leave.
[03:36:01] Chloe, thinking of her daughter and seeking to protect herself, reluctantly left without her.
[03:36:06] The following day, Chloe's friend told Chloe that she had been raped by the men.
[03:36:11] Wow, who could have guessed that? The incident represented the turning point in Chloe's life.
[03:36:15] she decided that she needed to leave her hometown for good and get as far away from these Asian men
[03:36:20] as possible. By chance, she reconnected on Facebook with a man that had known her early in her childhood,
[03:36:26] an old colleague of our mother who she describes as one of the only adult men in my life
[03:36:30] who never harmed me or treated me badly. She told him about everything that she lived through
[03:36:35] and desired to leave. He lived in Scotland and he was invited and she was invited to visit him
[03:36:43] for the weekend and what she did.
[03:36:45] After returning home, she sought the aid from Woman's Aid, who managed to secure her
[03:36:50] a property in Scotland.
[03:36:51] With nothing but her daughter and her small bag, she left the hometown, leaving a lifetime
[03:36:56] of abuse and exploitation behind, and moved to Scotland, where she resides to this day.
[03:37:02] Kohli personally knows at least 20 other girls from her area that were predated on by the
[03:37:08] basically preyed on. By Muslim gangs who abused her, the pattern was always the same, grooming,
[03:37:16] drugging, trafficking, abuse, and rape. Further, Khoi describes being taken into mosques where
[03:37:22] imams would describe non-Muslims as infidels and preach that white women who dressed inappropriately
[03:37:29] were quote, free game. Khoi believes that her local police, social services, NHS, and
[03:37:35] government were all fully aware of what was happening, including the radicalized nature
[03:37:40] of the crimes, but they did not intervene for two reasons.
[03:37:44] Number one, because they could not be bothered with the paperwork, and number two, because
[03:37:48] they did not want to be seen as racist.
[03:37:51] Coley blames these bodies for their major push for diversity for her abuse.
[03:37:56] Coley says that if I can save just one more child or boy from going through any of this,
[03:38:01] And I've done my job.
[03:38:07] Do you know how many men abused you over the period if you had to guess?
[03:38:11] Chloe says hundreds, hundreds, and hundreds.
[03:38:18] Wow.
[03:38:24] Holy shit.
[03:38:29] All right, well that's the first one yep there it is okay surely there's surely no it is there's no way this happened again right
[03:38:38] I mean there's no way but it's a nightmare. I know give me one second. I use the bathroom and
[03:38:43] God damn that's insane
[03:39:59] All right.
[03:40:19] Give me a minute.
[03:40:45] let these freaks ever try to tell you about Epstein ever again. This is what they let happen.
[03:40:53] That's the way it is.
[03:40:57] Not a lot to process. There's a lot to read.
[03:40:59] They explained my cure, Stommer can't be jailed.
[03:41:15] I don't think he should be jailed.
[03:41:17] No, thank you.
[03:41:19] I mean, there's a lot of people who shouldn't be jailed.
[03:41:27] It's just my opinion, but you know who knows.
[03:41:33] Sorry about that.
[03:41:39] Number two, Fiona.
[03:41:42] Fiona grew up in a highly abusive household marked by domestic violence,
[03:41:46] severe emotional abuse, and repeated suicide attempts by her mother,
[03:41:50] which Fiona witnessed.
[03:41:52] Despite exceptional academic ability,
[03:41:54] She developed serious mental health difficulties, self-harm behaviors, and suicidal ideation from a young age.
[03:42:03] After escalating abuse and failed disclosures, Fiona entered care at the age of 13.
[03:42:09] She was placed in a children's home that had already been identified as a high risk for sexual exploitation in a television documentary prior to her arrival.
[03:42:20] Why wouldn't you turn it off? Yeah, why wouldn't you just turn it off? I don't
[03:42:25] even get it. Oh my god. Inadequate supervision meant she was missing
[03:42:32] repeatedly. At 13 she was groomed by an adult, by adult Pakistani men, who she
[03:42:37] estimates were between the ages of 24 and 45. She's 13 by the way. Grooming began
[03:42:43] with affection and alcohol, quickly progressing to rape, drug dependency,
[03:42:47] threats and trafficking. Care staff negligence was extreme. Abusers would
[03:42:52] sit in cars waiting outside for the girls, openly converse with the staff,
[03:42:57] and even phone the home to inquire about them. One home worker told Fiona's
[03:43:03] mother that her boss had described the men in the car's registration plates as
[03:43:08] above her pay grade, warning that she would lose her job if she did so. Fiona
[03:43:14] The police believe that the staff were aware of what was happening but felt powerless to
[03:43:18] stop it rather than actively complicit.
[03:43:21] Nevertheless, the child's home received more than $5,000 a week to care for her and failed
[03:43:28] miserably.
[03:43:29] Fiona suspects the management avoided proper investigation for fear of being labeled as
[03:43:34] racist.
[03:43:37] Only the police took any formal action, issuing harboring notices to the men, official warnings
[03:43:42] stating they had no permission to associate with, contact, or house a vulnerable child.
[03:43:47] However, no further action followed. When Fiona's mother called the police to report her daughter
[03:43:52] missing and mentioned a history of abuse by Asian men, the call handler told her,
[03:43:57] you can't describe them as Asian men because that's racist.
[03:44:01] You should be glad your child is being taught a different culture.
[03:44:12] Oh, okay, makes a lot of sense Wow, on occasion, the police officer returned
[03:44:31] Fiona to the house where the abuse was occurring and told the men to have fun with her.
[03:44:37] Once again, on one occasion, the police returned Fiona to the house where the abuse was
[03:44:42] happening, and told the men that were there at the house to have fun with her.
[03:44:49] Wow.
[03:44:57] On another occasion, police instructed the abusers that if they could persuade for Fiona
[03:45:01] to sign herself out of care, the police would stop bothering them.
[03:45:05] So basically, the police were collaborating with the rapists.
[03:45:08] Well, that's great.
[03:45:11] That's amazing.
[03:45:12] we needed the gang then to ride to convince her to do so and tending to
[03:45:16] traffic her to cashmere that is yeah that's the area so it's like that's like
[03:45:25] I guess it would be like eastern Pakistan near India right it's in between
[03:45:30] that area it's kind of like a middle zone area where there is it yeah it's
[03:45:36] an India it's Pakistan and India like there's a lot of intermixing there and
[03:45:40] and the control over Kashmir is heavily contested.
[03:45:43] But yes, it's the top of India, exactly.
[03:45:46] If this is India, there's Pakistan, like Kashmir is kind of like right in this area.
[03:45:51] Like, I can't do the math, like that's basically it.
[03:45:54] So yes, and just so you guys understand, Kashmir is not in Europe, right?
[03:45:59] It's in fucking, you know, India and Pakistan.
[03:46:02] She was only prevented from leaving the country because she did not have a passport.
[03:46:06] From 2008 and 2012, Fiona was reportedly raped by multiple men connected to an organizing
[03:46:10] grooming network.
[03:46:12] She was often kept in a house known as a party house where between 10 and 20 men would attend
[03:46:17] at one time.
[03:46:19] On one occasion, she was encouraged to bring her friends there because the owner had relatives
[03:46:23] waiting visiting from Birmingham to celebrate Eid.
[03:46:27] This is a Islamic holiday.
[03:46:29] And he expected girls to be there.
[03:46:33] In the house, the girls were routinely referred to as white slags, while the men wanted Pakistani
[03:46:39] girls kept pure for marriage.
[03:46:46] Slags, by the way, is its British slang for sluts.
[03:46:51] The gangs reportedly discussed fears that the English defense league, EDL, would arrive
[03:46:56] armed, so they kept baseball bats for protection.
[03:46:59] They also allegedly spoke of attended EDL demonstrations with weapons.
[03:47:04] England was not only traffic and raped across multiple cities in the UK, but was also forced
[03:47:09] to traffic drugs.
[03:47:11] Drugs intimidation and violence were used to control her.
[03:47:14] She was made to clean up the knives from the scene of two fatal stabbings.
[03:47:18] She was present during a shootout.
[03:47:20] Her abusers bragged to her that they had hidden dead bodies in certain locations.
[03:47:36] A few days later, Fiona recalls the news reporting on a body being recovered from the same location
[03:47:41] that the abusers had disclosed to her.
[03:47:43] As a result, threatens of violence were carried enormous weight.
[03:47:48] At 14, so this is all, she's 13 years old, all these things are happening, she's 13.
[03:47:54] Keep all this in mind.
[03:47:59] At 14, Fiona was abused by a man known as Rambo.
[03:48:02] He entered Britain illegally in the back of a lorry.
[03:48:06] Previously castrated in Pakistan as punishment for child abuse, he had fled to the Philippines
[03:48:10] where he allegedly attacked multiple women and children with a large knife, the origin
[03:48:14] of his nickname.
[03:48:15] Rambo was locked in a room with two, so keep in mind, these people were so savage and such
[03:48:21] animals that he got his dick cut off in Pakistan and then he had to go to the Philippines and
[03:48:28] I'm sure he got ran out of there too. So he went to the PVE server of London so he could rape
[03:48:34] girls in London. That's what happens. And let's just hear, Rambo was locked in a room with two
[03:48:41] girls and subjected them to extreme sexual torture. This case illustrated that, in some
[03:48:46] instances, the sexual abuse of children was driven more by humiliation and control than
[03:48:51] from sexual gratification. At 15, Fiona became pregnant while in a mixed sex care home, her
[03:48:59] son was later removed and adopted due to ongoing exploitation risks. Yet, Fiona herself was
[03:49:05] left in the same dangerous environment.
[03:49:08] Oh my god, so she has the kid, they take the kid away from her because the kid might
[03:49:14] get raped, but then they keep her there and she's also a kid, she's 15 years old.
[03:49:20] Wow.
[03:49:23] The abuse continued into her adulthood.
[03:49:25] It only stopped when she turned 18, leaving her with profound physical and psychological
[03:49:30] trauma including PTSD, substance dependency and long term health damage.
[03:49:35] Fiona states, the greatest harm came not from the abusers, but from the institutional disbelief, neglect, and punishment that actively enabled the ongoing exploitation.
[03:49:46] In total, she estimates she was abused between 50 and 100 men. Of those, only two were not Pakistani.
[03:50:00] Wow.
[03:50:01] I was beaten regularly, I was drugged, filmed, being raped, and the footage was distributed.
[03:50:09] She's underage by the way.
[03:50:11] I sustained broken bones, facial injuries, and severe trauma.
[03:50:15] I was subjected to racial abuse in the community and blamed by the families of the perpetrators.
[03:50:20] Oh boy.
[03:50:21] Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy.
[03:50:27] Wow.
[03:50:28] Is he reading the entire report?
[03:50:34] Yes, that is correct.
[03:50:37] Michelle was physically abused in childhood by both her mother and her stepfather.
[03:50:41] Her mother had multiple partners throughout Michelle's childhood, many of whom had abused
[03:50:45] her.
[03:50:46] Some sexually.
[03:50:47] She believes this early experience created an association between abuse and love, leading
[03:50:51] her particularly vulnerable.
[03:50:53] From the age of 13, she was groomed by three adult Pakistani brothers who supplied her
[03:51:02] with alcohol, cigarettes, and drugs.
[03:51:05] She was raped while intoxicated, including one occasion where she was taken upstairs
[03:51:09] while her sister tried to intervene.
[03:51:12] Because of her upbringing, she thought this was normal, that they were her boyfriends,
[03:51:16] and that they loved her.
[03:51:17] She would go missing for extended periods of time and be subjected to repeated daily
[03:51:21] sexual abuse.
[03:51:22] The perpetrators would collect her from school, her home, and public places using threats
[03:51:27] of violence to course and control her.
[03:51:30] At age 14, she was gang raped and beaten by three men who had locked her in a house.
[03:51:36] She was left covered in cuts and bruises which alerted a friend.
[03:51:39] The friend told their own mother, who then contacted Michelle's mother.
[03:51:43] The police recalled, but they claimed there was little that could be done without more
[03:51:48] evidence.
[03:51:49] the gang members later forced Michelle to go to the police station with him and
[03:51:52] retract her statement.
[03:52:02] Oh my god. That's insane.
[03:52:08] I'm gonna get a couple more shifts.
[03:52:17] Aren't the cops supposed to find the evidence?
[03:52:21] They don't want to, because finding the evidence could lead them to a conclusion that they
[03:52:25] don't want to have.
[03:52:26] I mean, it doesn't make them look bad.
[03:52:30] How can you eat right now?
[03:52:35] I'm hungry.
[03:52:36] I don't got a lot of food, I got a few chips, and I got a little bit of chips, like chips.
[03:52:54] Fair enough, yeah, I'm hungry.
[03:52:57] The police accepted her, the police accepted him as her appropriate adult.
[03:53:04] Wait a minute, so, I'm going to go straight, sorry.
[03:53:15] She files a rape report against a guy.
[03:53:18] The guy shows up with her, she's a child, he's an adult, and then he has her retract
[03:53:23] the statement with him there, and then they assign him as the appropriate adult, and then
[03:53:30] they drop the investigation.
[03:53:32] Oh, okay.
[03:53:34] Oh, that makes sense.
[03:53:36] Yeah, definitely. Of course.
[03:53:38] One of Michelle's friends who live in the care home would be collected directly outside by the same gang.
[03:53:44] Care staff would call the police, but officers reportedly referred to the girls as prostitutes.
[03:53:50] The police officers referred to the girls as prostitutes, despite them being children.
[03:53:56] Both social services and the police, Michelle says, failed to understand the situation.
[03:54:01] That's not true. They understood the situation and they let it happen, and believed the girls were engaging in the activity by a choice.
[03:54:08] Oh, the 14-year-old and the 10-year-old were consenting. Right. I've heard that before.
[03:54:15] As a result, little was done to intervene. When she was abducted and went missing, no one came looking for her.
[03:54:20] A social worker once told her that at age 14, she would be allowed...
[03:54:26] Excuse me. A social worker once told her that at age 14 she would be allowed to live with
[03:54:36] her 30-year-old boyfriend, 14 years old, allowed to live with her 30-year-old, quote, boyfriend
[03:54:42] as long as they did not share a room. Oh my God. Michelle was raped and Ben Sheds, threatened
[03:54:54] with a knife and forced into sex with multiple men waiting in cars.
[03:54:58] She was drugged, beaten, burned with cigarettes, locked in rooms and passed between men.
[03:55:04] An amusement arcade was used as a front for drug dealing and the sexual exploitation of
[03:55:09] children.
[03:55:10] She became pregnant four times as a child as a result of rape leading to miscarriages,
[03:55:16] one abortion and one surviving child.
[03:55:19] Of her abusers, she states 98% of them were Pakistani Muslim.
[03:55:23] If not, they were Iraqi or Kurdish.
[03:55:27] Michelle believes that these gangs have remained untouched because authorities are feared of
[03:55:31] being labeled as racist.
[03:55:33] She describes an extensive network of abusers operating across the entire country, calling
[03:55:38] it industrial in scale.
[03:55:40] It functions as a large central network with smaller connected groups and specified localities.
[03:55:46] Michelle claims she was raped between six and seven hundred times, oh by between, sorry
[03:55:52] excuse me I didn't read that correctly, by between six and seven hundred, Jesus Christ,
[03:55:59] I've really bad dyslexia, it's hard for me to read, so just be patient.
[03:56:06] Michelle claims that she was raped by six and seven hundred men, different men over
[03:56:11] the course of three years.
[03:56:12] She now lives with severe PTSD and lifelong trauma, describing both her childhood and
[03:56:18] her future as destroyed.
[03:56:25] What would you say the main issue was?
[03:56:27] I don't think that they cared much about us.
[03:56:29] They didn't want to open that can of worms because it's a religion thing.
[03:56:33] I'd probably say 98% of them were Pakistani Muslim.
[03:56:37] If not, they were Iraqi or Kurdish.
[03:56:40] Man, how about that?
[03:56:46] Different men, that means more than a thousand occurrences?
[03:56:48] Well, probably a lot more than a thousand times.
[03:56:51] Whitney grew up in a vulnerable household.
[03:56:53] Her mother severed from severe mental health issues.
[03:56:55] I mean, you can, and you can clearly see how, and, and by the way, this is what I was talking
[03:56:59] about before about how when you allow one bad thing to happen, it cascades into other
[03:57:04] bad things.
[03:57:05] This is something that dumb people can't comprehend, but it's something that's referred
[03:57:09] to as a second order effect. So for example, when you don't have a social system that takes
[03:57:15] care of people, you have these secondary effects that, you know, for example, are like kids
[03:57:20] becoming vulnerable. And that's why it's such a huge problem that you have the money that's
[03:57:24] being allocated to these migrants that are apparently some of them are rapists, and it's
[03:57:28] not being allocated to these people that have mental health problems. And her father was
[03:57:32] absent from her life. She was first groomed and sexually abused at the age of 15 by two
[03:57:37] adult Pakistani brothers. One of the brothers, Whitney recalls, acted as a boyfriend figure.
[03:57:42] Both brothers would regularly take her to a flat in Birmingham, supply her with alcohol,
[03:57:47] and in her words, she would have sex with them.
[03:57:51] Their interactions with Whitney soon turned violent. They began beating her, and on one
[03:57:55] occasion they held a hot iron to her face. Whitney recalls that the brothers stopped
[03:58:00] contacting her after they arrived at her house to collect her and found all of her uncles
[03:58:05] sitting on the wall outside.
[03:58:07] Based on uncles, after that incident, they never came back.
[03:58:11] She cannot remember exactly how or why her uncles were there,
[03:58:14] but she believes her mother had asked them to intervene.
[03:58:17] Many years later, Whitney's daughter
[03:58:19] began self-harming at the age of 11
[03:58:22] and even attempted suicide.
[03:58:23] So this is generational, right?
[03:58:25] It's generational now.
[03:58:26] Her phone contained sexually explicit messages.
[03:58:29] Whitney's daughter told her there was a sex room
[03:58:32] at school, run by the older boys.
[03:58:36] Oh wow, so let me get this straight.
[03:58:38] So you have a bunch of text messages
[03:58:40] between underage kids about sex rooms at schools,
[03:58:43] but you're going and you're arresting people
[03:58:45] for tweets about immigrants?
[03:58:49] Huh, that's crazy.
[03:58:52] Why would you do that?
[03:58:53] Deeply concerned for her daughter,
[03:58:55] Whitney contacted social services.
[03:58:57] They ordered a little support
[03:58:58] beyond talking through the problems.
[03:59:00] in one instance social services accidentally sick is sent her
[03:59:05] six other children's case files
[03:59:08] instead of her daughters which left her deeply distrustful of their ability to
[03:59:12] help
[03:59:12] when he's daughter was coerced in the sending a sexual image which was then
[03:59:16] circulated across multiple schools the local community and eventually the
[03:59:20] internet
[03:59:20] and this is again she's eleven years old
[03:59:23] uh... she this led to receiving unwanted attention from adult men of
[03:59:26] various ethnicities and from multiple countries
[03:59:29] From that point on, Whitney's daughter began going missing regularly.
[03:59:33] These disappearances were directly linked to sexual demands and exploitation by older
[03:59:37] boys and adult men.
[03:59:39] She was threatened with violence if she contacted the police and sometimes returned home with
[03:59:43] items of clothing missing.
[03:59:45] Whitney repeatedly reported her concerns to the police and social services, clearly stating
[03:59:50] that she believed her daughter was being sexually exploited.
[03:59:53] Police responses were often delayed, statements were not taken, and investigations were closed
[03:59:58] without further action. Social services refused to relocate the family, downgraded the risk
[04:00:04] level, and eventually closed the case despite ongoing exploitation. Whitney herself was
[04:00:09] blamed for her own past, was used to undermine her credibility as a parent. Her family received
[04:00:15] repeated threats, including warnings that their house would be burned down, faces would
[04:00:19] be slashed, and machetes would be used. Later, Whitney discovered that her daughter had been
[04:00:24] placed in the national referral mechanism as a trafficking victim without her being informed.
[04:00:30] The NRM is the UK's official framework for identifying, referring and supporting victims
[04:00:35] of human trafficking and modern slavery and serves as a recognition by a designated professional
[04:00:40] that an individual is a potential victim of human trafficking or modern slavery.
[04:00:48] My daughter told me that after a while there was a sex room in the school. I told the school
[04:00:53] about it but they completely shut it down and they said that she was lying.
[04:00:58] Oh, okay. I guess so.
[04:01:10] Wow.
[04:01:18] Next! Give me a minute.
[04:01:21] I think the teachers were probably just okay with it.
[04:01:28] I mean, there's rumors like that in every school, basically, though.
[04:01:37] Excuse me.
[04:01:40] All right.
[04:01:41] Sally is the mother of a daughter who was found guilty of nine counts of perverting
[04:01:46] the course of justice for lying about being groomed by an Asian grooming gang and sentenced
[04:01:51] to eight years in prison. Despite this, Sally believes there is evidence to suggest her
[04:01:56] daughter was a genuine victim of the gangs. So nine counts of perverting justice. So they
[04:02:01] put her in jail for reporting this. Sally described a previously stable working family life until
[04:02:07] housing instability and family stress coincided with changes in her daughter's behavior.
[04:02:13] The house and family were buying fell through, the house the family was buying fell through
[04:02:20] and they had already moved out of their family home with all their possessions and they were
[04:02:23] in storage.
[04:02:24] The family family was able to rent them a part renovated process, property on a short
[04:02:27] term basis but it was not ideal for a family with four children.
[04:02:31] It was only meant to be temporary but the family ended up staying there for ten months.
[04:02:35] Her daughter ended up making up stories such as claiming her mother and stepdad were going
[04:02:39] away and leaving her to look after their five year old brother at school.
[04:02:43] This resulted in school act involvement in their family life.
[04:02:46] The stresses and the household under was led to arguments that brought in both police and
[04:02:54] social services.
[04:02:55] After leaving the school at 16, Sally's daughter began working at the local pub at 16.
[04:03:01] On one occasion, she was invited to a party.
[04:03:03] Sally received a call later that evening from one of her daughter's friends saying that
[04:03:07] her daughter was lying on the pavement outside the property.
[04:03:11] If Sally could pick her up, they were going to take her to the bus stop and leave her
[04:03:14] there as she was making too much noise.
[04:03:17] When her mother found her lying on the ground, she was making a horrendous wailing sound
[04:03:22] and kept saying to not touch her.
[04:03:24] Her mother recognized that something seriously was wrong and took her to the hospital.
[04:03:29] Sally's daughter told the nurse carrying out the examination that she had been sexually
[04:03:32] assaulted.
[04:03:33] The hospital notes recorded that her genitalia were swollen and red.
[04:03:38] The hospital reported the incident to the police. Sally's daughter then received threats
[04:03:42] via Snapchat and became scared about the outcome of the case and withdrew from the process.
[04:03:48] Around the same time social services closed their case on the family, Sally believes their
[04:03:53] daughter did not want to invite more trouble into the household. It appears later emerged
[04:03:58] in court that they had all been smoking cannabis. Sally believes that her daughter had participated
[04:04:04] and that something had happened to her,
[04:04:07] but she was found guilty and of lying about being raped.
[04:04:12] Sally's daughter then began working
[04:04:13] as a kitchen assistant at a care home
[04:04:15] and a glass collector at a nightclub
[04:04:17] in addition to her pub job.
[04:04:19] So she has three different jobs,
[04:04:21] well, these guys are sitting around collecting welfare.
[04:04:23] And after turning 18,
[04:04:25] she was able to work behind the bar at the nightclub
[04:04:27] where her behavior began to change.
[04:04:29] She would return home with cuts and bruises.
[04:04:31] On one occasion, she came back with a black eye
[04:04:34] and said that there had been a fight in the nightclub
[04:04:36] and she had been hit accidentally.
[04:04:39] She appeared more tired and distressed than usual.
[04:04:42] Sally began to notice that her daughter's phone
[04:04:44] would ring regularly with Asian men's names
[04:04:47] appearing on the screen.
[04:04:48] When asking about them, her daughter tried to hide the calls.
[04:04:51] The bar manager stopped her daughter
[04:04:53] from working on the main floor because she was small
[04:04:56] and they struggled to keep track of her.
[04:04:58] They also ensured that she was always paired
[04:05:00] with an older member of the staff,
[04:05:02] as the Asian men would harass her
[04:05:05] if she was working alone.
[04:05:06] One Asian man gifted her with a gold chain.
[04:05:10] Sally's daughter began saying she wanted to move away
[04:05:12] from home.
[04:05:13] She had regularly traveled to a nearby town by train.
[04:05:16] Sally would pick her up and drop her off at the station,
[04:05:19] and she never appeared to have been drinking or using drugs.
[04:05:22] One day, Sally returned home to find her daughter
[04:05:25] had left her with possessions and was ignoring her calls.
[04:05:28] She told her work colleagues that she had moved
[04:05:30] because her stepfather was harassing her,
[04:05:32] but this was not true.
[04:05:34] After a few days of investigation,
[04:05:37] Sally managed to find out where her daughter had moved to.
[04:05:39] When she arrived at the flat,
[04:05:41] she found her daughter with two police officers
[04:05:43] to whom she was reporting an allegation of rape.
[04:05:46] When her daughter was handed in her phone as evidence,
[04:05:48] the police found hundreds of messages from Asian men.
[04:05:52] They believed she was being groomed.
[04:05:54] She was later found guilty for lying about the rape
[04:05:57] that she had reported.
[04:06:02] Wow.
[04:06:04] Isn't that crazy?
[04:06:07] Over the course of the following year,
[04:06:09] Sally reported her daughter missing around 39 times.
[04:06:13] She would often turn up in various towns
[04:06:15] across the region, battered, bruised, intoxicated,
[04:06:18] or on drugs.
[04:06:20] She was usually without underwear
[04:06:22] and spent increasing amounts of time in the hospital.
[04:06:24] One police force made the referral to the NRM,
[04:06:28] believing that she was the victim of trafficking.
[04:06:30] Another police force repeatedly arrested her
[04:06:33] and seized her phone.
[04:06:34] So they're arresting the girl that was being abused.
[04:06:37] And seized her phone, which meant the referral agency
[04:06:40] could not contact her as her number kept changing.
[04:06:46] Wow.
[04:06:49] Destroying evidence, yep.
[04:06:50] One incident involves Sally's daughter being locked
[04:06:52] in a room above an Indian restaurant
[04:06:54] with the man refusing to let her leave the police ignored it believing that she
[04:06:58] was lying
[04:06:59] another incident involved an asian man following her trying to grab her and
[04:07:02] take her away
[04:07:04] thankfully she was with her sister and friends who quickly put her in the
[04:07:07] taxi and sent her home
[04:07:08] the same man was later arrested for breaking into a woman's house and
[04:07:12] sexually assaulting her while she slept
[04:07:14] this is a so the same guy was already sexually assaulting somebody else right
[04:07:18] this is the person who they think is lying
[04:07:21] Nevertheless, the police insisted Sally's daughter had been lying about the earlier incident the police did
[04:07:27] The police believed that she had a mental health condition and she was deliberately self-harming and putting herself in dangerous situations
[04:07:35] They wanted to have her sick
[04:07:37] Sectioned but her daughter the doctor disagreed noting that she still had capacity
[04:07:44] What the fuck
[04:07:46] Another incident involved a different Asian man who refused to leave Sally's daughter's
[04:07:53] flat.
[04:07:54] Police told him to leave but asked no questions.
[04:07:57] He left behind a balaclava.
[04:07:59] Let yet the police showed no interest despite him carrying it while visiting a young woman.
[04:08:05] After her flat door was kicked down and yet another incident while she was missing, she
[04:08:09] returned to her mother's home.
[04:08:12] Sowie's daughter later explained that she had moved away to keep her family safe and
[04:08:16] she had claimed that she had been told that if she did not do as her abuser said, they
[04:08:21] would harm her brother, rape her sister, and fire bomb her house.
[04:08:25] She had lied to her colleagues about Sir Stepdad to avoid bringing repercussions onto the family.
[04:08:31] She went missing again.
[04:08:33] The police stated that they believed that she was making the whole thing up and injuring
[04:08:37] herself, so they charged her with perverting the course of justice.
[04:08:43] Part of her bail conditions required her to not leave Sally's house.
[04:08:48] The following week, her daughter attempted suicide by overdose.
[04:08:52] She went missing one final time and was found in a field with injuries to her head and ear,
[04:08:57] a severed finger, and numerous cuts and bruises.
[04:09:01] Wow, I wonder why she'd cut her finger off, that's crazy.
[04:09:05] she wrote a post on Facebook alleging that she had been a victim of grooming
[04:09:09] gangs. The post went viral. Within a half hour the police arrested her and she
[04:09:14] was sent to prison. Following her daughter's conviction the family
[04:09:19] experienced sustained harassment and intimidation particularly from one
[04:09:23] Muslim man. Sally reports that repeated failures by the police to protect them.
[04:09:27] She believes her daughter was a vulnerable young woman who lied at times
[04:09:31] but was nevertheless groomed.
[04:09:36] Oh my god.
[04:09:41] Wow.
[04:09:44] Marlin.
[04:09:45] Oh boy.
[04:09:46] Another one.
[04:09:48] It's called manipulation.
[04:09:49] Yeah, of course it is.
[04:09:51] The user story is an example of people making up fake claims.
[04:09:54] Yeah, definitely.
[04:09:56] The people involved in this need to be put in prison.
[04:09:58] I don't think they need to be put in prison.
[04:10:00] that's my opinion
[04:10:02] i know a lot of people think that uh... i don't i i'm not a i'm not a fan of
[04:10:05] putting in prison personal
[04:10:07] i think there's a better solutions for this this uh... this situation
[04:10:12] uh... personally i think so
[04:10:13] what page reon that says right at the top forty five page forty five we've
[04:10:17] already on forty five pages gentlemen
[04:10:19] let's keep going
[04:10:20] marlin
[04:10:21] is the father of the daughter who is repeatedly or repeatedly uh... victim
[04:10:25] a grooming as well as being repeatedly failed by authorities
[04:10:29] marlin reported his fourteen-year-old daughter scarlet missing a number of
[04:10:33] times because she was being groomed and exploited
[04:10:35] the police informed social services of what marlin was doing this appropriate
[04:10:40] uh... as he was acting the safeguard his daughter
[04:10:42] however social services
[04:10:44] did not accept the police's assessment and said dragged out the
[04:10:47] investigation for three months
[04:10:49] during the time the daughter disclosed uh... concerns to her school
[04:10:53] which resulted in social services attending marlin's home
[04:10:57] while his daughter was present they told him that if he tried to stop her from
[04:11:01] leaving the house she should call social services or the police
[04:11:05] social services undermining his parental authority resulted in her missing
[04:11:09] episodes escalating dramatically
[04:11:12] social services effectively gave her permission to go missing
[04:11:15] and the case was then closed without meaningful intervention marlin come up
[04:11:20] placed a formal complaint the social services
[04:11:22] stating that he was struggling to cope with his daughter's missing episodes
[04:11:27] The social worker assigned to him following this openly
[04:11:30] stated to him that they were only taking the case because of his complaint.
[04:11:34] This made him feel like the problem rather than a parent concerned with
[04:11:37] safeguarding his father from his daughter from abuse.
[04:11:41] On one occasion, Marlon stood in front of the door to prevent his daughter from
[04:11:44] leaving late at night,
[04:11:45] resulting in her repeatedly kicking him and breaking three of his fingers.
[04:11:50] He reported this to social services, who simply stated that he should walk away
[04:11:55] when she becomes violent. Even after showing them the bruises on his back that he received
[04:12:00] as he walked away, they did not change the advice they gave. Marlin remains convinced
[04:12:07] that if his child were male and he were female, the response would be different. Marlin would
[04:12:12] often spend his evenings driving in search of his daughter until 3 or 4 in the morning
[04:12:17] while having work the following day, in which his employer was not supportive of. He often
[04:12:22] reported her missing to the police, who would sometimes turn up to his house many hours
[04:12:26] later. On one occasion, he saw footage of the police saying not to even bother talking
[04:12:31] to him. Not to even bother to not saying not to bother even waking him. Was it we want?
[04:12:39] This made him feel like more of a problem than being the safeguarding emergency that
[04:12:44] it was. Scarlet was unlawfully excluded from school due to grooming related behavior and
[04:12:49] and assigned a new school where the grooming gang operated.
[04:12:53] Uh-oh.
[04:12:55] Uh-oh.
[04:12:57] A multi-agency risk management meeting was held
[04:12:59] and eventually convened with children's services
[04:13:03] and the police's missing from the home team.
[04:13:06] While the meeting was ongoing,
[04:13:07] one of the police officers in attendance told Marlin
[04:13:10] to stop reporting his daughter missing.
[04:13:12] Marlin challenged this,
[04:13:13] which resulted in the police officer shouting at him
[04:13:16] in front of all in attendance.
[04:13:18] The officer has since been dismissed.
[04:13:20] The social worker and manager present did not intervene, but privately acknowledged that
[04:13:25] he was right to continue to report his daughter missing.
[04:13:28] They refused to launch a formal complaint against the officer.
[04:13:31] Wow.
[04:13:34] How dare you report these crimes?
[04:13:39] Is this in the UK?
[04:13:40] Yeah, it is.
[04:13:43] Shortly after this, his daughter went missing for several days and eventually was found
[04:13:46] at Marlin's mother's house.
[04:13:48] unkempt, distressed, and stating that she had been raped.
[04:13:52] Care staff returned to the location of the rape, thereby destroying forensic opportunities,
[04:14:01] and failed to report it to police until days after.
[04:14:04] Marlin had to make his own referral to the rape crisis center, by which time forensic
[04:14:12] evidence was lost.
[04:14:14] The perpetrator was arrested but bailed out with the condition to not contact Marlon's
[04:14:18] daughter.
[04:14:19] So they bailed the rapist out.
[04:14:22] Oh my god.
[04:14:24] Wow.
[04:14:27] Holy fucking shit.
[04:14:32] This is really bad.
[04:14:34] Hmm.
[04:14:36] They'll have Sherlock Holmes over there?
[04:14:40] Yeah, Sherlock Holmes went to jail for targeting minorities.
[04:14:44] They thought he was racist.
[04:14:47] And so now he's being reeducated.
[04:14:51] Yeah, I sent him to Pakistan.
[04:14:53] That's what happened.
[04:14:54] Immediately upon leaving the station, he called her and threatened her life.
[04:14:58] Immediately leaving the station, the perpetrator, who was bailed out with a
[04:15:02] condition to not contact her, immediately called her and threatened her life.
[04:15:07] He was an adult and drug dealer, and his associates soon began
[04:15:11] attending Marlin's home. His daughter was terrified of them
[04:15:14] and older woman began to groom and manipulate Marlin's daughter
[04:15:18] under the guise of friendship. After another missing episode
[04:15:22] Marlin was able to trace his daughter to a specific property.
[04:15:25] Despite repeated calls and reports of men entering the property
[04:15:28] both police and social services failed to remove her
[04:15:32] or issue an abduction warning notice. His daughter was then later found to be the
[04:15:37] victim of criminal exploitation, including drug supply, prostitution, and being forced
[04:15:42] to dig up a firearm.
[04:15:44] These acts were directed by the older woman, amongst others.
[04:15:47] At this point, the impact on Marlon was catastrophic.
[04:15:50] He was physically exhausted, anxious, depressed, and lived in constant fear.
[04:15:55] He was attacked by masked individuals in his own home with the police response delayed
[04:16:00] and dismissive.
[04:16:01] Marlon's daughter was eventually taken into a secure center where she was subjected to
[04:16:05] further abuse, including sexual abuse by the staff and other children, neglect, and safeguarding
[04:16:12] failures. Marlin made multiple complaints. At a court hearing, social services attempted to place
[04:16:17] his daughter on a child protection plan for emotional abuse and neglect by Marlin himself.
[04:16:24] However, the judge intervened and ordered this to be amended and to be recorded beyond his parental
[04:16:29] control. Marlin's daughter continued to be moved between unsuitable placements. She was groomed
[04:16:35] groomed repeatedly, trafficked, forced into drug supply, and raped by adult men.
[04:16:40] She became pregnant as a result of rape.
[04:16:43] The handling of her termination by professionals was traumatic and negligent.
[04:16:47] Police littered charged Scarlett with intent to supply Class A drugs, despite being a victim
[04:16:52] of trafficking and on the national referral mechanism.
[04:16:56] Scarlett was placed in a unit run entirely by male Muslim staff where she was groomed
[04:17:00] again.
[04:17:01] Racist abuse and extremist comments were made to her, Marlin again raised concerns which
[04:17:08] were ignored.
[04:17:11] This is just getting worse and worse.
[04:17:14] Despite his repeated attempts to help his daughter, he has experienced many instances
[04:17:17] of violence from her as a result of the trauma and grooming.
[04:17:21] He's experienced many assaults, received black eyes and had to sleep barricaded in his room.
[04:17:25] He repeatedly requested domestic abuse support but was refused because he was a male parent.
[04:17:30] He has been forced to complete parenting courses and blamed for his daughter's abuse.
[04:17:40] Not good.
[04:17:42] Not good at all.
[04:17:44] Oh my god.
[04:17:46] Isn't that bad?
[04:17:48] That's crazy.
[04:17:50] The whole experience harmed Marlon financially, emotionally, and psychologically.
[04:17:53] He states that he has destroyed his life.
[04:17:55] I believe him.
[04:17:56] He no longer is the person that he used to be.
[04:17:58] case highlights that parents can also be victims of grooming networks as well as
[04:18:02] widespread institutional failure. If you'd like to hear Marlon's story in
[04:18:05] greater detail, he's recently published a book about it on his
[04:18:08] experiences titled In Plain Sight. Scarlet missing again for several days
[04:18:13] when she was eventually found she was unkempt, distressed and disclosed and
[04:18:16] she had been raped. Shockingly, Edge of Care staff returned her to the location
[04:18:21] where she had been raped and failed to report the offense to police or duty or
[04:18:26] more duty social workers until days later.
[04:18:30] Oh my god.
[04:18:33] Oh my god.
[04:18:36] This is wild.
[04:18:39] This 100% destroys the Believe All Victims movement?
[04:18:42] Yeah, I told you guys.
[04:18:44] And this is, it's not even halfway over by the way, it's not even halfway over.
[04:18:49] Wallace's early childhood in Scotland is marked by poverty, instability, and a lack of consistent
[04:18:54] adult protection.
[04:18:55] His mother suffered from mental health and substance misuse problems.
[04:18:59] She struggled to comprehend the situation.
[04:19:01] She put her son in and often failed to intervene, which allowed Wallace's abuse to continue.
[04:19:06] Wallace's mother psychologically and emotionally abused him throughout his childhood.
[04:19:10] From a young age, adult men moved in and out of his life, and he was encouraged to refer
[04:19:15] to them as dad or uncle.
[04:19:17] This made it seem normal that adult men would be around him as a child.
[04:19:21] He was moved around many different home environments and learned to accept situations without
[04:19:25] question. His early experiences made him believe that adults could enter his
[04:19:29] personal space without consent and fear should be tolerated and that he had no
[04:19:34] control. Wallace's earliest memory of abuse occurred when he was four or five
[04:19:39] years old. When an adult came into his bedroom at night and got into bed with
[04:19:43] him, he could not identify who it was but he instinctively knew it was wrong. His
[04:19:48] main abusers were his mother's partner and the partner's brother, who both
[04:19:52] Both exercised authority over Wallace and were treated as trusted adults.
[04:19:56] They were connected to a biker group in the area.
[04:19:59] Not all members of the group were involved in the abuse, but a core group of the men
[04:20:03] were.
[04:20:04] Wallace recalls being taken to a particular house where multiple men were present.
[04:20:08] It had a dark atmosphere, lit by candles, possibly snake-shaped candle holders, and
[04:20:13] a fireplace.
[04:20:14] What the fuck is this?
[04:20:15] This is like Resident Evil.
[04:20:18] This setting felt deliberate and staged.
[04:20:20] All adults were sitting around watching him, which instinctively made him feel unsafe.
[04:20:25] He was led into a bedroom, restrained and raped by an adult.
[04:20:30] His mother's partner spoke to him as if what happened was normal, despite the considerable
[04:20:36] pain and his emotional distress he felt, while us asked if he would receive a toy for what
[04:20:41] happened.
[04:20:42] He did receive one, but it was cheap and insignificant.
[04:20:46] Even then, he realized that there was no real compensation for what had happened to him.
[04:20:50] The same pattern of abuse occurred on multiple occasions.
[04:20:54] Wallace recalls seeing other boys and girls present who were usually restrained and drugged.
[04:21:00] He also recalls being drugged himself and losing consciousness.
[04:21:03] He would often wake alone or with other abused children, disoriented and distressed.
[04:21:09] This has long caused psychological damage.
[04:21:12] At one point, the police raided the property.
[04:21:14] They took Wallace outside and showed him adults one by one, asking if he recognized them.
[04:21:20] He said that he had been coached to save these men or his uncles, and that is what he said.
[04:21:25] He associated authority figures with fear and wanted to avoid saying what he believed
[04:21:30] might be the wrong thing.
[04:21:31] As a result, the police intervention did not protect him.
[04:21:35] No safeguarding followed, and he returned to the abusive environment.
[04:21:39] The signs of abuse were there and only reinforced by Wallace's view that speaking out would
[04:21:44] not lead to safety. As an adult, he eventually attempted to report what had happened to him,
[04:21:49] a disclosure which took years. He expected to be treated as a victim of serious childhood
[04:21:54] sexual abuse, but instead his disclosure was treated as a mental health episode.
[04:21:59] He was asked to provide psychiatric and medical notes before any proper investigation would
[04:22:03] take place. The lack of seriousness from the authorities resulted in Wallace's statements
[04:22:09] being recorded improperly. Due to his experience, this experience he made complaints to the police,
[04:22:15] to professional bodies including general medical council and other oversight at organizations.
[04:22:20] Each process was slow, fragmented and obstructive and continued for years without resolution.
[04:22:27] During this time he was forced to relive his experiences repeatedly,
[04:22:31] while he was met with skepticism. At no point was his well-being considered,
[04:22:35] which further compounded his trauma as he once again felt dismissed, disbelieved, and unprotected.
[04:22:42] Owing to Wallace's abuse, he has experienced long-term psychological harm.
[04:22:46] This harm has affected his education, his relationships, his sense of self-worth,
[04:22:50] and his ability to feel safe. He wishes for his abusers and the authorities who failed to act
[04:22:56] to be held to account and for his story to help protect other children from similar harm.
[04:23:05] These are brutal, right?
[04:23:07] These are really bad.
[04:23:10] Oh, we should.
[04:23:12] Immediately after dealing with foreigners, they strip, yeah, I mean, this is nuts, man.
[04:23:16] I don't even know what to say.
[04:23:18] The worst? Yeah, it is.
[04:23:22] Sebastian, next, next.
[04:23:25] There's another one.
[04:23:26] Sebastian was raised in Scotland in a stable household.
[04:23:29] Sebastian's mother held down a professional job,
[04:23:32] Owned her home and car and the family regularly went on holidays together
[04:23:37] Despite this relatively secure background, which was not typical of abuse victims
[04:23:41] so
[04:23:42] excuse me
[04:23:44] Sebastian was raped and abused from the age of six by family members
[04:23:48] Without Sebastian's mother's knowledge these family members and
[04:23:53] Instilled in Sebastian the belief that to be safe you had to give them what they wanted
[04:23:58] They led Sebastian to develop a transactional view of interpersonal relationships.
[04:24:03] Six, that's right, that's six, which is up from the previous victim that was four and five.
[04:24:09] At age eleven, Sebastian was introduced to these abusive family members to a local, uh,
[04:24:15] introduced by these abusive family members to a local cafe owner.
[04:24:18] The owner gave Sebastian free food, lifts in his car, and free cinema tickets to build trust and a sense of obligation.
[04:24:25] From there, they began prostituting Sebastian out to a number of people.
[04:24:30] These included seemingly respectable professionals such as estate agents, solicitors, care support
[04:24:35] workers for children, and even police officers.
[04:24:38] Even at a boarding school, Sebastian was raped, assaulted, and groomed by staff and connected
[04:24:44] adults, with Sebastian's injuries often ignored by medical professionals.
[04:24:48] All of Sebastian's abusers were white British.
[04:24:52] In adulthood, and during the final years of the abuse, Sebastian became aware of the wider
[04:24:57] operation of grooming networks, both in a quiet rural area and the city.
[04:25:02] At age 40, Sebastian was able to escape a cycle of abuse that had lasted for nearly four decades.
[04:25:10] Following years of abuse, Sebastian, born a biological female, transitioned to the opposite
[04:25:16] sex and now identifies as a trans man.
[04:25:20] Sebastian transitioned socially at 41 and medically at 48.
[04:25:24] However, when describing the abuse experience as a child,
[04:25:28] it remains important for Sebastian to recognize
[04:25:30] these events happened while living as a girl
[04:25:33] and perceived as such.
[04:25:35] Oh, okay, okay, now that makes a lot more sense.
[04:25:40] Okay, had to change gender to escape, yeah.
[04:25:42] Well, a lot of people that are involved in any sort of
[04:25:44] like sexual deviancy or sexual extremity, right?
[04:25:47] Like changing gender.
[04:25:48] many of those people did have things like that happen
[04:25:52] sebastian acknowledges that this transition was in part a consequence of
[04:25:56] the abuse experience and feel safer from further abuse when presenting as a man
[04:26:01] sebastian that's
[04:26:03] fucking nuts
[04:26:04] oh my god
[04:26:06] when presenting as a man
[04:26:08] sebastian recognizes the profound impact trauma
[04:26:11] can have on a person's life and believes that different people can find
[04:26:14] different ways to cope
[04:26:16] For some, that may mean choosing a particular career or relationship or making unhealthy
[04:26:21] choices by using substances or alcohol, or for Sebastian transitioning and finding peace
[04:26:26] and being Seb being a pathway to recovery.
[04:26:30] Sebastian describes healing from trauma as a form of transformation.
[04:26:34] For Sebastian, the transformation has included, involved, the change from personal identity
[04:26:40] and finding a sense of safety never known while living as a female.
[04:26:44] Sebastian understands that while others may not fully understand the past that people take the cope with trauma
[04:26:49] But hopes that at the very least they will try to understand
[04:26:52] Sebastian now advocates for other survivors with the aim of protecting vulnerable people and helping develop local measures to prevent child abuse
[04:27:02] Man
[04:27:04] Man
[04:27:06] Berserk and the anime manifest I told y'all like that's like remember what I said with the Epstein stuff about how there were thousands of Epstein's
[04:27:12] and millions of Epstein's all around the world. That's it. And by the way, there's a lot of women
[04:27:18] that do this as well, where they mutilate their bodies as a result of sexual assault
[04:27:25] in order to make themselves less attractive. That's why a lot of times after women are sexually
[04:27:30] assaulted, they gain a lot of weight, they stop taking care of themselves, or they, you know,
[04:27:34] get piercings, or they get a bunch of tattoos or something like that. It's a very, very common
[04:27:38] psychological thing, and I think that you can very easily and logically come to the conclusion why that happens, right?
[04:27:44] So yeah, cutting themselves, mutilating their bodies, etc.
[04:27:50] Anna. Anna was raised in a stable middle-class household with both parents present.
[04:27:54] She first experienced abuse at the age of 13 by a perpetrator who was almost 18, who she met through friends.
[04:28:01] He began their interactions with one what's known as love bombing. He complimented her, messaged her regular,
[04:28:07] regularly offered to buy her gifts and alcohol, requested photographs of her,
[04:28:12] and discussed meeting up. They arranged to meet up at a local bus stop and go to
[04:28:16] town. At the last minute the plan changed and he asked Anna to meet him at the
[04:28:21] end of a path in a nearby woodland. Upon arrival his demeanor was cold and
[04:28:26] aggressive. He demanded that Anna perform oral sex on him. She's 13 and threatened
[04:28:32] to tell people that she knew that she had been sent explicit photographs and
[04:28:36] that they had already had sex, feeling threatened and fearful, she complied.
[04:28:41] Unbeknownst to Anna, he had secretly recorded the incident.
[04:28:54] A few days later, multiple men added her on Snapchat and began mocking and taunting her.
[04:29:00] That means that he sent it around.
[04:29:01] The perpetrator himself sent Anna the video, laughed, and told her that he had shared it
[04:29:06] with his boys and brothers, leaving her feeling humiliated, fearful, and traumatized.
[04:29:12] The Anna reported the assault to the police, but despite explaining a coercion and threats,
[04:29:16] the case was closed with no investigation into the coercion or the distribution of child
[04:29:22] sexual abuse material.
[04:29:24] Rumors spread rapidly among Anna's peers, and she was mocked and insulted in public.
[04:29:28] A year later, Anna encountered three Muslim brothers through a friend who already was
[04:29:33] being groomed and abused by them.
[04:29:35] They supplied her with alcohol and cigarettes in a public park and waited until she was
[04:29:39] heavily intoxicated before they began assaulting her.
[04:29:43] One of the brothers pulled her behind a tree and groped her chest despite repeated refusals.
[04:29:49] When she tried to flee, he pushed her violently against the tree, causing her to hit her
[04:29:54] head and suffer a concussion.
[04:29:56] The grooming continued through threats of family, intimidation, verbal abuse, and cycles
[04:30:01] of affection, gifts, and coercion.
[04:30:04] Anna did not feel safe reporting the abuse to the police.
[04:30:07] On another occasion, she was again supplied with alcohol.
[04:30:10] One of the brothers grabbed her body violently, dug his fingernails into her, and yanked her
[04:30:15] underwear repeatedly while laughing.
[04:30:18] Anna cried silently, feeling powerless to stop the assault.
[04:30:22] Afterwards, she tried to cut contact, but one of the brothers located her and banged
[04:30:27] on the door shouting while she hid inside and left.
[04:30:30] At a fear, she complied with further demands to meet the brothers, resulting in more assaults.
[04:30:37] There was a period of nearly four years before any trial was held, largely due to COVID-19.
[04:30:43] The perpetrators used this time to spread rumors, portrayed the abuse as consensual,
[04:30:48] and deposed about the assaults.
[04:30:50] In the courtroom, the abuse and intimidation continued.
[04:30:53] They pulled faces, pointed and laughed at her, and made rude remarks about her appearance.
[04:30:58] This behavior was not addressed by the court.
[04:31:01] One of the brothers was convicted of sexual assault.
[04:31:04] As he was taken into custody, he shouted, Alulakbar.
[04:31:08] At the sentencing, the brother's sister shouted abuse at Anna, threatened her, and later breached
[04:31:18] her anonymity online.
[04:31:20] She blamed the jury, stating that they were all white.
[04:31:24] She was eventually arrested and charged with molesters communications.
[04:31:28] States there is a broader failure to confront the role of ethnicity, religion, and cultural
[04:31:33] dynamics in organized sexual exploitation due to fear of accusations of racism.
[04:31:42] As he left the dock to be taken down to custody, I was literally verbally assaulted by his
[04:31:48] sister who also shouted alalakbar.
[04:31:52] Right.
[04:31:54] Right, of course.
[04:31:58] actually. Uh oh. What a surprise. Yeah, nobody could have predicted this. This, by the way,
[04:32:07] is the same thing that happened with the Henry Novak case. You got to keep that in mind.
[04:32:11] So this is the same thing happening with different people. And, you know, it's again, it's the
[04:32:17] same, same group of people. The quarter done a little bit more than that. But yes, actually
[04:32:24] Just just about a quarter way through. Yeah, that's that's correct
[04:32:28] You know I gotta get my soda open
[04:32:32] Got it. I don't have a bottle opener. I've got a pliers
[04:32:45] Excuse me
[04:32:47] You doing fine?
[04:32:49] I'm totally overheated.
[04:32:51] My room is so hot right now, but I'm not going to stop.
[04:32:56] Taylor was introduced at the age of 12 to older men through her friends, many of whom
[04:33:00] were adult Muslim men.
[04:33:02] They began giving her lifts home from school, sometimes in black cabs, sometimes in their
[04:33:06] own cars.
[04:33:08] Taylor saw the men buying her gifts for her friends initially and wished that she could
[04:33:12] receive gifts as well.
[04:33:14] On one occasion, instead of being taken to school, she was taken and driven to the men's
[04:33:19] sister's houses and taught how to cook Asian food.
[04:33:23] Her friends spent more time with the men, but because her parents expected her to come
[04:33:27] home straight after school, she had limited contact with them beyond the lifts.
[04:33:31] She notes that her friends were already doing adult things such as smoking, drinking and
[04:33:35] going to clubs, whereas she had more of a childlike disposition.
[04:33:39] The dynamic continued for three years until she turned 15, so they're being groomed at
[04:33:44] this point by adult men at 12 years old for three years.
[04:33:49] When the abuse began, she started working and going with her friends to a restaurant
[04:33:53] run by Muslim men to help with deliveries.
[04:33:56] This escalated when one of the men who worked there, a 35-year-old Bangladeshi man, kissed
[04:34:01] her, causing her to run away.
[04:34:03] The same man later raped her when she was 15.
[04:34:08] Because her friends were also being abused, Taylor believed that it was normal and that
[04:34:12] the man was her boyfriend.
[04:34:15] Wow.
[04:34:19] And also, like another component to this to keep in mind, is that the families are complicit
[04:34:24] too.
[04:34:25] It's not enough to just remove the bad actors themselves.
[04:34:28] You have to go after and remove the entire family.
[04:34:32] Because they turn a blind eye or they even enable it themselves.
[04:34:36] This is normal for them, it's what they do.
[04:34:40] The families allow it, they do, and then they defend it in court.
[04:34:46] Taylor believed it was normal, okay, I saw that, and however she walked with him with
[04:34:50] her friends, she realized this was not the case.
[04:34:52] After this, her behavior changed dramatically.
[04:34:54] She began skipping school and drinking heavily.
[04:34:57] During a family incident that led to the police being called, Taylor's father mentioned his
[04:35:00] suspicions that she was being abused by Asian men.
[04:35:04] The abuse responded, the police responded that there was nothing that they could do
[04:35:09] because she had quote, consented.
[04:35:12] And by the way, this is her consenting as a minor.
[04:35:14] She's 15 years old.
[04:35:16] She's consenting as a child and they say they can't do anything about it.
[04:35:21] Police were called on multiple occasions regarding the abuse of Taylor and her friends, but
[04:35:25] they consistently refused to take action.
[04:35:27] The only time they had helped her was when a group of Asian girls called the police officers
[04:35:32] and returned Taylor to her friend's home.
[04:35:35] Taylor believes they only intervened on that occasion because they did not want to face
[04:35:39] accusations of racism, given the call came from, quote, Asian women.
[04:35:45] Oh my god.
[04:35:47] Jesus, bro, this is just fucking crazy.
[04:35:52] Really?
[04:35:53] Oh my god.
[04:35:56] By the age of 16, she had been introduced to many more men and was constantly harassed
[04:36:00] by them over the phone.
[04:36:02] Some men would initially appear kind and caring, lending her to believe they were in a relationship
[04:36:07] only to lure her into situations where she would be gang-raped.
[04:36:12] Surprise.
[04:36:13] They used the combination of false kindness, violent abuse, and alcohol to coerce and control
[04:36:19] her.
[04:36:20] Cars would stop in the street and demand that she get in.
[04:36:23] She would be raped and then taken to the next abuser.
[04:36:26] She claims that on some nights she was passed to as many as 10 different men and estimates
[04:36:31] that she was abused by around 100 men in total.
[04:36:35] One common tactic used by the gangs was to send taxis to pick up drunk girls late at
[04:36:39] night.
[04:36:40] The driver would pretend to stop at a shop for a drink and then drive off, leaving the
[04:36:45] girl behind.
[04:36:47] The group of men would then rescue her, only to take her to a pre-arranged house for gang
[04:36:52] rape.
[04:36:53] The number of women also played a role in directing girls to their abusers in exchange
[04:36:58] for gifts and money.
[04:37:00] These women would trap the girls in their properties or use violence to coerce them.
[04:37:05] Taylor had witnessed shootings, had knives held to her throat, and a gun to her head.
[04:37:10] The gangs used the death of one of the other girls as leverage, threatening that anyone
[04:37:15] who spoke out would be next.
[04:37:18] Realizing that she had to escape the abuse, the Taylor made a detailed 20-page statement
[04:37:23] to the police.
[04:37:24] She provided the phone numbers of more than 100 Asian men and showed them messages in
[04:37:30] which the men threatened to rape her mother, beat her father, and burned down her family
[04:37:36] home.
[04:37:37] No investigation followed.
[04:37:39] Both her teachers at school and her GP were aware that something was seriously wrong,
[04:37:45] but they did not pursue the suspicions further.
[04:37:49] Before they raped me, they would chant Bishawa, Har, Rama, I don't know what that is, in the
[04:37:55] translation, in the name of Allah, the most gracious and the most merciful.
[04:38:00] Wow.
[04:38:02] Wow.
[04:38:04] The system literally enabled and promoted the rape?
[04:38:14] Yeah, of course it did.
[04:38:16] That's the whole point.
[04:38:17] And so did the other, uh, the families of the people that did it.
[04:38:21] That's correct.
[04:38:23] Yes.
[04:38:25] Isn't that crazy?
[04:38:27] Are we done with the names?
[04:38:30] Murray was born in a maternity home for unmarried mothers and grew up with her mother and grandmother.
[04:38:37] Her mother was cruel and abusive.
[04:38:39] She would deliberately make Murray cry, touch her inappropriately, and behave violently.
[04:38:44] She would go to school with split lips, black eyes, bruising marks all over her body.
[04:38:48] She was never asked what had happened.
[04:38:50] She was not allowed to go outside, have friends, and was regularly called degrading names.
[04:38:55] Viewing her medical record as an adult, there were documented concerns from around a year
[04:39:00] old.
[04:39:07] A year old.
[04:39:12] abused ever since before she could even remember. Isn't that nuts?
[04:39:17] There were notes of rash down below with question marks recorded. There were further entries
[04:39:24] where it was described as a possible nappy rash, again with question marks. Seven years
[04:39:30] later, at eight years old, a doctor made a note that she was a child that should be kept
[04:39:37] an eye on. Her mother refused to discuss her situation with Marie in the room. The records
[04:39:42] showed that she had significant bowel and genealogical problems.
[04:39:46] During this, despite the signs of abuse, no safeguarding action was taken.
[04:39:50] For around the age of seven, Marie's mother's partner began grooming and sexually abusing her.
[04:39:57] He would bring her presence and then touch her inappropriately.
[04:40:01] Marie said to him what he was doing was bad and that she did not like it.
[04:40:05] He told her that her mother told him that it was allowed.
[04:40:10] all her mother you pay okay her mom let him do it okay got it
[04:40:13] uh... her mother would ask marie
[04:40:15] how she got on with them demand that she had thanked him properly
[04:40:19] and would threaten to get angry if not
[04:40:21] she was complicit in the abuse continued for many years so the mom is
[04:40:25] literally prostituting your seven-year-old daughter
[04:40:30] right of course
[04:40:31] uh... her mother would deliberately shame her when marie began to menstruate
[04:40:35] uh... she thought she was dying but her mother told her periods are what dirty
[04:40:39] girls had. She deliberately gave her sanitary pads that would leak so she could blame and
[04:40:44] punish her. If she could have a spot on her face, she would put a large blob of germilene
[04:40:49] on her face and tell her not to remove it, otherwise people would not know that she was
[04:40:55] dirty. When she was unwell, her mother would get her partner to rub, to rub vapor rub on
[04:41:01] her chest. Her mother would soak her underwear in bleach and make her wear it, which still
[04:41:06] causes Marie discomfort to this day. In one instance, her mother and her partner forced
[04:41:11] a bottle inside of her, which was painful. Her mother would attach her clothes pegs on
[04:41:17] her clitoris to see how long Marie could last. Marie's mother also groomed her for
[04:41:23] others and had to share a bed with her. That's right. Take a second. You guys can process
[04:41:35] Not good.
[04:41:52] Well, if Newt UK, this is happening all around the world.
[04:42:01] Every country in the world is having this happen.
[04:42:04] The only difference is that the UK allows it.
[04:42:10] This is the human condition.
[04:42:12] I don't want to say that, but it's true, it's a human condition.
[04:42:16] Whenever I call people sub-human and animals, I'm thinking about these people.
[04:42:20] There's a reason why I call them that.
[04:42:23] I don't view these people as humans, I don't view them as people.
[04:42:28] The misplaced empathy towards them causes so much evil and so much harm, and it hurts
[04:42:34] so many people and it's all for nothing. It's all for nothing to provide safety and reassurance
[04:42:41] to a fiend, a demon, an animal that should be killed. That's how I feel about him.
[04:42:47] I've heard thousands of stories like this. It's super common.
[04:43:05] I'm doing that right now, aren't I?
[04:43:18] I'm reading the entire thing.
[04:43:21] I'm doing what I can.
[04:43:26] I'm radical-wise?
[04:43:27] What's a good start?
[04:43:29] I'm going to start a crusade in the UK.
[04:43:35] Okay, great, hopefully it can come over here
[04:43:37] and solve the problems over here too.
[04:43:39] That'd be great.
[04:43:42] It's just fucking crazy, man.
[04:43:43] It really is.
[04:43:45] I have the solution, pull me up.
[04:43:47] Marie was taken to another man's house
[04:43:49] by her mother's partner where she was raped.
[04:43:51] He began to traffic her to other perpetrators
[04:43:53] he knew through his work
[04:43:54] that operated like an organized group or gang.
[04:43:57] She became pregnant as a product of her abuse.
[04:44:00] On two occasions, her mother took her to a woman's house.
[04:44:03] There, a woman used a knitting needle
[04:44:05] perform the abortions. A woman used the knitting needle to perform the abortions
[04:44:12] after she was raped by an adult man. Okay. The husband, the woman's husband, this is
[04:44:18] probably the worst one by the way. I would say it's the most graphic one.
[04:44:21] The woman's husband also raped her. She had bottle tops opened, she had bottle
[04:44:27] tops opened up inside of her vagina and then made to drink what was in the bottle
[04:44:32] when she was in primary school age, that's ages 6 to 10 years old, potentially 11 years old.
[04:44:39] No more than 13.
[04:44:41] There were instances where she ran into members of our grooming network who would lure her to a secluded location and rape her.
[04:44:48] The abuse she experienced often included extreme sexual violence and degradation.
[04:44:54] She was raped repeatedly over the years, including anal rape. She was subjected to penetration with objects
[04:45:00] She was urinated on her legs were held open. She was bitten on the back cut on the leg and strangled
[04:45:08] She has lasting injuries
[04:45:10] Marie attempted to own to end her own life
[04:45:13] I would have never guessed by walking in front of a van at college
[04:45:17] She drank a bottle of vodka and took a box of tablets and an attempt at probably didn't work that it
[04:45:22] In an attempt to kill herself the college counselor raised concerns and contacted her GP, but nothing was done
[04:45:29] Between leaving school and joining college at 17, she was groomed by a 55-year-old police
[04:45:35] sergeant.
[04:45:36] He knew her background and claimed that he would catch her attack her and get justice
[04:45:40] for her.
[04:45:41] Instead, one evening he offered to take her out of the house and he raped her.
[04:45:46] He went on to rape her on another occasion.
[04:45:49] Upon becoming an adult, when she went to a women's aid refuge for safety, they moved
[04:45:54] her to a safe location.
[04:45:56] On one occasion, her mother and partner went to the women's aid office, but they refused
[04:46:00] to give them information and introduced additional measures to protect Marie, while in the safe
[04:46:05] house she miscarried, a product of her mother's partner.
[04:46:10] Following this, Marie drunkenly called her mother and told her what had happened.
[04:46:15] Even after explaining who impregnated her, her mother said, we would have loved a baby
[04:46:19] in the house.
[04:46:25] You know, it's really poetic that I'm listening to Witcher 3 music at this point, isn't it?
[04:46:33] You know?
[04:46:34] Reminds me of the Bloody Baron.
[04:46:37] How about that?
[04:46:39] Yeah.
[04:46:40] Not good.
[04:46:45] She went to the police in recent years and told them that she was the survivor of child
[04:46:49] sexual abuse and they told her to go away and sort her head out.
[04:46:54] None of the perpetrators have been brought to justice.
[04:46:58] Wow.
[04:47:04] Another one.
[04:47:06] Jane grew up in a fractured household.
[04:47:09] Rarely present, her mother was addicted to drugs and alcohol,
[04:47:12] regularly using hash and cocaine during Jane's childhood.
[04:47:16] She tried to end her own life on multiple occasions
[04:47:19] and left altogether when Jane was seven.
[04:47:22] The Jane's father had significant mental health issues.
[04:47:25] Through the age of five, she describes a generally positive relationship with him.
[04:47:30] However, after meeting a new partner, following the departure of Jane's mother,
[04:47:34] he became colder, more distant, increasingly abusive.
[04:47:39] He used his hands, a slipper, and the cane to hit Jane.
[04:47:42] She's five or six years old at this point.
[04:47:45] Jane's mother re-entered her life with her new boyfriend when Jane was 13.
[04:47:51] The boyfriend was abusive towards Jane's mother and on one occasion raped her in front of Jane.
[04:47:57] I was around that time that Jane's mother's drug dealer began grooming her via Facebook.
[04:48:04] He became aware of the fact that Jane was self-harming and presented himself as a sympathetic
[04:48:10] and supportive friend. Jane, vulnerable at the time, exchanged messages with him for several months.
[04:48:15] Eventually, the drug dealer began asking Jane whether she had smoked cigarettes, taken drugs,
[04:48:21] or had sex.
[04:48:23] During one half-term, he asked to meet with her.
[04:48:26] She agreed, and he came to Jane's father's house while Jane's father wasn't worked.
[04:48:31] Armed with a cauch, he took her up to the bedroom and told her to strip naked.
[04:48:35] He said, you may be thirteen, but you've got the body of a woman, and raped her before
[04:48:41] promptly leaving.
[04:48:44] then what? What next? And then the drug dealer regularly called Jane waited outside her school
[04:48:51] for Jane. Jane would hide in the staff room and tell the teachers that she did not want
[04:48:56] to leave. As she knew that he would be waiting for her, the staff did not intervene and they
[04:49:02] would force her to leave the school. The drug dealer regularly took Jane to his girlfriend's
[04:49:07] house where he would give Jane valium and cannabis. This would show her the drugs he
[04:49:14] took including heroin, methadone, and crack cocaine.
[04:49:18] The drug dealer sexually abused Jane every day apart from the weekends for several months.
[04:49:24] Jane was misdiagnosed with a personality disorder at this time.
[04:49:28] She did not tell anyone about her relationship with the drug dealer until one night during
[04:49:33] an argument with her mother who was drunk.
[04:49:35] Her mother said, I don't know why you're like this.
[04:49:38] Jane replies, because I'm being fucked by a 50 year old man and nobody has noticed.
[04:49:44] The following day, Jane returned from school to the police at her house.
[04:49:49] The police insisted that Jane, still just 13, would need to testify in court alone against
[04:49:56] the drug dealer, intimidated she did not wish to face him and he was not prosecuted.
[04:50:02] Following the revelation of Jane's grooming and rape by the drug dealer, Jane's father
[04:50:06] called her a whore, and told her that he wished she would just hurry up and kill herself.
[04:50:23] That's a great dad.
[04:50:25] Wow.
[04:50:26] The school accused Jane of using self-arm to manipulate her father.
[04:50:32] Oh my god.
[04:50:38] Oh, wow.
[04:50:42] That's crazy.
[04:50:46] She regularly placed and detention and threatened with expulsion due to falling behind with
[04:50:52] schoolwork.
[04:50:53] As a result, Jane became increasingly disobedient and suicidal.
[04:50:57] At the age of 14, Jane began running away from school, taking drugs, and spending time
[04:51:04] with men older than her.
[04:51:06] On one occasion, she took an overdose before school in an attempt to end her life.
[04:51:11] Oh my God.
[04:51:13] She was taken to the hospital after the staff told her that she would have done it in the
[04:51:16] woods or somewhere private if she actually wanted to die.
[04:51:21] Are these white parents?
[04:51:23] I really don't know, actually.
[04:51:25] Yeah, I have no idea.
[04:51:27] i mean like it's not stated one way or another
[04:51:30] like this is a glow this is a a systematic failure
[04:51:34] this is a systematic failure that affects white people black people
[04:51:39] uh... you know moslems pakistan is everybody
[04:51:42] what you can see that very clearly like there is
[04:51:45] that this is a multi-faceted problem there's a racial component to it there's
[04:51:49] a religious component to it
[04:51:51] there's a systemic problem to it
[04:51:53] there is a institutional problem to it
[04:51:55] it's all problematic
[04:52:00] that's it
[04:52:01] it's important to keep that in mind
[04:52:05] james a white name
[04:52:07] wait you think they're using the real names of these girls
[04:52:11] why would they do that
[04:52:15] you didn't really think they're doing that right
[04:52:19] come on bro like
[04:52:21] Come on.
[04:52:23] At the age of 14, Jane began,
[04:52:25] so all this had happened before she's 14, right?
[04:52:29] Jane began running away from school,
[04:52:31] taking drugs and spending time with men older than her.
[04:52:34] On one occasion, she took an overdose
[04:52:36] before school in an attempt to end her life.
[04:52:39] She was taken to the hospital after the staff told her
[04:52:43] that she would have done it in the woods
[04:52:44] or somewhere private if she actually wanted to die.
[04:52:47] Okay, her father then came to the hospital and told her to try harder next time as she
[04:52:54] was wasting everyone's time, and later that day she attempted suicide by cutting her own
[04:52:59] throat but failed.
[04:53:01] Jane was briefly taken to care by the hospital, but we're good, right?
[04:53:25] Little hiccup. Let's not even worry about it. Let's just keep going.
[04:53:28] It's not to which, it's just what happens.
[04:53:32] So anyway, her father would not accept her back into the family home, so she was left homeless.
[04:53:38] Jane spent a short period of time staying with friends until social services informed her about her situation by her aunt.
[04:53:46] Jane refused to return home, disclosing to social services that she was being physically abused and showed them bruises on her body.
[04:53:54] She was then briefly taken into foster care
[04:53:56] before being moved into a children's home
[04:53:59] until she was 16 years old.
[04:54:01] Jane was then moved into an semi-independent living
[04:54:04] facility for vulnerable young people.
[04:54:06] After a few months, a female peer at the accommodation
[04:54:09] invited Jane to what she would describe as a party.
[04:54:14] This peer was coercive and intimidating
[04:54:16] and Jane did not feel able to refuse.
[04:54:19] She had taken to a block of flats in Hounslaw
[04:54:22] and was, I don't know how to say that name, I'm going to assume I did, and expected to
[04:54:25] meet with a group of men, or a group of people her own age. Instead, the flat was occupied
[04:54:30] by six or seven Somali men. Jane was taken to the bathroom by the girl who had brought
[04:54:37] her there and extracted to shave. She was told that she was being sold to the men for
[04:54:42] sex. Jane did not want to participate, but complied out of fear. She was then sexually
[04:54:48] abused by one of the men and made to sleep in a small child's bed afterwards.
[04:54:52] Well, that makes sense considering that she was still a child.
[04:54:56] The following morning, the girl who took Jane to the flat was paid by the men.
[04:55:01] This occurred repeatedly over a period of months, sometimes with multiple other girls
[04:55:05] present.
[04:55:06] Jane was told that she needed to gain weight to be more desirable to the men.
[04:55:10] In response, Jane began purging, which developed into a severe de-eating disorder.
[04:55:15] is making yourself throw up a lot, in case anybody doesn't know that.
[04:55:18] Jane was blackmailed with the threat of prison by a peer if she disclosed her exploitation to anyone.
[04:55:24] Violence and intimidation became commonplace at the semi-independent living facility.
[04:55:29] On one occasion, a young woman returned to the accommodation, intoxicated and distressed,
[04:55:34] saying that she had been abducted and sexually assaulted.
[04:55:37] The staff, who were well aware that the sexual exploitation was taking place on the site,
[04:55:42] but chose to do nothing about it, responded by accusing her of making it up.
[04:55:47] Eventually, Jane disclosed her own sexual exploitation to a combination staff,
[04:55:52] including the trafficking and exchange of money.
[04:55:55] She was told that what was happening did not constitute trafficking as she was over the age of 16.
[04:56:00] The police were not contacted and no action was taken.
[04:56:04] Jane was blackmailed by staff with the threat of being blamed for the exploitation of her
[04:56:10] her and others if she took the complaints any further.
[04:56:24] Wow.
[04:56:26] Not good.
[04:56:28] Jane's eating disorder intensified and she began self-harming again.
[04:56:32] She was sectioned under the Mental Health Act and admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
[04:56:36] While hospitalized, she disclosed the exploitation again.
[04:56:39] Police interviews took place, but due to her being heavily medicated, Jane was treated as an unreliable witness, and no further action was taken.
[04:56:47] Oh, maybe that's why they drug all of them, so then the police can use that as like a reasoning to ignore it.
[04:56:54] Yeah, like that's actually, okay, now that's a good piece of the puzzle. Okay, now I'm starting to understand this more.
[04:57:00] I didn't even know, I didn't know they did that until right now.
[04:57:04] This makes a lot more things make sense.
[04:57:07] And she was disclosed, she also disclosed in writing what was happening to her.
[04:57:11] It was removed from her most recent social care file, but the original clearly states that she wrote a letter to them a year before she was hospitalized and her police interview matched the letter.
[04:57:21] The letter was not acted on by the authorities. As a result of her eating disorder, Jane has developed intro-indo metrosis, which has resulted in the loss of half of her uterus.
[04:57:32] Jane has since learned I'm surprised more of these people haven't killed
[04:57:36] themselves honestly it's crazy to me so many of them are still like every single
[04:57:40] one of them still alive really I mean like I don't mean to be morbid but holy
[04:57:46] shit this is the reason why like I tell you guys don't worry about me I'm fine
[04:57:51] you know or your own personal problems are fine some of this shit is crazy I
[04:57:55] guess actually no you're right you know no no you guys bring up a better point
[04:58:00] than mine, survivorship bias. I mean, because they're not going to be able to
[04:58:03] interview people that are dead. It's a good point. No, you're right. Yeah, and
[04:58:08] think about that. And so, like, I mean, you could also logically assume that the
[04:58:12] ones that are dead could, you know, I mean, I guess maybe on average, maybe even
[04:58:17] be worse than these. Think about that. Jane has since learned that her records at
[04:58:23] the semi-independent living facility have been lost or destroyed despite
[04:58:27] statutory retention requirements. Even into adulthood, Jane has not received any closure
[04:58:33] and attempts to get justice have been met with delays, obstruction, and re-traumatization.
[04:58:38] Jane states that she believes that children remain at risk due to the culture of silence
[04:58:43] that persists across institutions that should be caring for them.
[04:58:48] I later learned that key records from the children's home were missing or destroyed.
[04:58:52] Despite statutory retention mechanics, my care file from that placement cannot be produced.
[04:58:57] this is obstructed accountability. Well, it just removed it, right? I mean, it's gone. Yeah,
[04:59:02] there's no more of that. So, there was one event where you read the victim died, or was it somebody
[04:59:08] died? I don't remember, I'm not sure which one, there's been so many of them, right?
[04:59:12] Leanne, next, describes a childhood marked with extreme instability, domestic violence,
[04:59:17] fear, and early trauma. From a young age, she was exposed to abuse within her family,
[04:59:23] including sexual abuse by her uncle, which was severely damaging her ability to trust adults or
[04:59:28] disclose harm. Frequent moves, school disruption, ADHD, bullying, and exclusions compounded her
[04:59:35] vulnerability. By the age of 14, Leanne was drawn into peer groups linked to significantly older
[04:59:41] men. These men were adult males, primarily of Kurdish, Iraqi, and other Muslim backgrounds.
[04:59:47] They operated in groups. Grooming was systematic. Alcohol, drugs, accommodation, and emotional
[04:59:54] manipulation were used to entrap her. She was taken to various houses in Sheffield,
[04:59:59] noticeably Pitsmore, and other cities where multiple girls were trafficked and sexually
[05:00:04] exploited. She was raped repeatedly, drugged, and on at least one occasion held captive and
[05:00:10] beaten for several days. This is a 14-year-old. She witnessed stabbings, shootings, and machete
[05:00:17] attacks, handled firearms as a child, and was forced into the environments of
[05:00:22] extreme violence. At age 15, also still a child, Ruan became pregnant by an adult
[05:00:29] Iraqi man. She miscarried and later discovered that records have been
[05:00:33] falsified to suggest that she was 16.
[05:00:38] Thereby, minimizing the seriousness of the offense.
[05:00:45] That makes it so much better?
[05:00:51] It does, because 16 is an adult and 15 is not.
[05:00:55] It's like the difference between, you know, like a 16-year-old and a 17-year-old and
[05:00:59] an 18-year-old in the U.S. Like, it's literally the difference between like the age of consent,
[05:01:04] you know, and not.
[05:01:06] like, what's the difference between 17 and 18, 10 to 20? You know, like a very, very
[05:01:12] old fucking joke. Okay. Like there's a reason why they put the age of consent there, right?
[05:01:19] Let's fuck their kids. Well, I'm just telling you that's the way to do it over in the UK.
[05:01:25] The age is the difference, we say so. 16 is the age of consent. So at 18, you're an adult.
[05:01:28] Yeah, I'm talking about over there, right? Anyway, I don't want to get back and forth
[05:01:31] about this, right? A lot to go. And so despite the repeated missing episodes, police, intelligence
[05:01:36] sexual exploitation strategy meeting safeguards failed. The council hold a housing department
[05:01:41] refused to assist her due to her age. Child protection plans were implemented but did
[05:01:45] not remove her from danger. Social services and police were aware that she was associating with
[05:01:50] older Kurdish men and at high risk of sexual exploitation. Yet intervention was weak and
[05:01:56] inconsistent. No perpetrator was prosecuted for her rape. She eventually escaped exploitation
[05:02:02] only after becoming a mother at 17 and moving away from the grooming network.
[05:02:07] As an adult, Leanne lives with chronic physical and psychological harm,
[05:02:11] including trauma-related fibromyalgia. She has never received justice.
[05:02:18] She gave her evidence to ensure that what happened is finally acknowledged and not repeated.
[05:02:23] man. Wow. Lily. Lily was raised in a large loving working family. In the 1970s, her family's
[05:02:37] life was permanently destabilized when the council forced them out of their cottage
[05:02:41] to build flats. So they imminent demand this people out of their house. And they were evicted
[05:02:46] from their home and moved into two council homes. This is the first time anyone in the
[05:02:51] family had lived in a council estate. After moving on to the council estate, trouble began immediately.
[05:02:57] One older boy attempted to take Lily's hand from her mother when she was five years old.
[05:03:01] Her mother reported it to the police when it was treated as a joke.
[05:03:04] Years later, the same person went on to rape a three-year-old. Oh, of course.
[05:03:11] This perpetrator and his brother began targeting the family. They harassed Lily's mother and beat
[05:03:16] the father battling. This created an atmosphere of constant fear and chaos. The police frequently
[05:03:21] attended the family home, turning over belongings and breaking possessions while investigating
[05:03:26] the false accusations. Over time, Lily and her siblings were taken into care.
[05:03:31] Siblings who returned home disclosed severe abuse in children's home, including rape,
[05:03:36] violence, humiliation, and intimidation. Lily herself was groomed and repeatedly abducted,
[05:03:42] and raped by men from the age of six.
[05:03:46] He threatened to harm her sisters if she spoke.
[05:03:50] Lily's sister was sexually abused by her own social worker
[05:03:54] at the age of 12.
[05:03:56] This was actively covered up by management
[05:03:58] who pretended that he was in a relationship
[05:04:00] with another social worker to deflect suspicion.
[05:04:04] He gained legal guardianship of Lily's sister
[05:04:07] and eventually married her.
[05:04:12] That's bad.
[05:04:15] That is savage.
[05:04:16] Oh my god.
[05:04:19] He was paid by the local authority and the system never completed her education.
[05:04:22] Lily witnessed children being selected by staff and handed over to foreign taxi drivers
[05:04:26] over many years.
[05:04:28] Hmm.
[05:04:29] Of the innate children, Tom Lily was violently assaulted and sexually abused by the staff.
[05:04:35] Management figures dismissed or covered up the abuse.
[05:04:37] She also suffered numerous violent injuries from staff.
[05:04:41] The most serious was a head injury that resulted in lasting neurological damage.
[05:04:46] Later in adulthood, she was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm.
[05:04:49] That's never you have a blood vessel burst in your brain.
[05:04:52] And not a good thing to have happen, by the way.
[05:04:55] Really dad.
[05:04:56] After returning to school with serious injuries, Lily was sent home to her parents.
[05:05:00] At age 14, upon returning to the estate, she was gang raped by older men and boys.
[05:05:05] She did not report it to the police.
[05:05:08] As an adult, Lily learned that the police and the council records of her abuse had been hidden for decades.
[05:05:14] Operation Merameon briefly acknowledged her account while being shut down at a senior level.
[05:05:23] She was told the perpetrators were out of jurisdiction, dead or untraceable, and no one was held accountable.
[05:05:33] They would toot the horn of the car and then a child would be taken to the front door by a staff member
[05:05:38] of the children's home.
[05:05:45] This is crazy.
[05:05:50] This really is. This is brutal. You believe this?
[05:05:55] Your door-dashing kids? Yeah, pretty much. Yeah. That's one way to say it.
[05:06:13] No one's talking about this in Sweden. This is happening all over the world.
[05:06:21] The difference is that in Western countries, it's a controversy in other countries. It's commonplace
[05:06:29] That's culture
[05:06:33] Never forget that it happens everywhere
[05:06:38] The only difference is that we try to punish people for it
[05:06:42] Are you anxiety eating no, I'm I just really like barbecue potato chips man, I do
[05:06:47] And just another Tuesday, yeah. Isn't it funny how this Epstein stuff was all over the news,
[05:06:54] but this isn't? That's because the Epstein stuff was politically charged. Like, you know, for me,
[05:07:00] I'm against any of this stuff. So I talked about the Epstein stuff too. But I recognize that most
[05:07:04] of the people that talked about it didn't actually care about the victims. They cared about using
[05:07:08] it as political capital, as political, you know, as a political tool. And this, I think that this
[05:07:14] This is the difference between me and a lot of the other people that are these protectors
[05:07:19] of this bad behavior, is that I have no problem basically calling out my own bad actors,
[05:07:25] you know, somebody like, you know, I don't know, like Jeffrey Epstein, right, who was
[05:07:29] in connection with Donald Trump, or somebody else, like, you have no problem doing that.
[05:07:34] But these other people that are on the other side will never talk about this and they will
[05:07:37] try to delegitimize and make it invalid.
[05:07:40] And the reason why is because they don't actually care about grace, they don't care
[05:07:44] about Chloe. They don't care about any of these girls. All they care about is
[05:07:47] maintaining power and that power is held on by basically being subservient to
[05:07:54] different minority interest groups that vote as a block and would rather
[05:07:58] continue allowing these door dashing children from children's homes.
[05:08:04] That's the reason why.
[05:08:08] Grace was raised without a father and with a mother who met her basic physical needs
[05:08:15] but was emotionally cold, neither nurturing nor efficient.
[05:08:20] She believes this early life experience contributed to lack of emotional security and increased
[05:08:24] vulnerability later in life.
[05:08:26] Four years old, she was sexually abused by a babysitter.
[05:08:30] She has no memory of the abuse and states that it does not directly trouble her emotionally.
[05:08:35] Mrs. Mother prevented contact with her estranged father without giving her any reason, causing
[05:08:39] grace to rebel against her.
[05:08:41] By secondary school age, that's probably 11 or 12 or 13, her behavior had deteriorated
[05:08:46] significantly.
[05:08:47] She began getting into cars with adult men who offered her cannabis, music, food and
[05:08:51] lifts.
[05:08:52] She states that the majority of the men who groomed her were Pakistani, although some
[05:08:56] white men acted as intermediaries and assisted in the grooming of girls.
[05:09:01] That's right.
[05:09:02] See, it's not just them.
[05:09:04] This is a large scale.
[05:09:06] She was raped on multiple occasions by adult men, often while intoxicated.
[05:09:10] Because she had been drinking, she believed that she was responsible for the abuse.
[05:09:14] At 15, she believed that she was in a relationship with an adult man, a situation that lasted
[05:09:19] for about five years.
[05:09:21] During that time, she experienced domestic violence, rape, and course of control.
[05:09:25] She reported the perpetrators to the police, wishing only to prevent other children from
[05:09:30] experiencing abuse.
[05:09:32] However, the police arrested and interviewed some of the men about grace without consulting
[05:09:36] her in advance or assisting the potential impact on her.
[05:09:40] She felt pushed into prosecution without adequate preparation or support.
[05:09:44] She found the process abrupt and poorly explained.
[05:09:47] As a consequence of the police's handling of the case, she experienced flashbacks, panic
[05:09:51] attacks and a relapse into substance misuse.
[05:09:55] Another partner was a pedophile involved in grooming gangs who sexually abused children
[05:09:59] and others.
[05:10:01] He stalked, harassed, and threatened the family, and manipulated police investigations for years.
[05:10:07] Police repeatedly failed to seize devices, link cases, act on stalking logs, or protect
[05:10:14] her and her children.
[05:10:16] Non-molestation orders.
[05:10:18] There's a non-molestation order?
[05:10:20] I thought that's just called the law.
[05:10:23] Okay.
[05:10:24] And bail conditions were breached without consequence.
[05:10:27] The cumulative impact includes severe mental illness, displacement, loss of employment,
[05:10:32] and ongoing fear.
[05:10:34] Oh my god.
[05:10:37] If I got raped tomorrow, I would never come back to the police again.
[05:10:41] Because what is the point?
[05:10:42] It's just a pointless process that leaves you feeling even worse, because you're either
[05:10:46] not believed or you're not taken seriously, or they don't use the tools that they've
[05:10:50] got to investigate properly because it's too hard.
[05:10:55] Ah, jeez, guys, ah, jeez, it's too hard.
[05:11:02] Victoria gave evidence as the mother of a vulnerable teenager who started at a local
[05:11:06] college in 2022.
[05:11:08] In 2023, her daughter abruptly converted to Islam.
[05:11:12] Victoria discovered Muslim clothing, a Quran, a prayer mat, hidden under her bed.
[05:11:18] Her daughter began quoting the Quran and praying five times a day.
[05:11:21] This sudden change coincided with a secret relationship with an Algerian Muslim student
[05:11:26] who held strong Islamic beliefs.
[05:11:28] She became disrespectful to her family and started speaking negatively about Britain.
[05:11:33] Victoria says her daughter changed completely.
[05:11:36] The boyfriend exerted coercive control.
[05:11:38] He held her daughter's banking details via Face ID, controlled her social media, isolated
[05:11:44] her from the family, and imposed strict Islamic practices.
[05:11:48] Concerned by this, Victoria contacted the police and reported the controlling behavior
[05:11:53] and the sudden conversion.
[05:11:54] The police said they would refer her daughter to social services as she was still a child.
[05:11:59] When social services visited, they learned that her daughter was being made to take contraception.
[05:12:04] They also discussed the nature of her new Islamic beliefs.
[05:12:07] The social worker said he would refer her to a woman's aid for support with coercive
[05:12:12] and controlling relationships.
[05:12:15] Victoria asked a social worker to look into the partner's background, but the college
[05:12:18] did not respond to the social worker's inquiry.
[05:12:22] Victoria then contacted the college's safeguarding lead herself.
[05:12:25] The lead agreed that it sounded like exploitation and referred the case to prevent the British
[05:12:30] government's counter-terrorism program designed to safeguard vulnerable people from radicalization
[05:12:36] and terrorism.
[05:12:38] Let me guess, they didn't prevent anything.
[05:12:41] Her daughter's diet dramatically changed.
[05:12:43] She stopped eating bacon and ate far less than before.
[05:12:46] She spelt a lot of time in and out of the hospital, but never explained why to her mother.
[05:12:50] Her mental health deteriorated severely.
[05:12:53] After meeting the man, she repeatedly attempted suicide by cutting and made desperate calls
[05:12:58] saying that she would kill herself.
[05:13:00] During one emergency hospital stay, the police removed her daughter from Victoria and threatened
[05:13:05] Victoria with arrest and transported the girl to the address of the abuser's
[05:13:11] brother despite Victoria's explicit warnings about the danger. There her
[05:13:18] daughter was subjugated to mental and physical abuse including strangulation,
[05:13:23] death threats, rape, and financial exploitation. Money was was funneled
[05:13:29] through the abuser's brother's bank account. The men in his family racially
[05:13:33] abused her, calling her a white slag, and pressured her to drop all complaints and marry him.
[05:13:41] Prevents involvement was catastrophically delayed.
[05:13:44] The college's safeguarding initially led and told Victoria that the referrals had been
[05:13:48] made and accepted, but later evidence showed that they were late, incorrect, or not at
[05:13:54] all.
[05:13:55] Arrests were delayed for months and rape allegations were eventually dropped due to lack of evidence
[05:13:59] after only limited phone checks.
[05:14:02] concluded that systematic systemic failure and institutional reluctance to address Islamist
[05:14:08] related safeguarding had placed their daughter in grave danger. The local mosque where the
[05:14:13] boyfriend used to go is known for its extreme radical views and I view that the children
[05:14:19] and young adults that are attending that mosque are being taught what to go out and do in their
[05:14:23] our community and to do to our children and schools to preach.
[05:14:30] Wow.
[05:14:33] It's pretty bad.
[05:14:43] The ISIS Brides were likely born of this as well.
[05:14:45] I know.
[05:14:46] I'm fully aware.
[05:14:49] Eleanor was born into a financially comfortable family, but despite this, she had a childhood
[05:14:54] marked by instability, emotional neglect, and a lack of adult protection.
[05:14:58] Her parents separated, and after moving away with her mother and two sisters, she lived
[05:15:03] in poorer conditions and saw much less of her father.
[05:15:06] Without her extended family around her and her mother who was emotionally distant, she
[05:15:10] was left to grow up largely on her own.
[05:15:13] Her desire for adult attention resulted in poor performer, poor behavior, excuse me,
[05:15:18] at school. She was expelled in year seven, that's 12 years old probably, and placed
[05:15:23] in a pupil referral unit, which she was usually, she was eventually excluded from as well.
[05:15:28] She attributes her disruptive behavior to a lack of desire, to emotional capacity, to
[05:15:33] engage with her education, as well as a lack of structure in her life. She was preoccupied
[05:15:38] with seeking attention, validation, and care. By the age of 13, she began to be groomed
[05:15:44] by older men, whom she encountered locally in the town center. Some were older white
[05:15:49] men, but there were also Muslim men connected to a newly opened restaurant in the area.
[05:15:54] As the grooming continued, Eleanor's behavior deteriorated significantly. She had frequent
[05:15:59] encounters with the police and was arrested often. During this time, older men gave her
[05:16:04] drugs and kept her in various houses. She believed these men were looking after her
[05:16:08] and offering her the help that she craved. The care that she craved, excuse me.
[05:16:14] While this was ongoing, her mother was unaware of her location but did not report her missing.
[05:16:18] No authority intervened regarding why she was often missing, arrested, or spending significant
[05:16:23] amounts of time with adult men.
[05:16:25] When she was 14, she returned home one day after being away and no one answered the door.
[05:16:31] Eleanor climbed onto the roof of the house and managed to get inside.
[05:16:34] She discovered the house was completely empty.
[05:16:37] Her mother had thrown everything away, including childhood photographs and personal items, and
[05:16:41] left all without telling her.
[05:16:43] She went to social services of her own volition and was instructed to go with her father.
[05:16:48] She was expected to travel with him on the train alone.
[05:16:54] She had no meaningful relationship with her father and only spoke to him occasionally.
[05:16:58] When Eleanor arrived, he made it clear that his new partner was his priority and that
[05:17:03] she and her sisters came second.
[05:17:05] His partner tried to get her onto a more stable path and back into education, but due to her
[05:17:10] previous exclusions, schools constantly refused her. In an, quote, ethnic minority majority
[05:17:17] area, she was explicitly told by one school that she could not be admitted because she
[05:17:22] was an English girl and she would be the only one. She was placed in a pupil referral unit,
[05:17:28] but the behavior of other students there did libel to give her the sense of safety,
[05:17:32] structure, and aspiration needed. She therefore ran away often. Frequent running away resulted in
[05:17:39] repeated arrests and eventually social services decided that they could be
[05:17:43] contained in a family setting and took her into care. While in care, she became
[05:17:48] more visible and accessible to the men who were already looking for vulnerable
[05:17:52] girls and she was once again groomed. On one occasion, some adult men approached
[05:17:57] her and offered her alcohol and a lift. She drank a small amount and quickly
[05:18:01] became unwell and lost consciousness. When she awoke, she was inside a house
[05:18:06] that appeared to be decorated for an Asian wedding.
[05:18:09] But she lost consciousness again.
[05:18:11] When she finally awoke properly,
[05:18:13] she found herself abandoned by the side of the road,
[05:18:16] unclothed, injured, and disoriented.
[05:18:19] She managed to make it back to her children's home.
[05:18:22] However, she was not asked what happened,
[05:18:24] taken to the hospital,
[05:18:25] or had any report made of the incident and her files.
[05:18:29] Following the incident, Eleanor went missing
[05:18:31] far more frequently.
[05:18:33] She would sleep rough in doorways,
[05:18:37] abandoned buildings and taxis.
[05:18:39] No one at the care home asked her any questions
[05:18:41] about why this was happening.
[05:18:43] She was transferred to a different children's home
[05:18:45] where men regularly collected girls from outside,
[05:18:48] the home and sometimes came inside the building itself.
[05:18:51] The staff allowed this to happen.
[05:18:53] The men ordered food, alcohol, places to stay,
[05:18:57] and a sense of belonging,
[05:18:59] But in reality, they were there to sexually exploit children.
[05:19:07] What the fuck?
[05:19:10] They used to go to the, yeah, I mean, this is insane.
[05:19:15] Why are the, we call homeless rough sleepers?
[05:19:17] Oh, I didn't know that.
[05:19:18] Okay, I didn't get that.
[05:19:20] Eleanor became involved with an older man
[05:19:22] who she believes was her boyfriend.
[05:19:24] He was involved in the drug trade.
[05:19:27] she was taken to jersey and kept in a hotel for several days
[05:19:30] she was not allowed to leave freely upon returning to the care home no one
[05:19:34] questioned where she had been she continued to be arrested for low level
[05:19:38] offenses particularly shoplifting she was eventually placed on a young
[05:19:42] offenders institution
[05:19:44] uh... and keep in mind all the other rapists that so far in all these stories
[05:19:47] that have not been on anybody's list for any reason for anything
[05:19:51] uh... on one occasion she was punched while being arrested
[05:19:54] and this experience among others destroyed any trust she had in the
[05:19:57] police
[05:19:57] well i don't blame her
[05:19:59] and uh... from this point onward she saw the police as just another threat
[05:20:03] well they're also not just a threat their enablers
[05:20:06] when she was seventeen elinor was president a stabbing incident involving
[05:20:10] men connected to the grooming network
[05:20:12] that had been abusing her
[05:20:14] she was not involved in the violence but gave the victim first aid and call
[05:20:17] the emergency services
[05:20:19] she was arrested at the scene and charged under the doctrine of joint
[05:20:23] enterprise with conspiracy to commit grievous bodily harm with intent.
[05:20:27] The case did not come to trial until two years later when Eleanor was an adult, so she was
[05:20:33] tried as an adult.
[05:20:34] She was sentenced to two years in prison.
[05:20:37] She was also believed she was criminalized for circumstances to directly arose from exploitation,
[05:20:43] neglect, systemic failure rather than being protected from them.
[05:20:47] Following her conviction, Eleanor converted to Islam.
[05:20:50] She did not do so for theological reasons, but for practical ones, as a method of survival.
[05:20:55] In many of the environments she had experienced, Muslim girls were afforded some degree of
[05:20:59] protection relative to non-Muslims.
[05:21:02] She felt that conversion was a way to reduce risk and make herself less vulnerable.
[05:21:07] Before serving her sentence, she became pregnant by an older man and entered into an Islamic
[05:21:11] marriage with him, believing it might provide stability and protection.
[05:21:15] She was imprisoned with her young baby of experience that she found she, okay, this
[05:21:20] is a great sentence.
[05:21:21] She was imprisoned with her young baby and experience she found deeply distressing.
[05:21:29] Yeah I could see that.
[05:21:31] Yeah, no, that makes sense.
[05:21:34] Definitely.
[05:21:35] Yeah, I mean I'd be stressed out too, absolutely, sure.
[05:21:41] During her release, she was subjected to domestic abuse and coercive control.
[05:21:45] The abuse was not always physical.
[05:21:47] It involved isolation, monitoring, restrictions on her behavior and the constant erosion of
[05:21:52] her sense of self.
[05:21:54] She was controlled through fear, guilt, and religious obligation.
[05:21:58] She was not allowed independence or employment, and others were told she was mentally unwell.
[05:22:03] This further isolated her.
[05:22:05] She met and remarried another man who took her to Saudi Arabia.
[05:22:09] She was entirely dependent on her husband for everything and was not allowed to leave
[05:22:13] the house without him.
[05:22:15] She felt isolated and powerless.
[05:22:17] The experience made her realize that she needed to leave Islam, but she knew that apostasy
[05:22:22] carried very serious consequences so she kept it to herself.
[05:22:26] However, she was eventually able to escape Saudi Arabia and return to the United Kingdom
[05:22:31] with her children.
[05:22:32] Back in Britain, with no home, work, or money, she was raped by another man and became pregnant
[05:22:38] again and felt forced into another marriage.
[05:22:53] Not good.
[05:22:55] Or abuse continued.
[05:22:57] She eventually escaped the situation after studying in secret and building up her sense
[05:23:02] of identity and confidence enough to make a new life for herself.
[05:23:06] Eleanor believes that much of the harm she experienced could have been avoided, had institutions adequately protected her.
[05:23:12] Children's services did not safeguard her. The education system excluded her. The police criminalized her.
[05:23:21] I had friends that were Muslim, girlfriends, and this never happened to them.
[05:23:25] They would be in the cars with us sometimes, but the men would treat them differently.
[05:23:32] Oh my God.
[05:23:36] This is nuts. We're all the feminists when you need them.
[05:23:40] They don't, feminists don't, like, it's not real.
[05:23:44] Like, you never rely on them.
[05:23:47] Take a break. I'm fine. I'm good.
[05:23:49] I actually, like, at the beginning, I was kind of like,
[05:23:51] I don't know how I'm gonna get through this at this point,
[05:23:53] like, I'm in the zone.
[05:23:56] Rachel is the mother of a daughter who died age 12
[05:23:59] after taking an overdose.
[05:24:01] Her daughter was joyful, creative, academically engaged child
[05:24:04] child from a stable, loving home. She was, however, autistic, which made her more vulnerable
[05:24:11] to abuse and exploitation. Following the lockdown response to COVID-19, her behavior changed
[05:24:17] dramatically, and she became withdrawn, depressed, and began self-harming. Rachel's daughter
[05:24:23] disclosed that she had only been orally raped by a white British boy from her school. The
[05:24:29] disclosure devastated her and her family. When police attended the family's home, she
[05:24:34] She was told it would be her word against his, and that the process would take years,
[05:24:40] and that it involved extensive paperwork.
[05:24:42] The interaction caused her to shut down and withdraw her complaint.
[05:24:46] The police investigation went no further.
[05:24:49] Despite assurances to the contrary, the alleged perpetrator remained in school, and safeguarding
[05:24:54] was ineffective.
[05:24:55] She was subjected to relentless bullying, including physical assaults by girls linked
[05:24:59] to the perpetrator, which were filmed and shared online.
[05:25:03] The police took weeks to respond and failed to act on video evidence or threats.
[05:25:08] Rachel's daughter was abused and threatened on Snapchat and other platforms they got
[05:25:12] delete Snapchat.
[05:25:13] There's a lot of these.
[05:25:16] Was threatened on Snapchat and other platforms daily.
[05:25:19] The intimidation escalated when the perpetrator's adult brother attended the family home and
[05:25:24] attempted to force entry.
[05:25:26] Police advised only that the family should consider moving to house.
[05:25:30] Let's move, go to another house.
[05:25:33] son was assaulted at school. On the night of her death, Rachel's daughter took an overdose
[05:25:38] of, I don't know what that drug is, stating that she wanted everything to stop. She suffered
[05:25:44] multiple organ failures and died days later. Even after her death, the abuse continued.
[05:25:51] Rachel believes that her daughter was failed by the police, by her school, and by the crown
[05:25:56] prosecution service. She states that she was effectively murdered by institutional failure.
[05:26:03] Next, Jin's childhood was characterized by emotional neglect and a lack of safety.
[05:26:13] Her emotional needs were not recognized or prioritized by the adults in her life, particularly
[05:26:19] her parents, who were absent most of the time.
[05:26:22] Within the wider family context, boundaries were blurred and inappropriate dynamics were
[05:26:27] normalized.
[05:26:28] For example, family members introduced her to drugs and alcohol around the age of 13.
[05:26:34] Throughout secondary school, Jen was bullied, but staff did little to help despite the obvious
[05:26:39] distress.
[05:26:41] On the contrary, they contributed to her victimization.
[05:26:44] Much of the bullying stemmed from an incident in her first year of which a teacher refused
[05:26:48] to allow Jen to use the toilet, resulting in Jen wetting herself and being made to sit
[05:26:53] in stolled clothes for the rest of the day.
[05:26:56] Why would a school do that?
[05:26:58] wouldn't that just smell bad? Why wouldn't you want somebody to, uh, what the fuck?
[05:27:04] Um, the teacher faced no repercussions. Jen began self-began self-harming and running
[05:27:09] away from home. And the only adult she felt she could confide in committed suicide around
[05:27:14] this time. Into adolescence, Jen had no stable sense of self-worth and no adults constantly
[05:27:20] protected that advocated for her. Her self-harm worsened and she experienced suicidal thoughts.
[05:27:26] yet safeguarding responses remained absent gen began to believe that this was
[05:27:31] not that she was not worth protecting
[05:27:33] and as a result became increasingly vulnerable to exploitation
[05:27:37] at thirteen adult men began contacting her online
[05:27:41] giving her a sense of validation and belonging sexual conversations were
[05:27:45] common including one man encouraging gen to insult insert a knife into her
[05:27:51] vagina
[05:27:54] What the fuck?
[05:27:56] What the fuck?
[05:27:58] What the hell is wrong with them?
[05:28:00] This is a 13-year-old girl.
[05:28:04] At 15, offline grooming began with a group of white British men who presented themselves as sympathetic friends to the vulnerable gen.
[05:28:14] Though she was not raped by these men, one told her that touching was okay, but we can't have intercourse until 16 because of the law.
[05:28:22] Wow, what gentleman. This is crazy.
[05:28:25] At the age of 17, Jen was introduced to a gang of Iraqi Kurdish Muslim men by a friend who she now believes was herself groomed.
[05:28:34] And this is what happened in the Epstein files too, you've got to keep in mind, is that the girls that are groomed and then they age out of the age that the men are attracted to,
[05:28:44] are then used to bring in the next crop of girls after that. This is super, super common.
[05:28:50] happens all the time. Generational grooming? Yeah, of course.
[05:28:54] The gang members, all of whom were illegal migrants.
[05:28:57] Oh good. Traffic jenn to numerous towns and cities across the Midlands where she
[05:29:02] was
[05:29:02] raped by multiple men at what was described
[05:29:06] as parties. At one occasion she was anally raped in the park
[05:29:10] by one of the gang members. She was taken on drug runs and witnessed the
[05:29:14] slaughtering
[05:29:15] of a lamb in the bathroom of a house.
[05:29:18] She described a closed and intimidating social world governed by fear, loyalty, and silence,
[05:29:24] in which racially supremacist attitudes were openly and regularly expressed.
[05:29:29] White British people were described as white trash and white girls as English pig dogs.
[05:29:34] Perpetrators insisted that children choose exploitation,
[05:29:38] and Britain and its institutions were described as soft and easy to exploit.
[05:29:44] Well, they were right.
[05:29:46] They posted receiving free money from the British state on multiple occasions and
[05:29:51] Jen was forced to fill an asylum benefit application on their behalf. Of course.
[05:29:58] Of course, of course, of course, of course.
[05:30:02] Ken Winses' intimidation, violence, trafficking, asylum fraud, sexual
[05:30:07] exploitation, including the drubbing, drugging, and raping of children as young
[05:30:12] is 13 and the aftermath of a gang-related murder while involved with the group and was
[05:30:19] thus afraid to defy or disclose against its members.
[05:30:22] The gang became increasingly controlling and abusive, isolating Jen from her friends and
[05:30:27] family.
[05:30:28] Her movements, communications, and decisions were closely monitored and restricted.
[05:30:33] Any attempt to assert independence was met with threats.
[05:30:36] She suffered emotional, physical, and psychological abuse, and at 18 she became pregnant as
[05:30:42] a result of rape.
[05:30:44] Jin was repeatedly told that she was inferior and unclean as a non-Muslim.
[05:30:51] Religious coercion escalated into a forced conversion to Islam partly due to her pregnancy.
[05:30:56] She was taken to a dark, dingy flat that was then covered into a mosque and married by
[05:31:02] an Imam in an Islamic ceremony without giving consent.
[05:31:06] The marriage was used as a mechanism to legitimize control over her life and restrictions on
[05:31:12] her behavior increased. During pregnancy, the threats intensified, and Jen was told
[05:31:18] that she had no right to leave or make decisions about her child because to do so would be
[05:31:23] anti-Islamic. Her behavior was tightly controlled, including an instruction to not eat pork,
[05:31:29] As the father believed, it would make the baby gay.
[05:31:41] Of course, naturally.
[05:31:45] She was told that a disclosure to the authorities would result in shame and punishment.
[05:31:50] Nevertheless, she attempted to report her situation to the police, but no action was
[05:31:55] taken.
[05:31:56] The theological and religious dimensions of her trafficking and abuse were minimized,
[05:32:00] and her disclosures were reframed as relationship issues or cultural matters before being dismissed
[05:32:06] as exaggerated and unreliable.
[05:32:09] After the birth of her daughter, Jen's access to her child was restricted and used as a
[05:32:14] means of leverage.
[05:32:16] The father, an Iraqi illegal migrant, reportedly repeatedly took their daughter to Iraq despite
[05:32:22] having claimed asylum in Britain on the basis that he could not remain safely there. While
[05:32:27] there, she was exposed to firearms, including AK-47s, when her daughter was three years
[05:32:35] old. Jen contacted the police after her father threatened to take their daughter to Iraq
[05:32:42] and never bring her back. The police responded and said that it was a civil matter and did
[05:32:48] not intervene. Jen has not spent a single one of her daughter's birthdays with her since
[05:32:53] that she was nine years old and has had minimal contact with her for several years. The father
[05:32:58] continues to take her to Iraq regularly, so he's still in Britain. Jen now lives with
[05:33:03] complex PTSD, anxiety, depression, disassociation, periods of agoraphobia, that's never you're
[05:33:10] afraid of other people, you don't want to be around anyone, persistent fear of distress
[05:33:14] in relation to her daughter's safety and autonomy.
[05:33:17] Those difficulties significantly impair her ability to function day to day.
[05:33:21] She gives evidence so that religiously motivated coercive abuse is properly recognized and
[05:33:26] confronted, even while doing so is politically, culturally, or socially controversial.
[05:33:32] It sure is.
[05:33:35] They have no compassion for young girls that are out on the streets and they see us as slags
[05:33:39] as white trash.
[05:33:40] English pig dogs came up a lot.
[05:33:43] don't like pigs and they don't like dogs so they don't like they hate dogs and they hate pigs so
[05:33:48] they put women on that same level naturally of course
[05:33:54] agoraphobia is more complicated than that i know i simplified it
[05:33:58] Obviously it's more complicated.
[05:34:11] Kate.
[05:34:12] Kate grew up in a deeply dysfunctional and unsafe household where violent sexual abuse
[05:34:17] and neglect were commonplace.
[05:34:19] Social services had been involved with the family since before Kate was born, primarily
[05:34:23] they do to neglect the first siblings by her parents
[05:34:26] and she's a bro like bad spawner and g holy fuck
[05:34:29] uh... and i mean it is it's all of them honestly
[05:34:32] uh... the behavior of her older half-brother who is physically violent
[05:34:36] he along with kate's father sexually abused kate from a young age something
[05:34:40] that was not identified by social services for several years
[05:34:44] it was uh... when she was around the age of five kate and her two brothers were
[05:34:48] removed okay so this is before she was five years old she's being sexually
[05:34:51] abused okay
[05:34:52] and then from the care of her biological parents and placed in a foster home.
[05:34:57] It was determined that they could not return to their parents custody
[05:35:00] and that they were adopted by a couple from the town around fifty miles away.
[05:35:05] Kate and her brothers settled well into their new home and family environment.
[05:35:10] For the next several years Kate's life was happy and stable with her adopted
[05:35:14] parents providing the love and support that her biological parents have failed
[05:35:17] to give.
[05:35:18] Kate's adoptive parents were committed Christians and the family attended the
[05:35:21] local church on every Sunday. Much of Kate's social life outside of school
[05:35:25] revolved around church activities involving including youth groups and
[05:35:29] spending time with other families within the church community. At school she
[05:35:33] performed exceptionally well and was identified as gifted and talented across
[05:35:38] a range of subjects. She rarely got into trouble and despite suffering from a
[05:35:42] little self-esteem was well regarded by peers and teachers alike. Kate maintained
[05:35:47] a limited circle of friends directed most of her energies towards her studies
[05:35:51] which provided her with a sense of achievement and self-worth. Kate was highly ambitious and optimistic about the future.
[05:35:56] She held herself to high standards and aspired to attend university, complete a PhD and pursue a career in
[05:36:03] Archaeology or paramedicine. She was driven by a strong sense of family and look forward to getting married and having children of her own.
[05:36:10] Around the age of 12, Kate began to receive sexual education in school.
[05:36:15] school. She found those lessons upsetting as, up until this point, her understanding of
[05:36:19] what had happened to her during early childhood was very limited. Social services failed to
[05:36:24] identify the abuse at the time, so it had never been acknowledged, discussed, or explained
[05:36:28] to her. When she entered adolescence, confused about what had happened to her, and without
[05:36:32] a clear understanding of healthy boundaries and inappropriate behavior, she lacked the
[05:36:36] confidence to confide in an adult and this left her vulnerable.
[05:36:40] Kate came to realize that the abuse that she had suffered at the hands of her biological
[05:36:44] father and half-brother was not normal or legal. She began to experience a growing sense of shame,
[05:36:50] fear, and self-blame. It felt a deep uncertainty about her identity, her body, her relationships
[05:36:57] with others, and soon began to experience suicidal sloths. Still just 12 years old,
[05:37:02] Kate decided to take her own life. On Saturday night, her family had gone to sleep and left
[05:37:08] her at home in the early hours and walked to its secluded locations where she intended to commit
[05:37:13] suicide, hoping that she would not be found. She paused beneath a tree to shelter from
[05:37:18] the rain, and after a while she heard a group of men approaching. By their tone, Kate suspected
[05:37:23] that they were drunk, and when they saw her, they began jeering. They called her a no-homer,
[05:37:29] and suggested that she could stay warm on their dicks. Kate, terrified and regretful,
[05:37:35] waited for the men to pass before attempting to return home, but as she was walking, she
[05:37:40] was grabbed from behind by one of the men. Kate was overpowered by one of the three men,
[05:37:47] forced on the ground, and her arms and legs repented, and the men took turns orally and
[05:37:51] vaginally raping her, so she was going to go kill herself and then this happened instead.
[05:37:56] And when it ended, the men hit her repeatedly and threatened to find her, kill her, and
[05:38:01] harm her loved ones if she ever told anyone what had happened. So violent was the assault,
[05:38:06] Kate's clothes were left bloodstained. Traumatized, she walked across the town to her family's
[05:38:11] church, knowing that her parents would be there in a few hours. She sat on the porch
[05:38:15] and cried for several hours before deciding to return home. While she was walking, both
[05:38:20] a van and a taxi driver stopped to ask if she was okay, given her disheveled appearance
[05:38:25] and visible distress. She replied that she was. When she arrived home, she hid her bloodstained
[05:38:30] closed and went to sleep. Kate did not disclose the assault to anyone and her mental and physical
[05:38:37] health rapidly deteriorated. She began self-harming and her suicidal thoughts intensified. She
[05:38:42] attempted to take her own life on multiple occasions following the months that she was
[05:38:46] admitted to the hospital many times as a result. She started getting bullied at school, concerned
[05:38:51] for her welfare escalated, but Kate resisted every attempt by her parents and teachers
[05:38:55] intervene. She was assigned a child in adolescent mental health services. A
[05:39:00] practitioner by the local authority with whom started regular counseling
[05:39:04] sessions but Kate did not find this either effective or helpful and she
[05:39:08] continued to keep the assault hidden. The professionals concluded that her
[05:39:12] deteriorating health was linked to her early life trauma. Later that year, Kate
[05:39:17] received a message on social media from one of the abusers. To this day, Kate
[05:39:22] Kate does not know how they found her.
[05:39:24] The message was a video of the assault, and they threatened to share it with Kate's friends
[05:39:28] and family if she did not comply with their demands.
[05:39:33] This is fucking, this is like a horror story, oh my god.
[05:39:37] Kate feared that if they did so, the bullying would worsen and she would get into trouble.
[05:39:42] Once again, she did not disclose the incident to anyone, and believing that she could be
[05:39:46] resolving the blackmail, she went to meet them.
[05:39:49] She was instructed to come to a house in the local town center.
[05:39:52] She was taken inside, all three abusers were present.
[05:39:56] They proceeded to rape her again, this time making it clear that she was being filmed.
[05:40:01] Following this, they told Kate that she now worked for them and was expected to do what
[05:40:05] she was told, for otherwise the footage would be leaked.
[05:40:08] She was given a phone and told to always remain contactable.
[05:40:12] In the period that followed, Kate was required to meet two of the chief abusers frequently.
[05:40:16] They introduced her to other men in a network,
[05:40:18] and she was repeatedly subjected to them as well
[05:40:21] as sexual abuse.
[05:40:22] Kate was also forced to participate
[05:40:24] into webcam abuse sections,
[05:40:26] which generated revenue for the abusers.
[05:40:28] If the live stream did not generate what they considered
[05:40:31] to be a satisfactory amount of money, Kate was punished.
[05:40:35] The constant shifting of expectations
[05:40:37] was used as a method of control.
[05:40:39] Kate gradually became more open with her counselors,
[05:40:42] though she did not disclose the full extent
[05:40:44] of what was happening to her.
[05:40:45] she began to refer to the initial assault as the event.
[05:40:49] And they soon worked out that she had been raped,
[05:40:51] even though they did not suspect the ongoing abuse.
[05:40:54] They shared their concerns with Kate's parents
[05:40:56] and almost a year after the initial assault,
[05:40:58] Kate's mother confronted her about suspicions
[05:41:01] that she, Kate's father,
[05:41:02] and the social service professionals had formed.
[05:41:05] Kate confirmed to her mother that she had been raped.
[05:41:09] Soon after the disclosure,
[05:41:10] Kate was taken to a sexual assault and rape center
[05:41:13] for further counseling.
[05:41:15] uh...
[05:41:16] i think i've seen enough of these stories to unfortunately nowhere this might be
[05:41:19] going
[05:41:20] i'm not saying it but you know we'll see
[05:41:23] the s a r c uh... therapist encourage kate to report the initial assault to the
[05:41:28] police kate hope that doing so would lead to an intervention that would stop
[05:41:31] the ongoing abuse was too frightened to name them
[05:41:34] fearing reprisals from the gang
[05:41:36] nevertheless she reported the assault to the police providing with as much
[05:41:40] uh... information as possible
[05:41:41] and was brought in for questioning with her mother
[05:41:44] At the police station, Kate was taken into their interview room, and before the interview
[05:41:49] began, without Kate's mother present, Kate was told that this was her last chance to
[05:41:54] say that her report was untrue.
[05:41:57] She was warned that if any part of her account could not be supported by evidence, she could
[05:42:02] and would be arrested.
[05:42:04] For an extended period of time, both officers repeatedly told her how much trouble she would
[05:42:09] BN if any detail of her statement was disproved and that she could withdraw the allegation
[05:42:15] before the interview started with no further consequences.
[05:42:19] They also suggested that her parents would be relieved if she said the incident would
[05:42:24] have not happened.
[05:42:26] Still just 12 years old and already deeply traumatized, Kate became overwhelmed by the
[05:42:31] pressure she felt the officers were replacing on her and said what she believed they wanted
[05:42:36] her to say that the rape had not taken place. This interaction occurred before the recording
[05:42:42] began and as a result, the formal interview did not reflect the coercion that took place.
[05:42:47] Kate felt unstable, unable to disclose anything further, including the abuse that was ongoing
[05:42:53] at the time. Because she felt that she was not being believed or taken seriously, the
[05:42:58] police report recorded the incident as a withdrawal of the complaint. Following this experience,
[05:43:04] again attempted to take her own life.
[05:43:07] Shortly afterwards, Kate's mother found content in Kate's diary describing the rape.
[05:43:12] She encouraged Kate to speak with the police again, but Kate explained the police had
[05:43:16] previously pressured her to withdraw her complaint.
[05:43:20] Nevertheless, Kate returned to the police station and this time completed the interview.
[05:43:25] Some weeks later, Kate's parents discovered sexually explicit messages in their phone
[05:43:29] between Kate and several adult men.
[05:43:31] She's 12, keep in mind.
[05:43:33] sexual photographs. These were reported to the police, but it was concluded that Kate
[05:43:38] was engaging with these men consensually. And despite just being 13 years old, Kate,
[05:43:44] still afraid of retribution from the gangs, denied all knowledge of these exchanges and
[05:43:49] was not questioned any further. It was consensual, of course, right?
[05:43:55] Over the course of the following year, Kate went missing on numerous occasions, including
[05:43:59] during school hours and late at night. She alleges that no record was made of her absence.
[05:44:04] The game was blackmailing her and doing what they called jobs. Sexual abuse by gang members
[05:44:10] and their associates, in which gang received payment. This included web camming, gang rapes,
[05:44:16] parties, cop nights, and red rooms. Kate was raped multiple times a week, sometimes two
[05:44:25] two to four times a day. During this time, Kate encountered another girl whom the gang
[05:44:30] was exploiting. Kate, then 14, suggested the girl was even younger than her. On the night
[05:44:35] that they met, Kate had been instructed to meet two of the gang members in a secluded
[05:44:39] location late at night. When Kate arrived, they were holding the girl tightly around
[05:44:43] the neck. One of the gang members told Kate the girl was being broken in that night, and
[05:44:49] the men would be servicing, would be particularly brutal. Kate attempted to intervene, telling
[05:44:54] the gang members that she would take on the jobs instead.
[05:44:57] In response, the gang members beat and raped her.
[05:45:00] Kate went on to work with this girl on numerous occasions and they became very close.
[05:45:08] What a story!
[05:45:09] Throughout the first half of the next year, the exploitation intensified, and Kate made
[05:45:14] another attempt to take her own life.
[05:45:16] Shortly afterwards, she entered into a relationship with a relative of one of the gang members,
[05:45:21] leading to a temporary pause in the abuse.
[05:45:23] The relationship lasted for almost a year, but it came to an end, the exploitation resumed
[05:45:28] almost immediately.
[05:45:30] Later that year, Kate, then 16, experienced no significant missing episode to date.
[05:45:36] During this episode's incident, the gang trafficked Kate to a town far away from her home where
[05:45:41] she was restrained and raped repeatedly on a canal boat, including she alleges by a police
[05:45:47] officer.
[05:45:48] At one point, Kate tried to escape, but was caught, and the gang beat her and cut off
[05:45:53] much of her hair's punishment.
[05:45:56] Kate attempted a second time and was successful.
[05:45:59] She reached a nearby house and knocked for help.
[05:46:01] The woman who lived there took Kate in and gave her clothes, as Kate's own clothes had
[05:46:06] been badly damaged by the abusers and she was partially naked.
[05:46:09] The woman called the police who attended the property.
[05:46:12] The woman attempted to remove the rope and remained around Kate's wrists, but was instructed
[05:46:17] by the police to leave them in place as they were considered evidence.
[05:46:21] Kate was hesitant to speak with the police, given both the recent alleged abuse by a serving
[05:46:25] officer and the wider context of threats, coercive control, and physical and sexual
[05:46:29] violence that she had been experiencing.
[05:46:31] Yeah, I bet.
[05:46:33] Excuse me.
[05:46:39] I hate this so much.
[05:46:44] oh it's not even over
[05:46:47] this is it is not it it this is it's not even over
[05:46:51] lock in
[05:46:53] lock in bow
[05:46:55] that's it
[05:46:55] this is the way it is
[05:46:58] nevertheless she disclosed what happened on the canal boat but not the
[05:47:01] historic explanation expeering reprisals to the police she also did not report that
[05:47:07] she had been raped by a police officer
[05:47:09] the investigation did not progress
[05:47:13] and the police accused Kate of lying about the exploitation.
[05:47:17] This represented a turning point in Kate's dealings with the police
[05:47:21] as she then felt, as she thereafter felt that she could not turn to them for
[05:47:26] help, fearing that she would not be believed.
[05:47:28] Kate was placed on a child protection plan by the local authority.
[05:47:32] She shared a diary with one of the social workers containing details of the sexual
[05:47:36] abuse that she had been suffering, though once again she was not believed.
[05:47:40] During this period, Kate was diagnosed with this associated identity disorder.
[05:47:46] Soon after, Kate alleges that she was raped in a hotel by a man that she had believed to
[05:47:55] be a doctor.
[05:47:56] The police were called to the hotel room and staff were concerned that she was a prostitute.
[05:48:01] When the police arrived, she was found alone and naked in the room, having been left by
[05:48:06] the abusers and instructed to wait for more men to arrive. At this point, both Kate's family and
[05:48:12] the professionals involved in her care began to express frustration with what they believed to be
[05:48:17] her lifestyle choices. They did not believe that she was being exploited and instead assumed that
[05:48:23] she, still 16, was willingly meeting adult men. The misinterpretation of Kate's situation had a
[05:48:30] profound impact on professional professionals responded to her following months and years,
[05:48:35] because they believed her behavior was voluntary, subsequent incidents such as unexplained absences
[05:48:41] being found in hotels, receiving inappropriate messages, or associating with adult men,
[05:48:47] were being treated as matters of personal choice rather than indicators of ongoing exploitation.
[05:48:52] As a result, these events were not treated as safeguarding concerns,
[05:48:56] instead of exploring the possibility that she was the one being coerced and controlled.
[05:49:01] professionals increasingly frame the issue as one of behavioral difficulty, risk-taking,
[05:49:07] and non-compliance. The perspective Cato alleges influence decision-making process
[05:49:14] across agencies, referrals were closed prematurely, safeguarding meetings did not leave to protective
[05:49:20] action, and disclosures or partial disclosures were not pursued with the seriousness they
[05:49:25] required. The assumption was that she engaged in consensual activity meant that professionals
[05:49:31] did not intervene effectively, even when the circumstances strongly indicated exploitation.
[05:49:37] The perspective reinforced her isolation, reduced her ability to seek help,
[05:49:41] and ultimately allowed the exploitation to continue and escalate.
[05:49:47] Isn't this crazy? How can child consent? What the fuck is wrong with the UK?
[05:49:52] The police officers just don't give a fuck. Yeah, that's the reason why. That's it. Yeah, this is
[05:50:01] the way and this is what's been recorded. All the people who it was even worse than this and they
[05:50:06] were killed or they killed themselves, we're not hearing their stories because they're dead.
[05:50:11] So this probably is the tip of the iceberg. Just be logical about this, right? So yeah.
[05:50:18] Yeah, on one occasion around this time, concerns were raised at Kate's school.
[05:50:24] She was escorted to an office where the associate head teacher, the designated safeguarding
[05:50:28] lead, a PCSO, a police officer, her social worker, and the school nurse, and the head
[05:50:34] of the year were present.
[05:50:36] They prevented her from leaving the room and pressed her for names and details about the
[05:50:39] individuals involved in the abuse.
[05:50:42] Good.
[05:50:43] At that time, due to fear, coercion, and threats that she felt that she was under, she did
[05:50:47] not feel safe or able to provide the information they were requesting. Instead, she provided
[05:50:52] the nickdames of some of the individuals involved. Kate was visibly shaking and repeatedly
[05:50:56] asked to leave, explaining that she would be in significant danger if she revealed
[05:51:01] further information. After the meeting concluded, Kate was allowed to leave, but no protective
[05:51:06] measures were put in place. She was not supervised, safeguarded, or provided with any immediate
[05:51:12] safety planning. Despite indicators of fear and coercion, she was permitted to return home
[05:51:18] and continue her usual routine. No follow-up action was taken to monitor her well-being
[05:51:23] in the days that followed. After that meeting at the school, Kate's abusers made it clear
[05:51:29] that they knew she had spoken to the police. They told her that they were aware of every time
[05:51:34] she spoke to the police as they had people on the inside. They accused her of snitching,
[05:51:40] telling her that she would pay for it. Shortly afterwards, she was taken to a remote wooded
[05:51:45] location. The young girl who Kate had met before was also present. Initially, Kate believed they
[05:51:51] had been taken there for another, quote, job. The man then subjected the girl to extreme sexual
[05:51:56] and physical violence while Kate was forcibly restrained and made to witness what happened.
[05:52:02] So they gang-raped her in front of this other girl. Kate alleges that the girl was then murdered
[05:52:07] in front of her. Oh, they killed her. Okay. So yeah, exactly. So we're not getting that girl's
[05:52:11] story because she's dead. And so there's a good example right there. Cato alleges that the girl
[05:52:17] was then murdered in front of her. Oh my God. There we go. Yep, there it is. I was in law
[05:52:24] enforcement. This breaks every rule. Yeah, I'd hope so. Yeah, I kind of assumed this wasn't,
[05:52:34] Yeah, I assumed this wasn't what you guys learned at the Academy. I was kind of hoping so, right?
[05:52:40] Yeah, that's oh, what a relief
[05:52:43] Yeah, true great
[05:52:51] Following the incident, let's give me
[05:52:55] Kate reports that her abusers used what had happened as a direct and ongoing threat to ensure Kate silence
[05:53:02] They repeatedly told her that a murder had occurred because she had spoken to the police and insisted that it was her fault
[05:53:09] The message was delivered consistently and became a consensual part of their course of control
[05:53:14] They even made it clear that the same thing could happen again to Kate or to others if she ever disclosed anything ever again
[05:53:21] On another occasion Kate reports that she was taken from her local church on a Sunday morning service
[05:53:27] She was taken to a nearby city an hour away to do jobs
[05:53:31] She alleges that she was raped in a car on the way to the city.
[05:53:35] She eventually managed to get away from her perpetrators, but they followed and caught up with her and dragged her off to a canal path and raped her.
[05:53:43] After the perpetrators left, Kate left the structure and attempted to walk back along the canal path.
[05:53:49] She was visibly injured, distressed, and her clothing was damaged.
[05:53:53] A group of men who were fishing nearby saw her in this state and contacted the police.
[05:53:59] emergency services attended and she was taken to the hospital for medical
[05:54:03] attention
[05:54:04] kate reports that the fact of the no safeguarding measures were put in place
[05:54:08] following this incident either
[05:54:10] and this is all by the way
[05:54:11] then then kate turned seventeen
[05:54:15] a while
[05:54:16] uh... she joined a local college the transition created significant change in
[05:54:20] a routine she had more independence fewer supervised hours
[05:54:24] and uh... the last direct oversight from adults compared to what a previous
[05:54:27] school was having, this increased her vulnerability as the individuals exploiting her were able
[05:54:33] to take advantage of the additional freedom and reduced monitoring associated with college
[05:54:37] life. Kate's parents found it increasingly difficult to keep her safe and she was placed
[05:54:42] on the edge of care services under the age of 18. She stayed at the care home two nights
[05:54:47] a week as respite care for her family. During this period, she reports that she was trafficked
[05:54:53] by the gang to London. While there, she was subjected to repeated sexual exploitation.
[05:55:01] At one point, she managed to contact the care home and informed them of her location. A
[05:55:05] colleague provided guidance over the phone and directed Kate to a place where she could
[05:55:09] remain safe until help arrived. The police attended and collected her from the location.
[05:55:14] She disclosed the exploitation that had occurred, and on this occasion, the officers took her
[05:55:19] account seriously and responded with what she felt appropriate concern. They advised
[05:55:25] her that she should not return immediately to her local area due to risk for her safety.
[05:55:29] However, Kate's local authority did not agree with this and insisted that she be returned home.
[05:55:35] Staff from the care home traveled to London to collect her and return her to the placement.
[05:55:41] During the period, a retired police officer became aware of Kate's situation through a
[05:55:45] a mutual connection. A friend got in touch with him on Kate's behalf and he got in touch
[05:55:50] with Kate. He traveled to meet her in person and the next morning he came to her college.
[05:55:55] He expressed the intention to support her and stated that he believed he could assist,
[05:55:59] but explained that due to her age, he would need to, uh, uh, realize, I'm not sure, uh,
[05:56:05] I, I, this is probably something with Lee, Lee as I don't know, with my, I, I located
[05:56:10] so-called worker before to, okay, so he'd have to coordinate with them, right? I guess
[05:56:15] that's something like liaison or something like that.
[05:56:18] Liaison.
[05:56:19] Oh, wow.
[05:56:20] I've never even...
[05:56:21] Yeah, to liaison.
[05:56:22] Okay.
[05:56:23] I've never even seen that word actually typed.
[05:56:24] I've heard it spoken, but never typed.
[05:56:28] Kate's social worker declined to engage with him.
[05:56:30] Oh, wow.
[05:56:31] Well, that's convenient.
[05:56:32] So you had Jason Statham that's willing to go and save this girl and you don't want
[05:56:36] to talk to him.
[05:56:37] Well, that's convenient.
[05:56:38] Oh, great.
[05:56:39] Amazing.
[05:56:40] The situation quickly became confusing and overwhelming for Kate.
[05:56:43] The lack of cooperation from professionals, overwhelming for Kate, the lack of ongoing
[05:56:49] exploitation and her deteriorating mental health led to significant emotional crisis.
[05:56:54] Kate became extremely distressed and expressed intentions to end her life while being at
[05:56:57] college.
[05:56:59] As a result, she was sectioned under the Mental Health Act and taken in for assessment.
[05:57:03] Shortly after this incident, Kate was taken again by the individuals exploiting her.
[05:57:08] They told her that they knew that she had spoken to the police.
[05:57:11] She was removed from college and taken to a red room setting.
[05:57:15] Another girl, Meg, who was also present, during this incident, Kate alleges that she was forced
[05:57:21] to witness extreme violence that resulted in Meg losing her life.
[05:57:25] This, she says, was done deliberately and the perpetrators made it clear that this is
[05:57:30] a direct consequence of their belief that she had disclosed information to the police
[05:57:34] after her sectioning.
[05:57:37] What the fuck, bro?
[05:57:38] Yeah.
[05:57:39] Kate was sent to start university.
[05:57:41] She reports that she was taken to London during a nodding hill carnival made to engage in
[05:57:46] street-based sex work.
[05:57:48] At one point, Kate found the nearest police officers and attempted to explain that she
[05:57:53] was not safe and that she had been trafficked and that she was worried about her abusers
[05:57:57] would find her.
[05:57:58] They confirmed and that she had been reported as a missing person, contacted Kate's father,
[05:58:03] who told the officers that she was lying and refused to come collect her.
[05:58:12] What the fuck?
[05:58:16] I smell cat.
[05:58:18] If you think this is a cat, I think that you should talk to like, um, probably five girls,
[05:58:24] right?
[05:58:25] I mean, especially if it's any girl that's like above average attractiveness.
[05:58:28] Try to talk to them and see if they've had stories that are like this.
[05:58:32] And obviously, this is an outlier.
[05:58:36] The story is extreme.
[05:58:38] However, there are many more moderate versions of this that happen all the time.
[05:58:48] They are.
[05:58:50] And so, there it is.
[05:58:51] I mean, really, Shelter Desk Quote, I don't think it's really, yeah, I guess so, but I'm
[05:58:56] not really going to attack that person because a lot of people don't understand how bad this
[05:59:00] is.
[05:59:01] a joke that said if you talk to five girls that play World of Warcraft, you're going
[05:59:05] to get ten different stories about assault and harassment. And I think that's really
[05:59:09] probably an understatement. This is a very, very common problem. It's an extremely common
[05:59:14] problem.
[05:59:15] Officer Nernfels looking over girls thinking they're whores. Maybe. I mean, again, I think
[05:59:22] that some are good, some are bad, right? I mean, obviously the retired police officer
[05:59:25] was good. So yeah, not one person believes her story. That's very sus, of course.
[05:59:35] She felt entirely abandoned by the adults and professionals who would have tipped her safe,
[05:59:38] overwhelmed and stressed, take her own life. Okay, so let's see here. Soon after she started
[05:59:43] university, a goal she wanted to achieve is she thought that she would be a route out for the
[05:59:49] abuse. However, the increased independence and reduced oversight associated with university life
[05:59:54] created new opportunities for individuals abusing her to extend the exploitation beyond Kate's
[05:59:59] local area. This, she reports, marked the point in which her trafficking became national in scope,
[06:00:05] with the abuse occurring across multiple regions of Britain. Over the course of this academic
[06:00:09] year, Kate alleges that she was regularly taken to a range of cities across Britain.
[06:00:15] These movements were frequent, often unplanned, and carried out with little notice,
[06:00:19] making it impossible for her to establish any stability or predictability in daily life.
[06:00:24] the level of violence during this period increased significantly. My injuries became more frequent
[06:00:29] and more visible. On several occasions, Kate's university lecturers and friends noticed bruises
[06:00:34] or other marks which reflected the severity and regularity of the abuse. Oh my god.
[06:00:44] During these, despite these indicators of harm, no effective safeguarding, intervention took place
[06:00:50] and the exploitation continued. On one occasion, Kate was taken by her abusers from an area
[06:00:56] close to the university. They told her that she was in trouble because she had not been available
[06:01:00] for jobs due to her recent hospital admission. She was transported to a remote location,
[06:01:06] held in a caravan for approximately nine days. During this period, she reports that she was
[06:01:11] subjected to repeated sexual violence, severe physical assaults, and sustained torture,
[06:01:16] including being raped by a dog as men placed bets on whether it would
[06:01:22] penetrate her vagina or her anus filmed and forced to rewatch the footage.
[06:01:26] This was the most extreme and prolonged, I would hope so. I can't imagine
[06:01:33] anything worse than this. Jesus Christ! The most extreme and prolonged incident
[06:01:38] that she experienced and represented a significant escalation in the level of
[06:01:44] harm and control being exerted over her. The duration, isolation and intensity of the abuse
[06:01:50] during this period had been a lasting and profound impact on her physical and psychological
[06:01:55] well-being. Over the following year, Kate went missing for several extended periods which was
[06:01:59] subject to continuous trafficking and rape across the country. When the COVID-19 lockdown began,
[06:02:05] her day-to-day movements and university activities were restricted in line with national guidance.
[06:02:10] However, the individuals controlling her exploitation continued to...
[06:02:14] Bro, these guys didn't even give a fuck about the COVID quarantine. Can you believe that?
[06:02:21] Oh, wow. Who could have expected that?
[06:02:27] What? I know, look at this. Holy shit.
[06:02:35] Before the lockdown began, okay, uh, they continued to expect her to attend jobs throughout the
[06:02:39] period, the lockdown did not reduce the level of contact or demand placed on her. Following this
[06:02:44] period, the trafficking began to reduce gradually, probably because she got older. Positive, conclusive
[06:02:50] grounds decisions to the national referral mechanism confirming that she was a victim of
[06:02:55] trafficking and exploitation. By grooming behaviors by which Kate was subjected to did not follow
[06:03:00] the boyfriend model or grooming tactics that are often associated with child sexual exploitation.
[06:03:06] Instead, the abuse she experienced was based primarily on blackmail, coercion, and threats.
[06:03:12] From the outset, the individuals involved used fear, intimidation, and control, rather than the affection or persuasion, to entrap and exploit her.
[06:03:23] The demographics of the men abusing Cate were mixed.
[06:03:25] The first group trafficked and exploited her were primarily white, white British, or from Gypsy, Roma, and traveler backgrounds.
[06:03:33] That's just another general like Romanian gypsy, I think umbrella term as she got older
[06:03:38] She was trafficked more widely and the primary abuser demographics for Pakistani
[06:03:43] Bangladeshi and Bengali Muslims the other victims she encountered were almost always exclusively white British
[06:03:50] She was reported repeatedly subjected to racially and religiously motivated and being white was constantly being repeated as a
[06:03:58] justification for the abuse to not
[06:04:01] to minimize or dismiss the harm being inflicted. Kate was verbally attacked and demeaned because of
[06:04:07] her religion, including being mocked for wearing a cross and told that her Christian faith offered
[06:04:14] her no protection. The abusers regularly suggested that her God had abandoned her. Comments were
[06:04:21] constantly made. The thing is that a story like this, if you told somebody a story like this a
[06:04:27] A thousand years ago you would get a crusade nowadays you tell a person a story like this and you get a Twitter thread
[06:04:37] Isn't that crazy
[06:04:47] Wow
[06:04:51] That's that's insane
[06:04:53] Comments were constantly made suggesting that white girls and Christian girls were viewed
[06:04:58] as having degraded moral character or lower value, whereas Muslim girls were described
[06:05:03] by some of the men as having dignity and higher moral standard.
[06:05:07] Standing.
[06:05:08] Kate has participated in this inquiry because she feels a personal responsibility to speak
[06:05:13] up for many girls across the country who are unable to do so.
[06:05:17] And to help erasure of the realities of this form of exploitation that are understood and
[06:05:23] And that meaningful change can be achieved.
[06:05:25] The systems that should have protected Kate did not recognize the risks that she was facing,
[06:05:30] did not respond effectively when concerns were raised, and in some cases, she feels contributed
[06:05:35] to the harm by minimizing or disbelieving what was happening.
[06:05:41] For p- Oh, there's more!
[06:05:45] There's more in the appendix!
[06:05:46] Oh my god!
[06:05:50] holy shit man
[06:05:57] comments were made uh... suggesting uh... that white girls and christian
[06:06:00] girls reviewed as having fewer morals or lower value whereas Muslim girls were
[06:06:04] described by some of the men is having dignity and the higher moral standing
[06:06:09] these comparisons were used to justify the way i was treated
[06:06:13] and further humiliate and control me i was also subjected to religiously charged
[06:06:18] comments designed to shame and dehumanize me, including statements implying that God had abandoned me or would reject me because of what I had done had done to me.
[06:06:30] Oh, my God.
[06:06:35] That's a lot of crazy fuck. Holy shit, man.
[06:06:40] Look at that whistleblower testimony. So these are people that were not necessarily the victims themselves, but they were involved.
[06:06:48] Muslim lawyers who tried to expose the rapes were systematically silenced, discredited and punished.
[06:06:52] On occasion, their careers and reputations were also tarnished. Social care professionals,
[06:06:57] campaigners, and public activists who raised evidence of a still ongoing grooming, trafficking,
[06:07:01] financial abuse of children and care, and the institutional cover-ups faced suspension,
[06:07:06] defamation proceedings, dawn raids, asset freezes. Remember, Rupert Lowe also got raided.
[06:07:12] Asset freezes, fabricated charges, gagging bail conditions. That means that they can't talk about
[06:07:18] a third to be released from jail and career-ending isolation.
[06:07:22] Authorities assured them that full investigations had taken place when none had occurred and
[06:07:27] records were destroyed.
[06:07:29] Senior officials and elected members acknowledged concerns as credible, yet took no remedial
[06:07:34] action.
[06:07:35] The state did not merely ignore whistleblowers, it punished them to protect the gangs and to
[06:07:40] protect its own reputation.
[06:07:42] We wish to correct for that, so we invited these whistleblowers to our inquiry.
[06:07:46] Below are some of their testimonies, a social worker.
[06:07:52] One of our whistleblower social workers
[06:07:53] is experienced with children's social care professionally
[06:07:56] and with nearly four decades of service.
[06:07:58] Her specialist work is focused on leaving care services
[06:08:00] and safeguarding highly vulnerable young people.
[06:08:03] In February 2018, she raised extensive whistleblowing
[06:08:07] disclosures concerning financial abuse of young people,
[06:08:10] misuse of public funds, unlawful sanctions,
[06:08:13] illegal evictions, racism towards children in care, and systematic failures to safeguard
[06:08:19] against sexual and criminal exploitation.
[06:08:21] She was assured that the comprehensive investigation would occur in the event that responses were
[06:08:26] delayed, fragmented, and opaque.
[06:08:29] Senior officers later acknowledged that the financial abuse was likely but claimed proof
[06:08:34] that it was impossible due to missing records.
[06:08:36] Oh, we can't find it!
[06:08:38] Well that's convenient.
[06:08:40] She was informed that the Shredders had been purchased at units and that records may have
[06:08:44] been destroyed.
[06:08:45] Oh, they bought Shredders, I wonder why.
[06:08:48] Despite this, the disclosure was deemed reviewed without her ever even being involved.
[06:08:53] She describes repeated safeguarding failures witnessed as she was an interim co-manager
[06:08:58] of semi-independent units, including children with severe mental health needs placed in
[06:09:02] unsafely, repeated missing episodes, untreated exploitation risks, and delayed police and
[06:09:08] mental health intervention, her evidence illustrates escalating harm, including self-harm, sexual
[06:09:15] exploitation, criminal exploitation, and unlawful housing practices.
[06:09:20] Oh, man.
[06:09:22] After raising those concerns, she experienced retaliation, including removal of payments,
[06:09:27] suspension based on unfounded allegations, and professional isolation.
[06:09:33] Senior leadership and elected members repeatedly failed to engage meaningful with her.
[06:09:38] concerns. She concludes that the local council prioritized reputational and financial considerations
[06:09:45] over child safety, leaving ongoing risks unaddressed.
[06:10:08] This is malicious and done intentionally, yeah it is.
[06:10:15] This is that.
[06:10:20] You know chickpea, uh barbecue potato chips, this is nice.
[06:10:30] I like them.
[06:10:36] I need to do a noise gate on my mic, I just haven't done that.
[06:11:02] I'm not too bad. Yeah, I know they're being fat. I know. I don't think that right now I'm being very fat super fat
[06:11:17] Kevin compiled multi-agency records from 2003 onwards.
[06:11:29] These showed that police councils and MPs knew about organized grooming from Pakistani
[06:11:33] Muslim gangs years before any public admission.
[06:11:37] Vines engaged with national media and provided evidence to senior official.
[06:11:41] He states that in one of the interviews in which he partook in, namely with Sky News,
[06:11:46] He was misrepresented, which led to defamation proceedings that rendered him bankrupt and
[06:11:51] ruined much of his life.
[06:11:52] He alleges perjury by MPs and a failure to police to investigate it.
[06:11:58] The pattern demonstrates that early whistleblowing on institutional awareness produced retaliation
[06:12:03] rather than protection for the victims.
[06:12:07] Oh my god.
[06:12:09] Tommy Robinson.
[06:12:11] Tommy Robinson documented grooming patterns after the exploitation of a close female relative
[06:12:15] at the age of 14. He heard hundreds of similar accounts across families from England. When
[06:12:20] he formed the English Defense League and spoke publicly, South Yorkshire police allegedly
[06:12:25] subjected him to repeated arrests, dawn raids on his family homes. He reportedly also faced
[06:12:30] fabricated charges, asset freezes, and threats that forced repeated relocations. The state
[06:12:36] treated public whistleblowing on the ethnic and religious patterns of the gangs as more
[06:12:41] dangerous than the gangs themselves. After Robinson repeatedly detailed the scale of
[06:12:47] Muslim grooming gangs across Britain, the state responded with targeted legal action
[06:12:51] that in effect silenced him. In May of 2018, he livestreamed outside of Leeds Crown courtroom
[06:12:58] while defendants in a major grooming gang trial were entering the building. He was immediately
[06:13:03] arrested for breaching the peace and charged for contempt of court for violating reporting
[06:13:09] restrictions that protected the defendants. He was sentenced to 13 months in prison on the same day.
[06:13:16] Wow, that's really fast. I wonder why they did that one so fast, but they let these girls get
[06:13:23] abused for five years. Isn't that weird? What are the odds of that? How about that?
[06:13:32] This case was re-heard in July 2019 and he was re-sentenced to nine months in
[06:13:42] prison. The sentence combined six months from the leads offense with three months
[06:13:46] for breaking an earlier suspended contempt order related to a similar
[06:13:49] incident in Canterbury County Court in 2017. The timing and nature of these
[06:13:55] prosecutions to many could suggest clear retaliation. Robinson had been one of the
[06:14:00] most high profile voices and highlighting the grooming gang scandals at the time.
[06:14:04] When authorities in Rotherham, Rochedale and elsewhere were still denying its existence
[06:14:08] or suppressing evidence.
[06:14:10] Instead of investigating the gangs he identified, the state focused its resources on imprisoning
[06:14:15] the man who had drawn public attention to them.
[06:14:17] The contempt charges ensured that his reporting on the outgoing trials was criminalized while
[06:14:23] the grooming gang networks continued to operate.
[06:14:27] There is a prima facie case here.
[06:14:28] I don't know what that, I'm assuming that's Latin, right?
[06:14:31] I don't know.
[06:14:33] That repeated use of the courts against Robinson
[06:14:35] was not fair justice,
[06:14:36] but about punishing one of the individuals
[06:14:38] who forced the grooming gang scandal
[06:14:40] into the open long before official institutions
[06:14:44] were willing to act.
[06:14:46] Yeah.
[06:14:48] Fred is a father and information technology specialist
[06:14:51] with approximately six years experience
[06:14:53] in child protection work.
[06:14:55] His involvement began after his own daughters
[06:14:57] were groomed offline by a former partner of their mother.
[06:15:01] His eldest daughter recognized the risk
[06:15:03] and disclosed the situation, enabling Fred
[06:15:05] to intervene promptly and protect his children.
[06:15:08] This experience prompted him to join an online child protection
[06:15:11] team.
[06:15:12] For around two years, Fred worked as a decoy,
[06:15:14] posing as a child online to identify adults seeking
[06:15:17] to groom and sexually exploit children.
[06:15:19] He was exposed to highly disturbing sexual communications,
[06:15:22] which had a severe psychological impact
[06:15:24] and eventually led him to step back from decoy duties.
[06:15:27] Leveraging his professional background,
[06:15:29] Fred shifted his focus to developing tools
[06:15:31] for digital tracking, perpetrator identification,
[06:15:34] and forensic evidence gathering.
[06:15:36] His work is designated to, is designed
[06:15:39] to produce court-ready evidence.
[06:15:40] He has collaborated with multiple
[06:15:42] British child protection teams
[06:15:44] and interface with various police forces,
[06:15:46] including specialist online child protection units.
[06:15:49] To this date, Fred has assisted with the identification,
[06:15:52] tracking and reporting of nearly 1,300 child sexual abuse
[06:15:58] child sexual predators.
[06:16:00] That's a lot of people.
[06:16:01] Holy shit, Fred's going to work.
[06:16:03] These cases have resulted in arrests, prosecutions,
[06:16:05] and convictions.
[06:16:06] At least four cases involved attempted child trafficking.
[06:16:10] He also identified and provided technical data
[06:16:12] leading to the shutdown of approximately 30 deep web
[06:16:15] servers hosting large volumes of child sexual abuse material.
[06:16:22] Fred has observed that many offenders
[06:16:23] are repeat perpetrators.
[06:16:25] Really, wow.
[06:16:26] With some convicted multiple times,
[06:16:28] in his view, rehabilitation is ineffective
[06:16:31] for this category of offender,
[06:16:33] as current sentencing practices
[06:16:34] frequently fail to access the deterrent.
[06:16:36] With some individuals receiving only community orders
[06:16:39] to sprite strong evidence,
[06:16:41] Fred believes that online grooming
[06:16:43] could substantially be reduced or eliminated
[06:16:45] through existing technology and AI.
[06:16:47] Such systems could detect grooming behaviors in real time,
[06:16:50] based on established models.
[06:16:53] A recurring pattern in the cases Fred has supported
[06:16:56] is that the vast majority of suspects initiate contact
[06:16:59] with decoys, suggesting that they are actively targeting
[06:17:01] multiple children, of course.
[06:17:04] Yeah, he highlighted one specific case
[06:17:07] on one platform involving an individual
[06:17:09] who presented publicly as a Quran and Arabic tutor,
[06:17:12] linked to a mosque and teaching center in two universities.
[06:17:15] Extensive digital evidence, including chat logs,
[06:17:18] IP data, location information was submitted to the police.
[06:17:22] And despite all of this, the individual appeared to leave Britain shortly after resurfacing
[06:17:27] in the country while abroad, while the investigation remained open.
[06:17:31] Fred expressed concern about the lack of apparent action in this case, despite strong evidence,
[06:17:39] and was noted subsequent cyber attacks on his systems originating from the Middle East.
[06:17:43] Fred has faced direct personal threats, including a life threat from a serious repeat offender
[06:17:49] with prior convictions for abduction, torture, and rape.
[06:17:52] Fred provided this testimony to highlight the scale of online grooming, technological
[06:17:57] opportunities for prevention, and systemic gaps that allow perpetrators to continue
[06:18:01] offending.
[06:18:02] Uh-oh.
[06:18:03] Am I still going?
[06:18:04] Yeah, of course.
[06:18:05] Am I still going?
[06:18:09] Yeah, of course.
[06:18:15] It's important.
[06:18:18] Demographics and culture.
[06:18:20] Proprietrators from Pakistani Muslim and other Muslim backgrounds formed the core of
[06:18:23] the rape gangs nationwide.
[06:18:25] They operated under the honor and shame clan code that treated non-Muslim girls, especially
[06:18:30] white working class girls as property available for sexual use because these girls had no
[06:18:36] male protectors who could retaliate.
[06:18:39] These men began showering the girls with attention, gifts, alcohol, and drugs, and then escalated
[06:18:44] to coercion, gang rape, and trafficking.
[06:18:47] They transported victims across towns, shared them with friends and family, and sometimes
[06:18:51] forced conversions to Islam followed by a religious marriage.
[06:18:56] The Muslim men justified the abuse by describing white British girls as easy, trash, or morally
[06:19:02] inferior.
[06:19:03] The same networks targeted Sikh girls until the Sikh communities mobilized collective male
[06:19:08] protection and forced the gangs to withdraw.
[06:19:11] This is the only way you can get these people to stop doing it, is you have to, the only
[06:19:15] language they understand is violence.
[06:19:18] Everything else, they're just going to not take you seriously.
[06:19:21] You have to do that.
[06:19:23] else, truly kind of hard to say. Nothing's gonna happen. British girls were not permitted
[06:19:29] to have such a defense. Well, yeah, because if white people had made that same defense
[06:19:33] that the Sikhs did, they would be targeted for being racist. So it's not like white people
[06:19:38] don't want to do this. It's that they're systematically punished for doing this, and
[06:19:42] so that doesn't happen. That's the reason why. Look at what happened with Tommy Robinson.
[06:19:47] So the British girls were not permitted such a defense. This religiously framed exploitation
[06:19:52] was repeated in every major city and beyond.
[06:19:54] Britain has seen a series of high-profile convictions for organized crime, group-based
[06:19:59] child sexual exploitation, commonly referred to as grooming gangs, however the number of
[06:20:04] convictions amount only to a small proportion of the men carried out the crimes.
[06:20:09] In cases where the perpetrators of Pakistani heritage were named publicly in court for
[06:20:14] records, their names have consistently been Muslim in character.
[06:20:18] According to the 2021 census for England and Wales, around 93% of the individuals identifying
[06:20:26] as Pakistani by ethnicity also identified as Muslim with about 1% following another
[06:20:32] religion, the remainder having no faith recorded.
[06:20:35] Researcher Pierre McLaughlin, in Easy Meat compiled a comprehensive list of grooming
[06:20:42] gang convictions, drawing the published court outcomes.
[06:20:46] These examinations of names indicated that approximately 87% of those convicted bore
[06:20:53] distinctively Muslim names when which a figure echoed in related analyses far exceeding the
[06:21:00] Muslim proportion around 6% of the population.
[06:21:04] So there's 6% of the population, but 87% of the names were Islamic?
[06:21:10] Oh my God.
[06:21:13] The majority of these convicted groups consist entirely from men of Muslim backgrounds.
[06:21:18] Those groups are predominantly Pakistani heritage, especially when the group exceeds 10 or more
[06:21:23] members.
[06:21:24] The larger group-sized dynamic of Pakistani perpetrators is on display in major prosecutions
[06:21:29] and official reviews from locations such as Rocksdale, Rotherham, Huddersfield, I think,
[06:21:36] Oxford, Telford, and others.
[06:21:38] Other convictions have involved groups primarily composed of Muslims from other non-Pakistani
[06:21:46] origins demonstrating that the issue is not necessarily confined to one ethnic group.
[06:21:52] To Somali men in Bristol, a mainly African heritage gang in Bandari, three Iranians,
[06:22:00] three Syrians, two Turkish people, a Romanian rape gang, the large new scale operation sanctuary
[06:22:08] case involving 17 men and one women from diverse Muslim backgrounds, Albanian, Kurdish, Bangladeshi,
[06:22:15] Indian, Turkish, Iranian, Iraqi, Pakistani and Eastern European heritage, nearly all published
[06:22:23] names were Islamic.
[06:22:25] These patterns are drawn from judicial proceedings, sentencing records, official inquiries, such
[06:22:30] as the Rotherdam, Rushdale and others, and public reporting on concluded cases.
[06:22:34] developments including ongoing reviews and data audits, continue to examine the scale,
[06:22:39] characteristics and patterns of such offending.
[06:22:42] With regard to the scale of the crimes, this is reflected in conviction records, police
[06:22:46] data and relevant areas of the audits, all of which note overrepresentation from South
[06:22:52] Asian slash Pakistani heritage men in certain group-based cases while acknowledging data
[06:22:59] limitations on ethnicity nationwide.
[06:23:01] Yeah, you don't have more data on this because they don't want people to find out what the answer is. That's the reason why.
[06:23:08] Smaller non-Muslim groups often feature different dynamics or victim profiles compared with the classic multi-offender grooming model in larger operations.
[06:23:17] The term Asian has been frequently applied to media,
[06:23:21] official statements, and public discourse to describe the perpetrators in grooming gang cases across Britain. This broad labeling can be misleading,
[06:23:28] However, because Britain hosts a substantial number of non-Muslim Asian populations such
[06:23:34] as Hindus, Sikhs from India, Buddhists from Japan, and Christians from the Philippines
[06:23:39] and Vietnam, these populations have, and with very rare exceptions, had no involvement
[06:23:44] in these offenses.
[06:23:45] Yeah, it's not the people from Japan that are doing this.
[06:23:48] And everybody knows it.
[06:23:50] We all know this.
[06:23:51] So whenever they're saying Asian, they don't mean Asian.
[06:23:54] It's not like fucking Korean.
[06:23:56] It's not Japanese.
[06:23:58] It's not Asian.
[06:24:00] This is they're using deliberately vague language because the conclusion by using more specific
[06:24:05] language is not advantageous to them.
[06:24:08] So they're misleading you by being vague.
[06:24:10] That's what's happening.
[06:24:12] These populations have very rare exceptions, have no involvement in these offenses.
[06:24:15] In fact, members of these communities have more often appeared as victims than perpetrators
[06:24:21] in the grooming gang cases that have come to light.
[06:24:23] Dr. Ella Hill, a survivor of the Rothenheim Grooming Gangs, now a qualified doctor has
[06:24:27] courageously shared her experiences and reflections in multiple public forums, including a testimony
[06:24:33] to the 2022 Jay inquiry, a July 2020 podcast interview, and a 2018 article in The Independent.
[06:24:41] Her report is entirely consistent with the evidence that was heard at the rape gang inquiry.
[06:24:47] Following years of repeated sexual violence, severe beatings, and attempted murder by her
[06:24:51] abusers, her family members were forced to change their surnames and relocate to another
[06:24:57] part of the country so that she can compete her schooling, complete her schooling, and
[06:25:00] later pursue a degree in medicine.
[06:25:11] This is a somber day.
[06:25:13] I told y'all, like I did, I told y'all, like this is just fucking crazy.
[06:25:18] Some of this stuff is insane.
[06:25:19] I don't even really know what to say.
[06:25:21] Yeah, I feel like it's just kind of, it's just getting worse and worse and worse.
[06:25:26] Let me see where are we out here.
[06:25:28] Oh yeah, there it is.
[06:25:30] In her accounts, Dr. Hill has consistently described the abuse being both racially and
[06:25:34] religiously aggravated.
[06:25:36] She was explicitly told during the rapes that the attacks were happening because she was
[06:25:40] white and because she was Christian.
[06:25:42] She explained that she was initially groomed and then trafficked by a Pakistani Muslim
[06:25:46] boyfriend to groups of Muslim men.
[06:25:49] She repeatedly was taken to various houses and flats where she was raped, physically
[06:25:53] assaulted and even tortured. Even after she tried to escape and hide, her main perpetrator
[06:25:58] tracked her down, broke into her home, and attempted to kill her on five separate occasions.
[06:26:06] She survived. What the fuck was left was severe extensive lacerations and bruising. On at
[06:26:13] least five occasions, she approached the police presenting medical evidence for her injuries,
[06:26:18] yet each time was told there was nothing that they could do, and her evidence was not accepted.
[06:26:23] Ma'am, isn't that nuts?
[06:26:31] Dr. Hill emphasized that verbal abuse she endured was saturated with both racial and
[06:26:36] religious slurs.
[06:26:37] While being beaten, she was reportedly called a white slag, a white whore, a white cunt,
[06:26:42] and simultaneously condemned as a non-Muslim who deserved punishment for failing to follow
[06:26:48] Islamic rules.
[06:26:49] Her abusers, she said, operated according to what she termed, grooming gang ideology,
[06:26:55] under which they believed their crimes were religiously justified.
[06:26:59] In fully detail, in her submission incorporated to the associate professor, Lisa Oakley's
[06:27:03] evidence, Dr. Hill stated,
[06:27:06] I was told that I must respect their religion.
[06:27:09] This was the first of many confusing lies that I was forced to believe.
[06:27:13] I was told to show them respect.
[06:27:15] I mustn't eat pork.
[06:27:16] I was told that Muslim girls are good and pure and stay versions until marriage, but
[06:27:21] all white girls are slags.
[06:27:23] They all sleep with hundreds of people.
[06:27:25] I was told white girls are trash.
[06:27:27] They are all whores.
[06:27:28] They are lower than the shit under your shoe.
[06:27:31] They don't obey Allah, so they deserve to be punished.
[06:27:34] They don't dress modestly.
[06:27:37] Muslim women are pure because they cover down to their ankles, down to their wrists, and
[06:27:42] to the hem of their top comes below their knees.
[06:27:46] girls show the curves of their bodies, so they are asking for it. They should be
[06:27:50] raped as punishment for not obeying Allah. Kafeer girls are worthless. Sex with
[06:27:56] a Kafeer girl doesn't count as adultery. And how convenient? How
[06:28:01] convenient for them? Wow! And yeah, if you're not a virgin before marriage, you
[06:28:07] should be beaten. Many times I was told that the Quran says, if one of your
[06:28:11] wives disobeys you, beat her. This was often quoted to me before they beat
[06:28:16] me with their hands. But you're not married to them. They're not even following around
[06:28:22] this. They're so stupid.
[06:28:26] And okay, they believe they had a position of religious moral superiority over non-believers.
[06:28:33] They believe that it was their duty to punish us and they believe that doing so made them
[06:28:37] good Muslims. This is what we were taught by their, this is what they were taught by
[06:28:41] their mothers. They were taught that witches in Pakistan are blonde, so blondes are more
[06:28:47] evil and they deserve worse punishment. I was told that in Islam, if a girl or a woman
[06:28:52] looks at a man who isn't her brother, father, or her husband, and then that means she wants
[06:28:58] to have sex with them. Right. So I was told to look at the floor when I was around Muslim
[06:29:05] men. So when I looked at a waiter in a restaurant, I was taken away to be gang raped as punishment.
[06:29:11] Oh my God.
[06:29:26] Many of us had to endure the sexual act of thawing, which is, I guess, Arabic, I don't
[06:29:33] know what that means.
[06:29:34] This looks like muthafucka, but I don't know.
[06:29:37] I'm now told is a religiously sanctioned way of molesting children according to some as long. There's no way a la would be okay
[06:29:44] That sounds retarded
[06:29:46] Do you really think God is like oh my god you got me like it?
[06:29:50] This is so retarded. They gave you it's like you think God's stupid
[06:29:55] Like you're gonna trick God by like oh well technically like what the fuck are you doing?
[06:30:04] It's it's dumb
[06:30:07] It's not even logical.
[06:30:10] I was beaten, strangled, suffocated, and my head held underwater, tortured, kicked, and raped over a hundred times.
[06:30:17] I was told, if you don't scream when you're raped, then you're consenting to the rape.
[06:30:21] So you should be stoned to death.
[06:30:23] I was told that Muslim girls know this because the Quran said that Aisha's silence was her consent to the marriage to Muhammad.
[06:30:30] And that was like his bride. She was like, people say she's nine or 12 or six or something, like probably not 18.
[06:30:37] I'll tell you that but you know again that was a long time ago and
[06:30:41] So Muslim girls know to scream, but white girls don't so that's their fault because they're not Muslim
[06:30:48] When I did wear a head scarf to try to protect myself from being raped
[06:30:51] I was told to get it off and then they raped me again
[06:30:55] Now I know all these so-called ways to protect yourself from being raped are rape myths used to excuse perpetrators criminal behavior
[06:31:02] They threatened to kill my parents if my parents tried to stop me seeing them.
[06:31:07] I was intimidated with guns, intimidated with body parts being cut off with knives.
[06:31:13] When I tried to escape, I was told that I had offended their honor, so they must spill
[06:31:17] my blood.
[06:31:18] They did this in an honor attack.
[06:31:20] All of these sexual abuses that I experienced was linked to the spiritual abuse or religious
[06:31:24] abuse.
[06:31:25] Religious scriptures were used as tools of control to force me to conform to their will.
[06:31:30] I was not allowed to question these religious beliefs.
[06:31:33] They used their religious moral authority and self-proclaimed elitism to control me
[06:31:38] through the use of scripture, forced confessions, censorship of decision-making, requirement
[06:31:43] of secrecy and silence, isolation, excessive shaming, and punishment around sexuality requiring
[06:31:50] unquestioning obedience.
[06:31:52] I experienced this as a deeply personal, terrifying, physical, and emotional spiritual attack.
[06:31:57] Every time they quoted scripture, it was very hard to argue with.
[06:32:01] To them, it was like I was arguing with God.
[06:32:03] To me, I was actually like I was arguing with the devil.
[06:32:07] They used their so-called religious moral authority to do the most horrific and immoral
[06:32:11] acts imaginable.
[06:32:13] Yep.
[06:32:15] The entirety of experiences of Spivers known as Sarah and Anna, both of whom were helped
[06:32:20] by the Christian Legal Center, provide further illustration of the religious elements reported
[06:32:25] in some of the grooming gang cases. This is brutal, man. That's crazy. Oh my god.
[06:32:36] I know, right? Yeah, this is just, it's insane.
[06:32:39] Sarah endured a 12 year old, a 12 year ordeal after being kidnapped from the street at the age
[06:32:44] of 15. So I guess it was 15 to 27, logically, right? During the period, she was repeatedly drugged
[06:32:51] with Valium, beaten and raped. I've taken Valium, I'm just gonna do that, like, what?
[06:32:57] Yeah, like, I mean, maybe if you take a huge dose. But like at one point, her abuser presented her
[06:33:02] with a certificate from the mosque that declared that they were married according to Islamic
[06:33:08] rights. Later, he divorced her under Sharia procedure simply by stating, I divorce you three
[06:33:14] times. She was then immediately married in a ceremony conducted by an Imam to a man that
[06:33:20] she did not know. Within minutes of the ceremony ending, while the wedding party continued downstairs,
[06:33:25] she was raped by her new husband. Over the years, Sarah was subjected to eight forced abortions.
[06:33:33] That's a lot of abortions. One of them five months into pregnancy. When she accompanied
[06:33:40] her abuser to medical appointments, she required her to wear hijab and to walk five feet behind
[06:33:45] him. She was compelled to learn the Koran in Arabic and permitted to speak only in Urdu
[06:33:50] and Punjabi. And so, yeah, this is, and she made, just, I mean, she's probably from Pakistan,
[06:33:57] I would assume, right? And she also was made to cook and clean for the gang members who
[06:34:01] abused her. Sarah made several unsuccessful attempts to escape on one occasion after she
[06:34:06] reported her kidnapping to police. She was interviewed by a Muslim officer who switched
[06:34:11] off the tape recorder and instructed her to drop the allegations because of a lack of
[06:34:16] evidence. She later learned that this officer was imprisoned for child sex offenses. Uh-oh,
[06:34:22] uh-oh, not good. Really bad. In a separate case, Anna was living in a children's home
[06:34:31] in Bradford in 2002. From the age of 13, she was raped and abused while in the home and
[06:34:36] 15 she was forced into a Sharia marriage. Her social worker attended the marriage ceremony
[06:34:42] and permitted her husband's parents to foster her after she became pregnant. This is a 15-year-old.
[06:34:49] She's getting raped by an adult at 13, you know, married, forcefully married by him,
[06:34:55] and the social worker wants her to live with the parents of the rapist.
[06:35:00] Yeah. Anna described her situation as one of domestic slavery of which she was
[06:35:06] treated like a maid, repeatedly sexually abused by dozens of men. In Britain, reports of metropolitan
[06:35:11] police in London alone have indicated the average of 1,125 sexual assaults per year,
[06:35:18] involving unlicensed taxi drivers. Oh, that's it. The proportion of offenders in these cases,
[06:35:26] a significant proportion have been identified as Muslim. A further form of exploitation
[06:35:31] associated with certain Muslim communities across Britain is marriage trafficking.
[06:35:35] These are like ISIS Brides, stuff like that, right?
[06:35:41] The forced marriage unit handled 801 cases in 2004, just in 24, excuse me, concerning girls
[06:35:48] and women resident in the country who were forced into marriage with men providing direct support
[06:35:54] in 229 of those instances. Among the 280 cases where the focus of country was recorded in 2023,
[06:36:02] the six countries that accounted for the highest numbers were Pakistan at 45%, Bangladesh at 13%,
[06:36:11] Afghanistan at 7%, India at 3%, Somalia at 3% as well, Nigeria at 2%. I wonder where Norway was.
[06:36:24] Yeah, I wonder where Norway was on the list.
[06:36:32] or like Japan. That's crazy. Wow, what are the odds of that?
[06:36:40] Earlier, home office figures from 2009 showed that 90% of forced marriage victims in Britain were Muslim.
[06:36:47] In more recent years, however, the FMU has ceased collecting publishing data on the religion of those involved.
[06:36:53] That's exactly, see, this is what they do, is they stop recording it because they don't like the answers.
[06:36:58] That's what's happening an FMU report stated forced marriage is not a problem specific to one country religion or culture
[06:37:05] The FMU does not record data on religion. No major faith in the UK advocates forced marriage
[06:37:12] Freely given consent is a prerequisite of Christian Hindu Jewish Muslim and Sikh marriages. Oh
[06:37:19] Well, then why are not why were 90% of them? I mean, I don't know. It's it doesn't seem like that that now at the numbers show
[06:37:26] Stop the numbers show, right?
[06:37:28] Although forced marriages occur in various communities and not unique to Muslims, statistics
[06:37:33] show a clear open representation of Muslims and those involved.
[06:37:36] Well, yeah, I mean, here's the thing, right, is that you need to obviously understand trends,
[06:37:41] but yeah, every forced marriage should be removed.
[06:37:44] Duh.
[06:37:45] It's also inaccurate to claim that Islam mandates a woman's consent for marriage.
[06:37:49] Similar patterns of sexual offenses disproportionately involving Muslim men have been reported to
[06:37:54] other Western countries with significant immigrant populations.
[06:37:57] the netherland in the netherlands considerable media coverage is focused on the so-called
[06:38:01] lover bullies
[06:38:03] uh...
[06:38:04] who are predominantly moroccan muslim men these individuals first seduce that's girls
[06:38:09] often teenagers and then course them into prostitution uh... in order to profit from
[06:38:14] their earnings according to a two thousand one report by amsterdam
[06:38:18] uh... based child rights organization approximately five thousand ordinary dutch schoolgirls age
[06:38:23] 13 or 14 from typical family backgrounds have been lured into prostitution by lover boys.
[06:38:31] The documentary film Lover Boys, directed by Julia Rook, follows the work of Ibrahim,
[06:38:36] a Dutch-Moroccan social worker supporting both the perpetrators and their victims.
[06:38:41] Oh my god.
[06:38:43] In Sweden, a 2021 academic study examining Swedish rape offenders concluded that nearly
[06:38:50] half of the convicted individuals were born outside of Sweden.
[06:38:55] I'm surprised it wasn't more.
[06:38:57] With immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa being marketing, I wonder what the
[06:39:01] remaining percentage would be from first generation, or sorry, second generation, because I feel
[06:39:07] like that's probably where you're getting the other half, right?
[06:39:11] Like overwhelmingly so.
[06:39:14] In Australia, nine Lebanese Muslim men were convicted in 2002 of gang raping white girls,
[06:39:19] Contemporary media reports at the time indicated that police were aware of over 60 female victims
[06:39:25] linked to the group through convictions related to the rapes of seven girls.
[06:39:30] Police seized the mobile phone message from one of the perpetrators that read, when you
[06:39:33] are feeling down, bash a Christian or Catholic and lift up.
[06:39:38] Well, that doesn't sound very nice.
[06:39:47] What an asshole.
[06:39:48] Yeah, what a dick.
[06:39:51] Statistics.
[06:39:52] Offender data from the 2017 Culliam Foundation analysis, together with the recent independent
[06:39:58] investigations, reveal a consistent, disproportionate involvement of Muslim men overwhelmingly of
[06:40:04] Pakistani heritage and group-based child sexual exploitation.
[06:40:11] The 25,000 figure, 250,000 figure, is not a precise count.
[06:40:17] No such count exists because the British state has failed to record it.
[06:40:20] But we may regard it as a conservative estimate that accounts for the organized and repeated
[06:40:25] nature of the abuse.
[06:40:27] Girls raped by the hundreds of hundreds of times by multiple perpetrators and decades
[06:40:31] of institutional concealment.
[06:40:34] Analysis of 264 convictions for group-based child sexual exploitation from 2005 to 2017,
[06:40:42] 12 years that sorry yeah yeah 12 years and found that 84% 222 out of 264 offenders were
[06:40:52] south asian with the vast majority being pakistani muslim only 7% were white and 8% were black wow
[06:41:01] additional context and expert commentary includes statements for dr taj money and a mom at the
[06:41:07] Oxford Islamic Congregation who observed that virtually every individual in these grooming
[06:41:14] gangs appears to be Muslim, estimating that 95% of those involved are of Muslim faith.
[06:41:22] As a previously stated, Peter McLaughlin's research indicates that approximately 87%
[06:41:27] of rape gang convictions were of people with distinctively Muslim names.
[06:41:32] These figures stand in a marked contrast to the much smaller park population of Pakistani
[06:41:38] or Muslim communities within the overall population of modern Britain.
[06:41:42] So Muslims are 6.5% and Pakistanis are 2.1%, according to the most recent census data.
[06:41:50] So but they're 87% of the rate gang, the rate gang convictions.
[06:41:54] That seems pretty high.
[06:41:57] That seems really high.
[06:41:59] What are the odds of that?
[06:42:00] Wow.
[06:42:01] It's a lot. I feel like they're kind of overrepresented. I think there might be a trend here. I don't
[06:42:11] know. Multiple examinations, including police data from various forces, national audits and
[06:42:17] independent reviews have documented overrepresentation in group based on the offending nature even
[06:42:20] to some early and official narratives emphasize no single community profile or sought to downplay
[06:42:24] ethnic patterns. Yeah, they're downplaying it because they know what it is. That's the
[06:42:29] reason why they're doing it. The number of reported rapes in the United Kingdom has risen
[06:42:33] substantially since 1997, where the large era of mass scale immigration to the country
[06:42:39] commenced under Blair. Official police recorded crime data for England and Wales indicated
[06:42:44] that rape offenses stood at approximately 8,593 in the year 2000, a figure closely aligned
[06:42:51] with levels observed in the late 1990s, prior to major changes in recording practices. By
[06:42:57] By the year ending in March 2025, police recorded that rape offenses had increased to over 70,000,
[06:43:05] reflecting a rise exceeding 800%.
[06:43:09] That's a lot, even after accounting for population growth of around 15% during, so it's gone
[06:43:15] up by 800%, even though the population's gone up by 15%.
[06:43:21] Right.
[06:43:24] That's okay.
[06:43:26] Of course.
[06:43:27] know that makes perfect sense and yeah wow I don't really know what else to say
[06:43:33] holy shit. In a stark contrast Poland which maintained relatively low
[06:43:39] immigrant levels of immigration throughout the same period has
[06:43:42] experienced a decline in reported rapes. Polish national police data show 2,399
[06:43:49] recorded rapes in 2000 falling to 1,127, a reduction of more than 50%. So the UK went up by 800%
[06:44:01] and Poland went down by over 50%. Wow, that's crazy. With a stable population of approximately
[06:44:11] 38 million, this equates to a per capita rate of about three rapes per 100,000 residents in
[06:44:16] recent years, compared with over 100 per 100 in the United Kingdom. These comparative patterns
[06:44:23] drawn from official sources highlight divergent trends between the two nations. References
[06:44:28] include ONS Bulletin on sexual offenses with the year ending in March 2025 and the Eurostat Police
[06:44:34] Office's recorded offenses. Polish national statistics compiled via Statistia for the period
[06:44:40] covering 2000 to 2023, per capita calculations further underscore the scale of the disparity
[06:44:47] when relative population sizes are considered. The figures indicate that the rape gangs are
[06:44:54] a specific ethno-religious phenomenon with Muslims, specifically Pakistani Muslims significantly
[06:45:00] overrepresented. The Influence of Islam
[06:45:03] Muslim treatment of non-Muslims worldwide. Britain is not a unique case. This sort of thing goes on
[06:45:09] anywhere that isn't either welcoming mass migration from Muslim countries, that either
[06:45:14] welcomes mass migration from Muslim countries, or contains long-established Muslim populations.
[06:45:19] There is a consistent pattern of sexual violence directed against non-Muslim minorities in
[06:45:24] settings where Muslims form as the majority. Across Britain, we have noted that girls from
[06:45:29] Sikh and Hindu backgrounds have also been targeted by Muslim gangs. Unlocked, unlike
[06:45:34] the white British majority, these non-Muslim immigrant populations were never prevented
[06:45:39] from organizing as a collective to protect their own
[06:45:42] this is i was talking about before another there they're admitting it right
[06:45:46] and uh... in doing so as was their duty the network of the seek organizations
[06:45:51] drew attention to the appalling treatment of non-muslims in pakistan
[06:45:55] we need only look at the appalling treatment of girls from minority faiths
[06:45:58] in pakistan
[06:45:59] where christian hindu and seek girls are kidnapped
[06:46:02] forced to convert to Islam
[06:46:03] and get married to get an understanding of the underlying motivations
[06:46:07] in two thousand and eighteen
[06:46:09] Around 1,000 girls in Pakistanis send a privance, province alone suffered this fate.
[06:46:15] In many cases, perpetrators are granted impunity due to corruption and connivance with local
[06:46:20] officials.
[06:46:21] In April 2024, the UN human rights experts expressed serious alarm regarding the vulnerability
[06:46:29] of minority girls in Pakistan to forced religious conversions and forced marriages.
[06:46:34] The press release highlighted that Christian and Hindu girls in particular faced heightened
[06:46:38] risks of abduction, trafficking, child force marriage, domestic servitude, and sexual violence.
[06:46:44] Human rights groups in the media reports, including a 2021 BBC investigation, have estimated
[06:46:51] that thousands of non-Muslim girls, particularly Christians, and oh my god, this is just, oh
[06:46:57] Jesus Christ, Hindus and Sikhs are abducted annually in Pakistan, compelled to convert
[06:47:02] to Islam, forced into a marriage with their abductors.
[06:47:15] That sounds like consent to me.
[06:47:18] One documented case involved Farrah, the 12-year-old Christian girl, abducted from her home in
[06:47:23] June 2020 by three Muslim men, raped and forced to perform household labor as a slave.
[06:47:30] A common consequence or sequence of these cases is seen as a girl abducted,
[06:47:34] coerced into signing a conversion significant,
[06:47:36] swiftly married to a Muslim man.
[06:47:39] Well, that's how they say it's consent, is because they're forced into doing that.
[06:47:43] And police in Pakistan frequently side with the abductors over the girl's family.
[06:47:47] When parents pursue legal actions, court tend to...
[06:47:51] I'm fine. I just have a little bit of these pieces in my throat. Give me a second.
[06:48:00] I'm glad, yeah, I'm not mad, I'm right on chips maybe, that's the easy one, that's
[06:48:27] obvious one. This is the one everybody uses. Okay, sorry about that. A common sequence in
[06:48:37] these cases is sees a girl abducted. When partners pursue legal actions, court tend to uphold the
[06:48:41] legitimacy of the conversion. Birth certificates may be falsified to indicate the girl is not a
[06:48:46] minor. Contact with her family is typically blocked. Following conversion to Islam, non-Muslim parents
[06:48:52] who's all authority over their child, as Islamic law prohibits non-Muslims from exercising
[06:48:57] guardianship over Muslims, including their own offspring.
[06:49:02] The evidence from grooming gang convictions across Britain repeatedly shows a Muslim background
[06:49:06] among many of the perpetrators.
[06:49:08] When this is viewed alongside similar patterns of sex crimes, observed both in countries
[06:49:12] of origin or for immigrants in a Muslim majority societies, it offers compelling grounds to
[06:49:18] consider that elements of Islam are contributing to the grooming gang scourge in our country.
[06:49:23] Absolutely. It's obviously religiously motivated. I mean, duh.
[06:49:29] Yeah, while it's unsurprising that a religion can shape and regulate sexual behavior,
[06:49:33] the suggestion that Islam may play a role in driving sex crimes remains deeply uncomfortable
[06:49:38] for some in the liberal West. Even so, the possibility of an Islamic influence on these
[06:49:43] crimes cannot be dismissed. The available data strongly points towards it as a hypothesis
[06:49:48] that merits serious examination. The impact of any religion on individual behavior is
[06:49:56] rarely direct and unmediated, is heavily filtered through culture, which a religion can gradually
[06:50:01] reshape over generations. Yes, culture and religion are very much, you know, it's like
[06:50:05] yin and yang, right? Not all Muslim communities or societies are influenced by Islam to the
[06:50:10] same degree or to the same manner. Minority Muslim populations may behave differently
[06:50:15] than from majority ones. For instance, convictions of Indian origin Muslim men and grooming gangs
[06:50:20] across Britain are notably rare compared with those of Pakistani heritage.
[06:50:25] Yeah, disparity may relate to a demographic context. Muslims form only 14% of India's
[06:50:31] population with Hindus comprised of about 80%. Placing them in a minority position where
[06:50:38] Social and legal constraints differ markedly from Pakistan where Muslims dominate overwhelmingly and non-Muslims constitute a small often marginalized minority
[06:50:56] The religion stuff seems like an excuse not a cause I
[06:51:00] Think it's an enabler and
[06:51:02] And I think that like religion is definitely like an enabler that people use to either justify bad actions or to justify good actions.
[06:51:12] I think that's really what it is.
[06:51:15] Like you definitely, you know, people, it's like a gun, right? You can use a gun to protect the family or you can use a gun to kill a kid.
[06:51:22] So I don't really think that like, I don't think you can say it's like it's not they're using it or it's not forcing them to do it either.
[06:51:30] but many of them use it and it's also like i mean the logic of the of like
[06:51:34] some of these people's like religion there
[06:51:36] it's like okay so it's like basically everything that you want to do is
[06:51:39] somehow enabled
[06:51:41] it's okay to rape another girl if they're not part of the same really
[06:51:44] like it's it's it's what
[06:51:46] you can you can
[06:51:46] you can do fine
[06:51:48] but you can't have sex it
[06:51:50] it's just bullshit
[06:51:52] it's it's bullshit like it it's it's basically
[06:51:55] you start from the position
[06:51:57] that you want to fuck somebody and get away with it
[06:52:00] and then you invent ideological justifications for it and work
[06:52:03] backwards
[06:52:05] doesn't make it in any sense at all
[06:52:07] ridiculous
[06:52:09] same or else is bullshit
[06:52:11] and uh... anyway
[06:52:12] place in minority right
[06:52:14] okay uh...
[06:52:17] minority uh... market different uh... where muslims dominate overwhelmingly
[06:52:20] non-muslims constantly small often marginalized nori in a such a setting
[06:52:23] exploiting non-muslim neighbors becomes far easier
[06:52:25] at least eight theological aspects of his long contribute to the cultural
[06:52:28] patterns that enable and normalize the sexual abuse of non-Muslim girls.
[06:52:33] This include, number one, the doctrine of Muslim superiority, number two, the principle
[06:52:38] of loyalty and disavowal, number three, male dominance over women, number four, in forced
[06:52:44] and enforced seclusion and veiling of women, number five, forced marriage and combined
[06:52:49] with the absence of a fixed minimum age of consent.
[06:52:52] The perception, number six, the perception of female sexuality as inherently dangerous.
[06:52:58] Number seven, the historical Sharia institution of slavery, and number eight, the system of
[06:53:04] deminitude.
[06:53:05] I don't know what that is, honestly.
[06:53:08] These are all rooted in classical Islamic theology, up to and including Islamic jurisprudence.
[06:53:14] But even in Sharia governations, adaptations are common, such as setting a minimum marriage
[06:53:18] age or restricting.
[06:53:20] That's the reason why I don't care.
[06:53:22] Like all of these places do not follow these religious books 100%.
[06:53:26] So to the extent that you're doing something bad that negatively affects somebody, you
[06:53:31] saying that it's because of my religion is bullshit, because you're not following every
[06:53:35] page in every single instance in every single way that this book is telling you things.
[06:53:40] So the moment that you choose to do something bad, you can't use your religion as an excuse
[06:53:44] because you don't follow that book 100%.
[06:53:47] You pick and choose just like everybody else does.
[06:53:49] So this whole idea that, oh, well, it's my religion, I have to do this, or this is why
[06:53:54] It's justified you would probably ignored five other things that your religion has told you to do and you just decided that okay
[06:54:01] Well, this is the one I'm going to do. It's bullshit
[06:54:03] Bullshit nobody follows the religion 100% so any applications of bad religious behavior can never be blamed on the religion
[06:54:10] Like or you can blame it on the religion
[06:54:12] What I'm saying is like it's not like you can't practice a religion without this
[06:54:17] You can easily practice a religion without hurting other people duh and so anyway
[06:54:22] Let's see here, even in Sharia governations, adaptations are common, such as setting a
[06:54:28] minimum age, marriage age, or restricting unilateral divorce by men in order to lessen
[06:54:33] the harsher effects by women.
[06:54:35] Muslim Supremacyism.
[06:54:37] Islam holds that those who are righteous and truly fear God, meaning Muslims, are inherently
[06:54:41] superior to those who reject God's command, namely non-Muslims.
[06:54:44] This idea is captured in the Quran.
[06:54:46] You Muslims are the best nation raised up for humankind, commanding what is good and
[06:54:50] forbidding what is wrong, and for believing in Allah. If only the people of the book Christians
[06:54:55] and Jews believed, it would be better for them. Some of them are believers, but most
[06:55:00] are perverted. I think this is pretty common. A lot of religions say the same shit, but
[06:55:06] yeah, there it is. And the verse positions Muslims as the finest community entrusted
[06:55:11] by God. Isn't it crazy that everybody's religion says that they're the chosen people?
[06:55:16] What are the odds of that? That's crazy, isn't it? Wow.
[06:55:20] And the Verge positions Muslim as the finest community entrusted by God with the duty to
[06:55:26] enjoin good and prohibit evil. This responsibility can be understood as authorizing Muslims to
[06:55:31] correct, compel, or if needed, punish non-Muslims. I think that's exactly what happens.
[06:55:37] Potentially through coercion and force, other Quranic passages affirm Islam's ultimate superiority
[06:55:41] over other religions. He Allah who has sent his messenger with the guidance of the religion
[06:55:46] of truth Islam to make it triumph over every other religion.
[06:55:51] Non-Muslims who refuse Islam are described in harsh terms.
[06:55:55] Surely the worst of animals and Allah's sight are the rejecters of Islam they do not believe.
[06:56:00] The concept of Muslims' priority is closely linked to the derogatory views of non-Muslims.
[06:56:06] For instance, in Surah 9,928, labels associators a pejorative term encompassing Christians
[06:56:12] Jews and other non-Muslims as unclean.
[06:56:15] teachings provide a religious justification that bolsters the abuser's conviction for their own
[06:56:20] superiority and facilitates the dehumanization of non-muslim victims. Man. That's a lot.
[06:56:29] In her July 2020 podcast interview, Rotherham survivor Dr. Ella Hill described abusive language
[06:56:36] and acts that emboldened the sense of superiority. She recounted being made to bend down and kiss
[06:56:41] her perpetrator's feet as a deliberate act to underscore her inferiority. But she also
[06:56:46] spoke of another Rothran victim who during gang rapes by dozens of men was forced to lick their
[06:56:51] feet clean because they believed that they were morally superior to her. It's a Muslim superiority
[06:56:57] thing. They believe they have maximum moral authority to command people beneath them to lick
[06:57:01] their feet. She further noted that her rapists viewed non-Muslim habits as inherently unpure.
[06:57:06] If you're eating pork, you're unclean, you're dirty.
[06:57:09] If you use a knife and fork, you're dirty.
[06:57:11] If you don't eat your food with your- if you- what?
[06:57:14] Ugh!
[06:57:18] What the fuck?
[06:57:21] How are you dirty if you use something that doesn't get your hand?
[06:57:24] Doesn't even make sense!
[06:57:28] What the fuck?
[06:57:31] Is the other way around? I know.
[06:57:34] Nice table manners, yeah I know that.
[06:57:35] And Islamic principle known as loyalty and disavowal
[06:57:39] combines Muslims to direct their love, allegiance
[06:57:41] towards what pleases God while hating, avoiding,
[06:57:44] and distancing themselves from what displeases him.
[06:57:46] In essence, it calls for loving and supporting fellow believers
[06:57:49] and rejecting non-believers.
[06:57:51] This teaching draws in several chronic verses,
[06:57:53] including let's not, let not, let not the believers
[06:57:56] take the disbelievers as allies rather than the believers.
[06:58:00] Whoever does that has nothing from God
[06:58:03] unless you guard yourselves as a precaution.
[06:58:06] You who believe, do not take the Jews
[06:58:09] and the Christians as allies.
[06:58:11] They are allies of each other.
[06:58:13] Whoever of you takes either of them as allies
[06:58:15] is already one of them.
[06:58:17] Surely God does not guide the people who are evildoers.
[06:58:20] Yet you see that these whose hearts as a sickness
[06:58:23] are quick to turn them.
[06:58:26] Whoever takes God as an ally and his messenger
[06:58:29] and knows who believe, surely the party of God,
[06:58:32] they are the victors
[06:58:35] on
[06:58:38] there was a good example of for you in abraham uh... and those who are with
[06:58:41] them whenever they said to their people surely we are uh... quit of you
[06:58:46] uh... and what you serve instead of god we repudiate you and between us you and
[06:58:51] in the day has appeared and hatred forever until you believe in god alone
[06:58:56] these passages emphasize that muslim should maintain strong bonds within
[06:58:59] Muslim communities while maintaining, while keeping non-Muslims at a distance and harboring
[06:59:04] enmity towards them. The Quran words that God views non-Muslims with contempt and that Muslims
[06:59:10] who befriend, ally with, associate closely with them, being risk of regarded by God as disbelievers
[06:59:16] themselves. While some Muslims downplay this doctrine, revivalist movements which have gained
[06:59:20] considerable influence in Western countries have actively promoted it. And I think this goes back
[06:59:25] to again remember the the old thing of the guy in the UAE saying that the most
[06:59:30] extreme people are in the UK now like that's the problem is that they're
[06:59:35] unwilling to even they're not even they're afraid to do anything about
[06:59:39] this because they don't want to be seen as racist it's more important for them
[06:59:43] to not be seen as racist tend to stop literal terrorist murderer rapists
[06:59:49] That's nuts. This is where we're at. Oh my god.
[07:00:00] Meanwhile, Minnesota, yeah, sure. And presenting, yeah, Minnesota, exactly.
[07:00:06] And presenting a strict adherence to loyalty and disavowal is vital to the
[07:00:09] Muslim community's success in carrying out the divine mission.
[07:00:12] Beyond its theological role, it has profoundly shaped a certain as on cultures.
[07:00:16] In certain environments, many Muslims feel strong pressure to not say or do anything that could damage the image of the Muslim community
[07:00:21] that would bring discredit to Islam. I think this is bigger than Islam.
[07:00:25] Obviously, there's a religious component, but you see this with the Sikh community as well with Henry Novak's case.
[07:00:31] This is there's very clearly
[07:00:34] Third-world tribalism is a huge problem. And when you import third-world tribalism into a Western democratic country,
[07:00:42] you have big problems. You have huge problems. Like you have the democratic
[07:00:47] process gets shut down. You can't have juries anymore because they're basically
[07:00:52] depending on whether somebody is guilty or not based off of race. And also we
[07:00:56] have this here by the way. We do. We have the same problem here. So it's a huge,
[07:01:01] huge problem. Tribalism? Yes it is. Within an honor and shame-based framework
[07:01:08] reinforced by these values, speaking out to outsiders about wrongdoing,
[07:01:11] committed by fellow Muslims is often seen as an act of betrayal. This dynamic can have serious
[07:01:16] real-world consequences. For example, in her book The Imam's Daughter, Hanan, later known as Hannah,
[07:01:21] described her experience as a 14 or 15 year old Pakistani teenager in Britain.
[07:01:26] After confiding in a female teacher that her father and a mom was beating her,
[07:01:30] the teacher informed a deputy head who arranged for the male Pakistani Muslim social worker
[07:01:34] to meet with her at the school. Initially terrified because of his background, Hanan
[07:01:38] John eventually opened up to him about being treated as a domestic servant, fearing a forced
[07:01:42] marriage and enduring physical abuse.
[07:01:44] That same afternoon, she returned home to find a social worker speaking with her father
[07:01:49] and relaying everything that she had said.
[07:01:51] While the social worker was present, the father acted kindly, but once he left, the father
[07:01:56] subjected her to a severe beating and rape, threatened to kill her if she ever spoke again,
[07:02:01] and imprisoned her in the cellar for days.
[07:02:04] When she later encountered a social worker at school and refused further contact, he
[07:02:09] reportedly told her, hey, I was just doing what I thought was right.
[07:02:12] You know that.
[07:02:13] It's not right to betray your community.
[07:02:25] That's crazy.
[07:02:26] Wow.
[07:02:29] Similar patterns have appeared in accounts from grooming gang survivors.
[07:02:32] Some have described approaching the police only to be interviewed by Muslim officers
[07:02:36] who switched off the recording device and urged her to abandon her complaint due to
[07:02:40] supposed lack of evidence.
[07:02:42] A deepening grain culture enforced loyalty and community protection can discourage individuals
[07:02:47] from reporting abuses or providing evidence against members of their own group.
[07:02:51] Had the social worker in Henan's cases reported her disclosures to the police, leading to
[07:02:56] her father facing criminal charges, he would have exposed himself and, by extension, those
[07:03:01] associated with him, to the serious risk of being labeled a traitor within the community.
[07:03:06] The prominent Indian-Pakistani Muslim thinker and revitalist, Abdul-Aulah Madhu, has influential
[07:03:13] work let us be Muslims, maintained that Muslims cannot achieve true success until their highest
[07:03:17] allegiance is given to God and to the Muslim Ummah community.
[07:03:21] The doctrine of loyalty and disavowal exerts particularly strong pressure when Muslims
[07:03:25] live as a minority in non-Muslim host countries.
[07:03:29] such settings they seek to preserve and assert a powerful collective identity. Muslims may place
[07:03:34] even greater emphasis on internal solidarity and separation from non-believers." You saw this in
[07:03:40] Minnesota too with all of the random Nick Shirley stuff, right? That's it. So it's been a huge issue.
[07:03:53] Superiority and dominance of men over women. Islam establishes that men hold the position of
[07:03:57] managers and maintainers over women is stated in surah 434 where the role
[07:04:02] involves ensuring that women remain in the proper state under Islamic law
[07:04:05] every woman retains under the guardianship of a male relative normally
[07:04:09] this is her father should the father be unable to serve due to death loss of
[07:04:13] mental capacity or apostasy from Islam a specified order of male relatives from
[07:04:18] the paternal line steps in starting with the paternal grandfather then sons
[07:04:21] brothers deaf use daughters and uncles surah further authorizes men to
[07:04:27] discipline their wives including through physical violence numerous
[07:04:31] authoritative substances sources and sharia regulations reinforce the notion
[07:04:35] of women's inferiority men surat two two twenty eight
[07:04:40] uh...
[07:04:41] declares that men that hold a rank above women the prophet muhammad stated that
[07:04:45] women are deficient in both religion and intelligence
[07:04:49] relative to men and in the same hadith he noted that women for the majority of
[07:04:53] those and has so all the women are in hell
[07:04:56] if a woman or a dog passes in front of a praying man the prayer is invalidated
[07:05:06] if a woman or a man passes in front of a praying
[07:05:09] uh... a woman or a dog excuse me
[07:05:11] passes in front of a praying man
[07:05:13] the prayer is invalidated
[07:05:15] there's a reason why mosque position men with their backs to women during prayer
[07:05:19] sharia obliges a wife to engage in sexual intercourse with her husband whenever
[07:05:23] he desires it
[07:05:24] if she refuses Muhammad said the angels will curse her until morning
[07:05:28] uh... diverse uh... divorce under sharia strongly favors men
[07:05:31] uh... husband may unilaterally divorces wife without setting a reason simply
[07:05:34] pronouncing a divorce you three times for a life
[07:05:37] obtain a divorce is far more difficult to be involved in far from the legal
[07:05:40] process and financial costs
[07:05:42] falling divorce the mother may retain physical custody of young children up
[07:05:45] to a particular age
[07:05:46] but the father retains legal guardianship more over if the mother remarried she
[07:05:50] loses the right to have those children of the previous marriage with her
[07:05:53] sharia rules on evidence that further diminished women's status valuing a
[07:05:56] woman's testimony as half of that of a man's
[07:05:59] inheritance laws under sharia generally allocate women half of the share given
[07:06:03] to men
[07:06:04] for example the sun receives twice the portion of the daughter
[07:06:07] and a wife or wives together inherit one quarter of a husband's estate if he
[07:06:12] leaves no children or one eighth if he does leave children in contrast a husband
[07:06:17] inherits half of his wife's estate if she has no children or one quarter if he
[07:06:21] if she does. Why are they dogs? I don't know. Yeah, I don't know why they're only dogs at all.
[07:06:28] That's crazy. Sharia's approach to rape also disadvantages one.
[07:06:38] Rape is categorized as a form of Zina. The same offense that covers adultery and fornication.
[07:06:44] Zina is defined as sexual intercourse between a man and a woman who is neither his wife nor his
[07:06:49] slave. There is no distinct offense for rape. It is treated as coercenia that
[07:06:54] marital rape is not recognized. The penalty for rapists mirrors that for
[07:06:59] consensual extramarital sex. 100 lashes for an unmarried person or stoning to
[07:07:05] death for one who has been married. When a woman accuses a man of rape, her
[07:07:09] consent is presumed unless both the act of penetration and her lack of consent
[07:07:15] are proven by four male eyewitnesses who each directly observed the man's penis entering
[07:07:21] the woman's. But that's pretty hard to do. Damn. So that basically never happens. So
[07:07:28] if there's three guys, you're good. Wow. Should a woman alleged rape but fail to provide the
[07:07:36] four required male witnesses? She risked being convicted of Zina on the basis of her own
[07:07:41] accusation in 2003, Pakistan's National Commission on the Status of Women reported that up to
[07:07:47] 88 percent of women imprisoned in Pakistan were rape or gang rape victims who unable
[07:07:53] to meet the forewitness requirement were instead convicted of illicit sex.
[07:07:58] Oh my god.
[07:08:02] Oh my god.
[07:08:05] Wow.
[07:08:08] together sharia provisions institutionalized male dominance over women and exert profound
[07:08:13] influence and culture shaped by Islam. Boys can be raised to grow into men who assume
[07:08:17] rightful control over women in their lives, confident in their inherent superiority.
[07:08:22] Isonic law contains multiple provisions that mandate the covering and seclusion of women.
[07:08:26] It's widely recommended, recognized when Muslim women must cover the rest of their body when
[07:08:29] appearing in public. Additionally, syria grants a male guardian the authority to restrict
[07:08:33] a girl or a woman's movements, allowing him to confine a wife or daughter to the home
[07:08:39] and permit her to leave only when accompanied by a male relative for a valid reason.
[07:08:45] This is reflected in Surah 3-3-3-3, which instructs women, stay in your houses, do not
[07:08:51] flaunt yourselves.
[07:08:52] One consequence of the Sharia-derived culture of covering and seclusion is that a woman
[07:08:56] who appears in public without covering or remains outside the protected space of the
[07:09:00] home may be culturally perceived as unguarded and therefore sexually available or promiscuous.
[07:09:07] This is the notion of an uncovered woman that invites molestation. It's suggested in Surah
[07:09:12] 3359 of the Quran where Muhammad is instructed that his wives and daughters should cover themselves
[07:09:18] up so they are not to be abused. Certain Islamic preachers have explicitly endorsed this view
[07:09:25] up to following the high-profile convictions of Muslim men and Lebanese background for rape and
[07:09:30] Sydney and Australia and the country's Grand Mofti and controversially placed
[07:09:35] blame on victims for not being covered and not remaining in their homes. If you
[07:09:39] take out uncovered meat and place it outside without cover and the cats come
[07:09:44] to eat it, whose fault is that? The cats are the uncovered meat. The uncovered
[07:09:49] meat is the problem. If she was in her room in her home in Hijab, no problem
[07:09:54] would have occurred.
[07:09:56] That's a lot.
[07:10:01] Wow
[07:10:18] The males yeah, I feel like yeah, I wouldn't want to be called a cat
[07:10:24] Not good
[07:10:30] Hmm
[07:10:45] There's chips a wall though, I don't think they can be hello. I think that has to be like an animal, right?
[07:10:53] Hmm. No
[07:11:00] Okay, my food.
[07:11:09] Any more pages are left?
[07:11:16] Yes.
[07:11:18] That's correct.
[07:11:19] There are pages left.
[07:11:21] Forced marriage in the age of consent under Sharia marriage takes the form of a contract arranged between two men
[07:11:27] The groom and the bride's male guardian
[07:11:30] Oh, right marriage. So it's it's a guy and another guy. Okay, that
[07:11:36] Man, how about that? That's convenient. The structure closer resembles the contract of sale. Oh, really?
[07:11:43] That's interesting the groom pays and agreed some known as the mahar. This is a dowry. This is quite common
[07:11:49] to the bride in exchange she becomes sexually available to him is I would
[07:11:54] actually know it that's that's the reverse excuse me Islamic jurisprudence
[07:11:58] sets no minimum age of which a girl or a woman may be married religious
[07:12:02] authorities permit a father to arrange a marriage for his daughter even while she
[07:12:06] is still an infant well that probably isn't a good idea the Prophet Muhammad
[07:12:11] himself married Aisha when she was six an arrangement made between Muhammad and
[07:12:15] her father and consummated the marriage when she was nine, the Quran itself addresses the
[07:12:20] remarriage of a divorced girl who has not yet reached menstruation.
[07:12:23] Damn, you're already getting divorced?
[07:12:25] You haven't even gone, you haven't even gotten your period?
[07:12:27] You're getting divorced?
[07:12:28] Oh my God.
[07:12:31] Sharia distinguishes between types of guardians.
[07:12:33] The bride's father or paternal grandfather is teamed while forcing guardian because certain
[07:12:38] schools of Islamic law allow him to compel a virgin daughter or granddaughter into marriage
[07:12:42] without her consent.
[07:12:44] notion that a girl must reach a particular age before she can consent to sexual activity
[07:12:49] is foreign to Islam. In Islamic teaching, the only lawful context for a woman to consent to
[07:12:53] sex is through marriage, and even through that, consent is not always required. Significantly,
[07:12:58] the Arabic term, I don't know what that is, you know what, I'm not going to say that. I'm not
[07:13:04] going to pronounce that word. Denounce is both marriage and sexual intercourse. Sharia in effect
[07:13:10] merges the two concepts. An unmarried woman is forbidden while engaging in sex, while
[07:13:15] a married woman has no right under Sharia to refuse sexual relations with her husband.
[07:13:20] Hadiths further state that a virgin's silence constitutes as consent to marriage. The emerging
[07:13:25] of consent to marriage and consent to sex sheds light on Dr. Hill's account that her
[07:13:30] rapist interpreted the victim's silence as consent to rape, drawing on these same Hadiths.
[07:13:35] I mean, let's be real. If she was yelling, they still would have done it. I mean, this
[07:13:39] This is just, come on, like, it's all like, you know, they're going to rape you and if
[07:13:45] they can have like a moral authority to do it, then they do it, but like, these guys
[07:13:49] are going to do it no matter what, right?
[07:13:50] I mean, that's the truth.
[07:13:52] And let's be real.
[07:13:54] Islamic scholars differ on the degree of physical and emotional maturity needed for sexual intercourse
[07:13:58] within marriage.
[07:13:59] Some hold that the onset of puberty serves as a threshold for readiness, although Muhammad
[07:14:03] consummated his marriage with nine-year-old Isha before she reached puberty and through
[07:14:08] and others permit thawing, enter, I don't know what the fuck, with a wife who is menstruating
[07:14:13] or considered too young for vaginal penetration. Well, that's not good. And these observations
[07:14:19] suggest the Muslim grooming gangs makes a bit religious and cultural indifference to
[07:14:22] the modern concept of the age of consent. Yeah, this is one of my opinions is like if
[07:14:27] you're coming from a country where the age of consent is under 13 or adult men can have
[07:14:33] of sex with people that are under 13 or 14.
[07:14:37] No, no, you're not coming.
[07:14:39] Nope.
[07:14:41] That's a no peruse skis for me.
[07:14:45] Yeah, I feel like, you know, you gotta,
[07:14:46] I mean, really, you gotta draw the line, right?
[07:14:52] Not interested?
[07:14:53] Yeah, no, not happening.
[07:14:57] 18, bro, make it 18.
[07:14:59] I mean, UK is 16.
[07:15:01] I mean like there's a lot of places in the world that are like Western countries that it's 16
[07:15:06] Most of the country most of the states in America are 16
[07:15:09] Like I'm being reasonable. I'm a very reasonable guy. I'm an extremely reasonable guy
[07:15:16] So let me go back I'll do the ones
[07:15:21] Although Islam prohibited sex outside of marriage all four schools of Islamic jurisprudence
[07:15:25] Teach that a girl can be married when she reaches puberty, which is on average in Britain is 11
[07:15:31] when muslim brother government to power in egypt one of the new laws they were
[07:15:34] going to introduce was to load lower the age of consent from eighteen to thirteen
[07:15:38] and disappointment was voiced by certain stuff alls and muslim brother it's
[07:15:42] colors that it wasn't nine
[07:15:44] uh... islamic state have nine is the permissible age for marriage i don't
[07:15:47] think that they're sense in some sense of wrongness and shame
[07:15:50] with some cases having sex with a twelve-year-old girl that's pretty young
[07:15:54] and female sexuality
[07:15:57] Islamic canonical sources portray women as possessing sexual desires that are at least as strong as men's and as stronger and viewed desires as potentially harmful to men.
[07:16:05] Prophet Muhammad stated, after me, I have not left any trial more severe to men than women.
[07:16:11] I mean.
[07:16:13] Yeah, but the Arabic term Fina is used to notice the severe trial that can involve seduction or temptation leading people astray from faith.
[07:16:23] It also carries connotations of chaos and disrupts social harmony.
[07:16:27] Muhammad also suggested further that men are susceptible to sexual temptation. Allah is preordained a prussian of Zina for every man
[07:16:33] Allah has written in the son of Adam that is inevitable share of Zina whether he's what I mean
[07:16:39] If that's bullshit that that's not like what do you mean?
[07:16:42] There's like a acceptable amount of like a bullshit like this like so
[07:16:48] Everybody at the same amount like that's just what do you mean? God says it's okay. Who the fuck thought this up?
[07:16:57] Really? I mean, like, this is insane. How do you believe this? Oh my God. One practical
[07:17:07] expression of anxiety of a woman's sexuality is the practice of female genital mutilation.
[07:17:13] And yeah, if you're in a country that practices female genital mutilation, I don't want you
[07:17:17] coming over here. I don't. I don't. And I think it's just like, ah, geez. Ooh, guys. Oh, man,
[07:17:23] I think we're full.
[07:17:25] That's it.
[07:17:26] Yeah, it's just the truth.
[07:17:28] And various schools of Islamic thought,
[07:17:30] another reflection is perceived danger
[07:17:31] posed by phenylsexuality as a strict separation
[07:17:33] of the sexes, enforced through practices,
[07:17:36] revealing women's bodies, restricting them at the home,
[07:17:38] and the chronic directive against men
[07:17:40] and women gazing together at one another.
[07:17:43] Tell the believing men that they should lower their gaze
[07:17:45] and guard their private parts.
[07:17:47] That is purer for them.
[07:17:48] Surely Allah is a layer of what they do.
[07:17:51] And how is the law aware of that?
[07:17:53] But he thinks that like you think you're getting one over on him with thawing like I there's no way Allah is so dumb
[07:18:00] He doesn't know what you're doing
[07:18:02] Like I how do you how do you imagine like so he knows what's in your head, but you think you're it dude. This is
[07:18:10] Really does it make any sense?
[07:18:14] It's no way you can do this
[07:18:18] Oh my god, don't any personal accountability. Yeah
[07:18:21] Yeah, there's no way God's that stupid, okay?
[07:18:25] Like, there's other religions that do things that are similar to that, but it's just so
[07:18:31] ridiculous.
[07:18:32] So the point of the spirit for them stories are, say they're believing women that they're
[07:18:36] lower their gaze and predict their power of heart, so they're not show their charms,
[07:18:39] okay?
[07:18:40] Dr. Hill describing what's subjected in moving practice, I was told to look at the floor as
[07:18:43] we're on Muslim men.
[07:18:44] Yeah, okay, so basically, and you can see clearly like she's giving her account and then the
[07:18:49] account is being cross-referenced with, like, ideology, right? So, yes.
[07:18:57] I wonder if the answer to comply with Sharia norms, for instance, by appearing
[07:19:00] unveiled and unaccompanied in public represents a danger to social order.
[07:19:04] Such a framework and responsibility for any sexual assault that she suffers is often
[07:19:08] attributed to her own behavior, especially when combined with the notions that are inherent
[07:19:12] impurity of non-Muslims. The Alec leads non-Muslims to appear and uncovered and move more freely
[07:19:19] without male supervision and being labeled as sluts were eager to entice men. In cultural context,
[07:19:25] a Muslim man who engages in sexual activity with a woman bears no blame, the fault lies entirely
[07:19:30] with the woman. In Islamic teachings, concerning perilous nature of female sexuality and moral
[07:19:35] inferiority of non-Muslims can reinforce and legitimize the pattern of attributing responsibility
[07:19:40] to the victim. This is the next section. Jihad and sex slavery. Oh boy. Oh boy, guys.
[07:19:49] Azamistria law details regulations, govern armed conflict, including provisions related to the
[07:19:54] institution of slavery. Islamic law slavery arises as a consequence of warfare against non-Muslims.
[07:20:00] Non-Muslim captives are taken with conflicts and regarded lawfully enslaved just by the
[07:20:04] virtue of their capture. Well, yeah. These captives may be allocated to Muslim combatants as part of
[07:20:10] of their war booty or spoils. Yes, clearly, they can subsequent be sold, ransomed, or retained in
[07:20:15] slavery. Historical records show during the Prophet Muhammad's lifetime, Muslim forces in
[07:20:19] Sathlimin captured from enemy groups more than a dozen military engagements. No way. Under Sharia,
[07:20:25] a dozen relations, a sexual relation in male owner and a female captive slave does not...
[07:20:30] Wait, so you can fuck female slaves and there's nothing not... Dude, there's no way! There's no
[07:20:36] away bro like what are you talking oh come on come on dude dude what are we
[07:20:48] doing really I mean come on guys oh my god okay let's see here if I find it
[07:20:58] all right go to the next one that's a little bit loud how convenient yeah
[07:21:03] supposedly authorized multiple chronic passages supported by numerous the
[07:21:06] death precedents Muhammad talking on their Muslim woman captured is
[07:21:09] automatically divorced from her previous husband by the aperture action of
[07:21:12] capture itself as a result sexual intercourse between her Muslim captain
[07:21:16] and not a captain owner and does not constitute to adultery at first glance
[07:21:21] it may appear in Congress to connect the classical Islamic institution of
[07:21:25] slavery with sexual abuse of white girls in contemporary Britain yet the
[07:21:28] historical records reveal a long-standing pattern of Islamic
[07:21:30] enslavement and sexual exploitation of white women. Historians estimate that between the
[07:21:35] sixteenth and nineteenth centuries, approximately one million Europeans were seized for profit
[07:21:40] as part of the Barbary slave trade. This is obviously true. It's not like the only slaves
[07:21:45] in society or history were black people. This is total bullshit. Everybody was a slave.
[07:21:52] In March 1786, when Thomas Jefferson and John Averns inquired of Tripoli's ambassador
[07:21:57] to France why the Barbary State's wage war on the nations that had not attacked them.
[07:22:02] City of George Abdul Rahman reportedly answered, it was written in their Quran that all nations
[07:22:07] which had not acknowledged the Prophet were sinners, whom was right in their duty to fateful
[07:22:12] and plunder and enslave, and every Muslim who was slain in this warfare was for sure
[07:22:18] to go to paradise.
[07:22:19] He said that a man that was first aboard the vessel had one slave over above his share.
[07:22:24] In recent times, Islamic terrorist groups such as ISIS have openly assuraded the right to
[07:22:28] revive Islamic slavery.
[07:22:30] A significant contemporary legal debate, Muslim scholars about the proper crossifications
[07:22:35] of Western countries and now host large Muslim immigrant populations.
[07:22:38] In classical Islamic jurisprudence, any non-Muslim nation was presumed or categorized as the
[07:22:43] House of War, which the Muslims had the right and duty to take slaves as articulated by
[07:22:48] Tripoli ambassador.
[07:22:49] Medieval Sharia treated this as the default status for infidel territories.
[07:22:54] The doctrine attributed to Muhammad further obliges Muslims residing in this to benefit
[07:22:59] migration to a territory governed by Islam, particularly if they cannot freely practice
[07:23:05] their faith.
[07:23:06] The duty of migrate continues to be emphasized by many safali groups.
[07:23:10] How do you do that?
[07:23:11] That's what I'm saying, right?
[07:23:12] So how do you do that?
[07:23:13] But then you go to another country where the laws are totally different.
[07:23:17] It was just, do we equivocate those along in any of the religions?
[07:23:28] Are we repungent, super dishonest, find anything like this outside Islam whatsoever?
[07:23:33] I think you can find bad behavior in other religions for sure, but it's obvious that
[07:23:36] the majority of terrorists attacks are Islamic.
[07:23:39] It's overwhelming the case, and I think that the religion is a component to it, right?
[07:23:43] I'm me saying it happens doesn't mean that it happens in equal amount of times
[07:23:48] I'm not gonna like and by the way
[07:23:50] If you're gonna get triggered by that or you're gonna get upset by that or whatever
[07:23:54] I don't want to argue with you about that. That's I feel like I'm giving you more than enough
[07:23:59] If if you if you need to purity test beyond that you're just being a retard
[07:24:05] Really like I'm not I'm not gonna I'm not gonna go through your instant your your infinity purity hoops, okay?
[07:24:10] I've explained my position. I think that my perspective and my position is extremely rational and logical
[07:24:19] None of it is in denial of reality. Yes, I'm not I'm not interested in
[07:24:26] Sensoring myself to to protect people that are irrational
[07:24:30] I'm reading this entire thing if that's not enough for you go take your meds and go lay down
[07:24:34] It's not my problem. Anyway, in modern times, however, various adaptations, reverberation,
[07:24:42] accommodate, change realities. Some authorities now classify Western nations as the house of
[07:24:46] propagation, where Muslims enjoy freedom to invite others into Islam. And in the circumstances
[07:24:51] and obligation to wage jihad, it's thought to have been suspended. Others scholars maintain
[07:24:55] that there is an implicit covenant of security that exists for Muslim migrants in the West,
[07:24:59] where they are presented to live and operate freely in exchange from restraining, refraining
[07:25:04] from jihad against the host society. Definitely not a good thing to do. It's also worth emphasizing
[07:25:09] the alternative classifications for western countries, such as a tacit covenant of security,
[07:25:14] serve only to postpone, rather than eliminate, the traditional obligation to engage in jihad.
[07:25:20] For at least some, Muslims with radical inclinations,
[07:25:24] do you choose not whether jihad will eventually be required, but merely when the appropriate
[07:25:28] moment arrives. Certain Muslim men, grasping deep scholarly knowledge, often rationalize
[07:25:32] their grooming gang offenses by mentally recasting their victims in the role of legitimate safe
[07:25:37] property under Islamic framework. That's exactly right. And this is it. Survivors have described
[07:25:43] being compelled to perform domestic tasks such as cooking and cleaning for their captors
[07:25:47] while enduring repeated sexual violation, mirroring the treatment of household slaves.
[07:25:52] Journalist Andrew Novak captured this mindset whenever he observed. So these Muslim kids have
[07:25:58] got an idea probably because it's quite convenient for them that Britain's been designated as a land
[07:26:02] of war. So certain things have become permissible in terms of the enemy. I think some of these guys
[07:26:07] think it's okay to do stuff to white girls. They wouldn't dream of dealing to Muslim girls.
[07:26:11] I mean, this is, there's so many of these. Yeah, obviously this is what's happening.
[07:26:15] Diminitude, Islam's treatment towards conquered non-Muslim people. And this is going to be,
[07:26:19] I think I'm pretty much going to assume what this is. Classical Sharia laws in Jihad, defined as
[07:26:24] warfare, wage against non-Muslims, crystallized during the medieval era. As you just noted,
[07:26:28] The rules divided the world in two fundamental categories,
[07:26:31] house of Islam and the house of war,
[07:26:33] territories under non-Muslim control.
[07:26:35] I mean, that's pretty simple, right?
[07:26:37] And like, I mean, this is like, for example,
[07:26:39] this is like the jizy attacks and stuff like that, right?
[07:26:42] Super, super common.
[07:26:43] I think a lot of people know about this stuff.
[07:26:46] Under this framework, non-Muslims fell into the two groups.
[07:26:48] Those residing within the house of Islam
[07:26:49] were considered to be trekked,
[07:26:51] provided they fulfilled specific obligations
[07:26:53] and were not legitimate targets of middle-throw reaction.
[07:26:55] By contrast, those living in the house of war
[07:26:57] could waffly be fought, defeated, and upon capture enslaved.
[07:27:00] When non-Muslim communities came under Islamic rule,
[07:27:03] they were granted conditional tolerance
[07:27:04] to the informal surrender known as the Dimmapak.
[07:27:07] This is what the Ottoman Empire did, like in Mass, right?
[07:27:11] It is at scale.
[07:27:13] Yeah, and the arrangement allowed Dimmas,
[07:27:15] now protected Muslims to retain their religion,
[07:27:17] but on the condition that the adult males paid
[07:27:19] an annual tax of the jizya,
[07:27:20] this is the thing that, for example,
[07:27:22] Vlad the Impaler refused to pay.
[07:27:25] there's a huge history behind this,
[07:27:28] and that the entire community observed
[07:27:30] a range of restrictive regulations.
[07:27:32] As the renowned commentator in a Kethir explained,
[07:27:35] these rules were designed to ensure
[07:27:37] the continued humiliation, degradation, and disgrace.
[07:27:40] Yeah, obviously to like, you know,
[07:27:41] keep people under control.
[07:27:43] If Deming community was deemed to have violated the pact,
[07:27:45] whether by failing to pay the jizya,
[07:27:47] by abusing any of the imposed conditions,
[07:27:48] his law permitted the resumption of jihad,
[07:27:51] which is exactly what happened.
[07:27:53] In such circumstances, the Bolshevik regulations,
[07:27:55] war would apply. Adult males could be killed, women and children enslaved, and the property
[07:27:59] of non-Muslims seized as spoils. The dimmer framework imposed a permanent condition of
[07:28:04] insecurity on Christian and other non-Muslim populations, other under-Muslim sovereignty.
[07:28:09] It is supplied a religiously sanctioned cultural template that continues to underpin the abduction,
[07:28:14] forced conversion, and course marriage of non-Muslim girls in places such as Egypt and
[07:28:19] Pakistan. I didn't even know Egypt had this.
[07:28:22] One of the ways to review the involvement, or lack thereof, of the British state officials
[07:28:25] of the rape-gain scandal is an incorporation of the Dehimi-like submissiveness.
[07:28:30] This mindset prioritizes deference to Islam and Muslims, above all else, while dismissing
[07:28:34] or aligning fault to non-believers.
[07:28:37] From this perspective, the failure of authorities to act decisively against the grooming gang
[07:28:40] issue might represent a significant step towards the gradual Islamization of Britain.
[07:28:46] I think that's pretty clearly what's happening.
[07:28:49] And Egypt is just as bad as the UK.
[07:28:51] i don't know about that i just i'd i literally don't know anything about that
[07:28:56] how convenient yes
[07:28:57] is on the clan culture uh... evidence in the author of uh... author an activist
[07:29:01] a a on the sea all the uh... inquiry highlights that the grooming and rape
[07:29:05] banks operating in town such as rofner and rafael are not isolated instances
[07:29:08] criminality but stem from pre-import imported pre modern clan systems
[07:29:13] embedded with uncertain at no cultural communities
[07:29:15] reinforced specifically is on the collectivism
[07:29:18] this is the same problem we have in minnesota
[07:29:21] this is the exact same problem in minnesota that we have
[07:29:24] that you know again like we've imported blood feuds from africa into america
[07:29:29] and now people are voting on them
[07:29:30] this is why you need mass deportations this is exactly why i like i want to
[07:29:34] send every single one of them back
[07:29:36] i don't want to deal with this shit here it's not it this is not american it's
[07:29:40] not native to this area
[07:29:42] i don't want to have it in the country i don't think it should be in in europe
[07:29:44] either it's not my decision but i don't think it should be
[07:29:48] i don't want to deal with any of this
[07:29:50] that was egypt won the egypt system and that the bit
[07:29:53] i i'd i'd i'd i'm talking about america right that's clear when talking about
[07:29:59] and so do you have your original year on one yeah keep that shit over there
[07:30:03] and uh... before it started the crimes disproportionately infected are perpetrators
[07:30:06] from pakistani heritage
[07:30:08] and backgrounds while rooted patterns rooted in honor and shame-based
[07:30:11] dynamics
[07:30:12] or holy anathema to british norms
[07:30:15] the of the avi here is deeply tied to tribal structures of prevalent parts
[07:30:18] Pakistan, Afghanistan, the Middle East, North Africa, and Somalia. Just like I said, family
[07:30:23] honor is primarily vested in the conduct, modesty, and virginity of girls and women.
[07:30:27] Strict codes require obedience, restricted interaction, breaches within a community,
[07:30:31] severe sanctions, including honor killings, or collective retaliation by male clan members.
[07:30:36] This is why none of them try to roach out on their group.
[07:30:41] You have to admit, some rally the U.S. and the EU to escape this shit, and we refuse to vet the
[07:30:46] bad appeals because of racism. I think that it's very obvious that many people that live
[07:30:50] in these countries don't want to live under this kind of stuff. And I think that like
[07:30:54] a very limited amount of immigration is okay if we can vet them well enough. But I think
[07:30:59] that also another component to that is that is this really in the best interest of our
[07:31:03] people or is it in the best interest of them? And so if there's a risk that you would have
[07:31:07] second generation radicalization or something else, which is very common, like for example,
[07:31:12] the two bombers that threw that thing in New York in front of Jake Lang, they were second
[07:31:19] generation. So obviously just allowing the parents in, that doesn't necessarily mean
[07:31:25] that the problem will never be solved. So I think that it's really about a case-by-case
[07:31:29] basis. And I think also even doing it at all should be extremely sparing. It should be
[07:31:36] like very, very, very, very minimal. I'm talking single digit percentages or numbers per year.
[07:31:42] Like maybe double-digit for some more normal areas. So yeah, I mean like but I agree
[07:31:47] I mean I mean to be honest with you I can misread the people that live in these areas, right?
[07:31:51] I mean, I'm sure many of them don't want to live like this. It's just that's just the way it is, right?
[07:31:55] And it sucks, but it's also not our problem
[07:32:00] When it targets a non-muslim girl particularly what and also like another big component is that
[07:32:05] like, you know, like as like a
[07:32:07] you know, like a white person or whatever in a European country, American
[07:32:11] country, a Western country, one thing that really bothers me is that every
[07:32:16] single time that something like this happens you have a lot of people like
[07:32:21] let's say you know like Carmel Anthony does something bad well then it's like
[07:32:25] let's talk about how racist everything is like no let's talk about the fact that
[07:32:28] you had somebody that you literally just murdered someone right or like you know
[07:32:32] oh what about peaceful Muslims like well we all know that not everybody is doing
[07:32:35] There's two billion Muslims in the world. They're not all bombing
[07:32:38] But the problem is that whenever you don't have moderate voices in the community that police and regulate their own extremism
[07:32:45] Then you have the community that becomes defined by that extremism
[07:32:49] Which is exactly what I think has happened is that like you've had these communities that have been basically
[07:32:54] That they've they've turned a blind eye to it
[07:32:57] They've ignored it out of like some kind of like, you know cultural solidarity or some other variation
[07:33:01] And it's like that's what happens is like if you don't hold your say if you don't hold yourselves accountable
[07:33:07] Then you're going to if you if you don't act like these people are different than you then people are going to assume that they're not
[07:33:13] And I think that's what's happened
[07:33:17] Same with feminism yeah
[07:33:19] How do you suggest we stop white men from shooting of schools and public places in the country?
[07:33:23] I don't know. I mean like last time I checked the majority of the shootings aren't being done by white people
[07:33:29] You can check the statistics yourself
[07:33:32] Yeah, cuz like the last time I looked is that um, you know, actually it's not why people doing that. I
[07:33:38] Mean, you might not know that but yeah, so just honestly, it's just it's not even true
[07:33:47] Crashing out for no reason
[07:33:50] So you're advocating for corrective corrective responsibility-ness. I think that I'm advocating for not defending it. I
[07:33:57] I think that like I'm not saying everybody's collectively responsible, but when none of the not enough of the moderate people
[07:34:06] stand up and immediately condemn it and say this is a problem. It's usually some form of you know accountability displacement or it's not because of the faith or this person doesn't represent us or you know this is because of some other cultural reason that's your fault.
[07:34:26] like that's the problem.
[07:34:28] That's the main problem.
[07:34:29] That's the reason why people are becoming
[07:34:32] more paranoid and more bigoted.
[07:34:34] That's it.
[07:34:35] Like whenever a white person shoots up a school,
[07:34:37] everybody says put him in the chair.
[07:34:39] Whenever Carmelo Anthony stabs somebody in the heart,
[07:34:42] there's, you've got black people out there saying
[07:34:44] that he did it in self-defense.
[07:34:47] That's the difference.
[07:34:48] Every group is gonna have criminals.
[07:34:50] Every group is gonna have bad actors.
[07:34:51] Even Japanese have murderers.
[07:34:53] So it's not like nobody's doing this in every culture.
[07:34:56] It happens everywhere in the world, always.
[07:34:58] It's not about whether it happens.
[07:35:00] It's about how you approach it happening
[07:35:02] and how you deal with it.
[07:35:04] And when you have the community that's running defense for it,
[07:35:06] then the community is seen as being complicit
[07:35:10] because in a big way, they are.
[07:35:13] That's it.
[07:35:14] I feel like it's extremely simple.
[07:35:17] Anyway, can't get too off topic, okay?
[07:35:19] I'm gonna finish this.
[07:35:21] So this is a proprietor of U of Women
[07:35:23] that escalates into organized networks
[07:35:24] the traffic's girls roughs regions, impunity fuels the cycle, initial assaults without
[07:35:28] consequences create a perception of Britain as a place where such behavior carries no
[07:35:31] risk.
[07:35:32] And that's true.
[07:35:33] Yeah, they do it because they get away with it, turning vulnerable girls into commodified
[07:35:37] products.
[07:35:38] That's why they keep doing it to the same girls over and over and over.
[07:35:42] That's it.
[07:35:43] A key contrast emerged in this evidence.
[07:35:45] When Simora Games targeted Sikh girls, the Sikh community mobilized men to confront and
[07:35:49] deter the perpetrators effectively.
[07:35:51] working-class girls lacked equivalent collective protection, not at least, not least because
[07:35:55] authorities often silence concerns with accusations of racism, allowing the abuse to persist and
[07:36:01] expand into modern day slavery. This is why I've always been a very big advocate of sending
[07:36:06] migrants with machetes into gated communities that vote for this stuff. That would be my goal.
[07:36:13] I would send a bunch of illiterate migrants with machetes and I would say you're going to live
[07:36:19] live in this big house and you have no money. You've got to figure out how to survive. And
[07:36:24] you know, see what happens. I don't know what could possibly happen. What could it be?
[07:36:35] And anyway, let me go back. Feminism is why white girls don't have anyone stepping up.
[07:36:40] Well, it's because feminism is generally, like Western feminism is generally just a
[07:36:46] a bunch of white women who hate their dad
[07:36:49] uh... or they hate their uncle who was mean to them or you know like abused
[07:36:53] them or something like that
[07:36:55] uh... there's no actual um...
[07:36:57] i mean because women have all the rights that men have right so like if
[07:37:01] you're a feminist nowadays it's just because you hate men
[07:37:04] like i mean women can vote women can drive a car
[07:37:08] you know like i mean there it is
[07:37:15] Focus on the small things. Yeah, I guess so. Anyway, even the second, third, fourth generation immigrants raised in Britain continue these patterns, acting as demographic clusters where the Klan system reproduces itself and intensifies regardless of wider culture.
[07:37:29] Ongoing immigration from such Klanish backwaters only serves to replenish and strengthen such communities. That's exactly correct. You can't bring people from people like them, places like that.
[07:37:37] When the foundational system is tribal, rather than purely religious, Islamic elements provide
[07:37:42] ideological justification, communal shielding, and strategic expansion.
[07:37:46] Preparators sometimes hide actions for families, mosques, and moms because the behavior brings
[07:37:51] disgrace from the community.
[07:37:52] Yet remorse towards British victims is limited because non-Muslim girls are not viewed as
[07:37:56] fully human individuals deserving of protection.
[07:37:59] But as unprotected outsiders available for abuse without moral consequence, this fosters
[07:38:03] widespread silence within affected communities.
[07:38:06] His inquiry provides evidence to the fundamental clash of worlds.
[07:38:10] Across the West, our historic respect for the individual has, thanks to mass immigration,
[07:38:14] been overpowered by the more primitive attitudes that prevail elsewhere, according to which
[07:38:18] group membership matters first and foremost.
[07:38:20] The elite obsession with diversity has invited the latter to take advantage of the former.
[07:38:25] Scare words like Islamophobia and racism have been deployed to exploit the goodwill of Western
[07:38:30] host societies paralyzing investigation and enforcement man this is a big one
[07:38:40] which by the way this is all true sorry right there I could have
[07:38:47] Concerns have long been raised in the fear of accusations of Islamophobia have an inherited
[07:39:00] open discussion and effective action on group-based child sexual exploitation cases, particularly
[07:39:06] those involving grooming gangs. A series of reports and analyses from the think tank policy
[07:39:11] exchange have documented how the change of Islamophobia, the charge of Islamophobia has
[07:39:16] been deployed to challenge, intimidate, and discredit individuals and organizations attempting
[07:39:20] to highlight the issue. Islamophobia is not a real word. It's just not. Like, it's just
[07:39:28] a word that's invented to silence people that are critical of Islam. I mean, Islam is a
[07:39:35] collection of ideas, basically. It's a collection of faith-based ideas. How can you have a phobia
[07:39:42] against an idea. That's not real. It's just an invented word that's used to shut down
[07:39:50] conversation. It's a fabrication. Yeah, it's a fabrication of shut down conversations.
[07:39:56] And I've been deployed to challenge this credit as certain individuals attempting to highlight
[07:39:59] the issue. 20-25 research note titled the Rotherdam grooming scandal and the creators
[07:40:04] of Islamophobia definition, policy exchange examined connections between the scandal and
[07:40:08] off of them and the development of a contested definition of Islamophobia by the all-party
[07:40:13] parliamentary group on Muslims.
[07:40:15] The report indicated the key role of a staff, Mubin Hussain, who in 2015 organized a community
[07:40:21] protest against South Yorkshire police, accusing them of scapegoating Muslims amid the grooming
[07:40:26] investigations.
[07:40:28] Well, yeah, actions described as some local figures as inquiries is unhelpful to addressing
[07:40:36] the abuse.
[07:40:37] It tells us a great deal about the politically correct institutional culture within Rotheram
[07:40:40] Metropolitan that in the attendance of safeguarding a strategic meeting dated June 2000 was an
[07:40:46] anti-racism coordinator.
[07:40:48] Well, yeah, and the reason why these people try to advocate for anti-racism is because
[07:40:53] they're racist.
[07:40:55] Every form of anti-racism is actually just disenfranchisement of white people and anything
[07:41:01] that they perceive that white people have an advantage in.
[07:41:04] So basically, there's never an instance where anti-racism addresses racism as a meta-level
[07:41:10] subject.
[07:41:11] Anti-racism is just simply anti-white.
[07:41:14] That's it.
[07:41:16] Similar themes in policy exchange to June 25, how to not tackle grooming gangs, which
[07:41:21] argues that accusations of Islamophobia, independent of any formal definition, have been used to
[07:41:25] suppress exposure of the scandal in the pursuit of justice for the victims.
[07:41:30] recommends pausing government work on the official Islamophobia definition, well the
[07:41:34] government should just get rid of the word. They shouldn't even think about the word.
[07:41:40] I mean like you can't be a phobia, it's not phobia, it's a religion's an idea. You opt
[07:41:44] into a religion. You choose to be Islamic. You choose to be a Muslim. You choose to
[07:41:49] be a Christian. You choose to be a Hindu. Everybody chooses their religion. So you can't
[07:41:53] have a phobia of that. It's ridiculous.
[07:41:57] I mean, do I have Democrat phobia?
[07:42:00] I don't think so, right?
[07:42:01] I mean, like almost.
[07:42:02] Sometimes I feel like I do, but I don't.
[07:42:05] It's not real.
[07:42:07] If I could, I would.
[07:42:09] Yeah, politicians have echoed these worries
[07:42:12] in relation to proposed definitions.
[07:42:13] Shadow Quality's minister has warned
[07:42:15] that adopting such a definition
[07:42:16] predictorily one frame to targeting expressions
[07:42:18] of muslimness could intensify a culture of censorship,
[07:42:21] potentially granting perpetrators greater immunity
[07:42:23] by making legitimate scrutiny patterns
[07:42:25] grooming case is more difficult and risky for police.
[07:42:28] She argued that the risks of repeating past mistakes for fear of racist or Islamophobic
[07:42:32] labels contributed to delayed or inadequate responses.
[07:42:36] That's correct.
[07:42:38] The concern to shield Muslims from criticism at all costs went hand-in-hand with a more
[07:42:42] general ideological shift organized around the unquestioning treatment of minorities
[07:42:47] as a special victim group.
[07:42:49] And rooted in the left-liberal pay—I've always found it to be ironic that leftists
[07:42:54] find solidarity with, you know, like radical Islam. Like, radical Islam stands against,
[07:43:01] radical Islam would have you thrown off a building. Like, why would you, these people
[07:43:06] aren't on your side. What do you mean? It's so weird, it really is. And I think that the
[07:43:12] reason why they do that, it's actually very simple. It's because they just hate white
[07:43:17] people and they hate their own culture. That's the reason why. And so anything that's willing
[07:43:21] to destroy white people or destroy their own culture is what they're going to side with.
[07:43:26] That's literally it.
[07:43:27] So it's not about what there's, it's not about siding with something, it's about siding against
[07:43:31] something.
[07:43:32] Does that make sense?
[07:43:33] I'll put you guys can see what I'm saying.
[07:43:39] Fuck.
[07:43:42] Wait a minute.
[07:43:47] Okay.
[07:43:48] Anyway, let's see here.
[07:43:50] Concerned to shield Muslims from criticism at all costs when handed down with a more
[07:43:53] ideological shift organizing around the unquestioning treatment of minorities as special victim groups,
[07:43:57] rooted in the left liberal paradigm in the 1960s, this minotaurian outlook of the scored
[07:44:02] political victories under Harold Wilson's labor government, in time, tolerance, multiculturalism
[07:44:07] and anti-discrimination became highly prized values in elite circles.
[07:44:10] The law, too, began to foster an environment in which challenging certain minority communities,
[07:44:15] including Muslim ones, became politically dangerous or even criminal.
[07:44:18] This enabled grooming gangs to operate with impunity for years because authorities at
[07:44:22] every level, as we have seen, feared being labeled as racist or Islamophobic more than
[07:44:26] they feared failing the girls to whom they owed a duty of care.
[07:44:31] That's right.
[07:44:32] It's more important to let women get raped than to be called racist.
[07:44:35] That's correct.
[07:44:38] The legal framework of underpendous analysis with the Erased Relations Act of 1965 and
[07:44:43] even stronger in 1976.
[07:44:45] statutes designed to convert or overt discrimination were interpreted and expanded in ways that
[07:44:50] made any discussion of ethnicity or culture and crime patterns hazardous. That's right.
[07:44:55] The McPherson report and this is in there. They're trying to outlaw thinking and the
[07:44:59] reason why they're trying to outlaw thinking is because they know where the conclusion
[07:45:02] is going.
[07:45:04] inquiry branded the police institutionally racist and introduced the definition of racism
[07:45:10] so broad that police officers and social workers became terrified of any action that could
[07:45:15] be construed as targeting ethnic minorities.
[07:45:18] Across Britain, clear evidence of organized abuse by Pakistani gangs among other Muslim
[07:45:22] majority ethnic groups was ignored because confronting at-risk accusations of racism,
[07:45:27] the fear was not abstract.
[07:45:29] Senior officers and council staff explicitly cited concerns about so-called community relations
[07:45:34] and potential race riots for a reason of inaction.
[07:45:37] So you're like, I don't really see a fraud.
[07:45:39] Like my outlook of like, if you have a race riot,
[07:45:41] would you shoot them?
[07:45:43] I mean, that's it.
[07:45:45] That's what I would do.
[07:45:46] Just shoot them.
[07:45:47] Somebody's going around rioting and burning shit down
[07:45:49] to shoot them.
[07:45:51] But they don't want to do that.
[07:45:52] Nobody wants to do that.
[07:45:54] So they have to put up this bullshit.
[07:45:57] I don't get that.
[07:45:58] We got to get back to that.
[07:45:59] I know.
[07:46:00] The country's transformation was greatly accelerated
[07:46:01] under Tony Blair's new labor project,
[07:46:03] which culminated in the Equality Act of 2010.
[07:46:06] This consolidated and strengthened the so-called anti-discrimination protections by adding
[07:46:10] religion as he protected characteristic alongside of race.
[07:46:14] Combined with the hate crime legislation under Part 3 under the Public Order Act of 1986 and
[07:46:19] the Crime Disorder Act, it created an environment in which criticizing aspects of Islamic culture
[07:46:24] or patterns of offending link to Muslim communities could be framed as racial hatred or Islamophobia.
[07:46:30] Official definitions on Islamophobia prevented, promoted some campaign groups, further blurred
[07:46:35] the line between legitimate concern and blind prejudice.
[07:46:38] The result was a chilling effect across public institutions, police forces, social services,
[07:46:44] local councils repeatedly chose silence or denial over robust investigation because political
[07:46:49] and professional costs of appearing to single out Muslims was deemed too high.
[07:46:53] I think this is a very good analysis.
[07:46:55] This is completely what I think.
[07:46:57] Why do immigration for these toxic places start in the first place?
[07:47:00] There's a lot of different reasons.
[07:47:02] is like, you know, unrest there, you know, like white gill. I mean, there's 50 different reasons.
[07:47:08] And yeah, the QC Audit confirmed this pattern, noting the authorities shied away from examining
[07:47:13] ethnicity and culture even when the data pointed overwhelming to Pakistani Muslim perpetrators.
[07:47:18] What went wrong now is painfully clear. The post-war liberal consensus that began with Wilson
[07:47:23] emphasized diversity, inclusion, and non-judgmentalism as supreme virtues.
[07:47:27] Multiculturalism replaced national self-confidence as the guiding principle.
[07:47:31] Longstanding British norms around free speech, child protection, and impartial application
[07:47:36] of the law were subordinated to the need to avoid offending minority sensitivities at
[07:47:40] all costs.
[07:47:41] Liberal elites and media, politics, and the public sector internalized the idea that acknowledging
[07:47:46] cultural or religious factors in a crime was in itself a form of bigotry.
[07:47:51] This mindset actively shielded the rape gangs by discouraging the very inquiries and interventions
[07:47:56] that could have saved thousands of children.
[07:47:59] This is exactly it, 100% true.
[07:48:05] So I was making money off of this, a lot of people are actually.
[07:48:13] Until the country rejects the fear of being called racist and restores the courage to
[07:48:18] name uncomfortable truths, the conditions that allowed these networks to thrive will
[07:48:22] remain.
[07:48:24] The inquiry records the damage without apology.
[07:48:26] The paralysis of our institutions was not some fluke.
[07:48:29] It was the predictable outcome of decades of legal and cultural challenges, changes that
[07:48:34] place sensitivity above justice.
[07:48:36] The law of the land has not merely failed the victims of grooming gangs, but actively
[07:48:40] enabled the perpetrators.
[07:48:42] For decades, statutes that should have been delivered swift exemplary justice were either
[07:48:46] ignored, deluded, or deliberately misapplied in a manner that protected organized networks
[07:48:52] of predominantly Pakistani Muslim men, while leaving thousands of British girls without
[07:48:57] protection or redress.
[07:48:58] The legal framework governing sexual exploitation, commonly described in public discourse as
[07:49:03] grooming gangs, is extensive but fragmented.
[07:49:06] It consists of overlapping criminal offenses, human rights obligations, civil liabilities,
[07:49:12] and sentencing structures.
[07:49:13] While parliament has enacted a broad suit of statutory provisions designed to criminalize
[07:49:18] sexual exploitation and all of its forms, serious questions remain as to whether the
[07:49:22] law has been sufficiently coherent. It's obviously not. And because you can't address
[07:49:27] root causes, if you can't address a root cause, you can't solve the problem. It's actually
[07:49:31] really simple. You may not think higher ups may, the higher ups seem to be held responsible.
[07:49:39] I think they're the main ones that are being held responsible. Like that's my opinion.
[07:49:44] i hold them more responsible than even the rapists
[07:49:48] because they're the ones that betrayed around people
[07:49:50] they're the ones that did the wrong thing
[07:49:53] so no i i i feel that absolutely i totally agree with you
[07:49:58] and uh... the court criminal law of response lies in sexual offense active
[07:50:01] season three the statute represents principal legislative mechanism for
[07:50:04] addressing rape sexual exploitation grooming a criminalize is a wide
[07:50:07] spectrum of conduct ranging from rape and assault to penetration to causing
[07:50:11] your inciting a child to engage in sexual activity and facilitating
[07:50:14] sexual exploitation. The act also contained specific offenses concerning abuse, positions
[07:50:19] of trust, traffic for the sexual exploitation, and paying for the sexual services of a child.
[07:50:24] Collectively, these provisions were intended to modernize and consolidate earlier sexual
[07:50:29] offense legislation. However, their practical operation cases involved organized exploitation
[07:50:34] has often revealed structural limitations. The statutory framework presumes that the
[07:50:38] criminal justice system will detect and intervene early in abuse of patterns. In practice, many
[07:50:44] cases of organized abuse have involved prolonged periods in which victims were groomed, trafficked,
[07:50:49] repeatedly assaulted without any meaningful intervention by the authorities.
[07:50:53] Subsequent legislation, including the Serious Crime Act in 2015, expanded the concept of
[07:50:58] sexual exploitation to encompass a broader range of behaviors, including a non-contact
[07:51:03] abuse and technologically facilitated exploitation.
[07:51:07] The expansion reflected the evolving understanding of grooming as a process rather than a single
[07:51:12] act. Yeah, of course, because like multiple people doing this and all that, right? Many,
[07:51:16] many times this is what's happened, right? And so a serious crime, yeah, this time more serious,
[07:51:21] right? Of course. Nevertheless, legislative reform has largely been reactive. It's tended to follow
[07:51:26] a public scandal rather than anticipate systematic patterns of abuse. As a result, the legal framework
[07:51:31] often appears to be piecemeal rather than strategically designed. In cases involving organized sexual
[07:51:36] exploitation, prosecutors frequently rely on a constellation of offenses rather than any single
[07:51:42] overarching charge.
[07:51:44] Preparators may be convicted of conspiracy to rape, trafficking for sexual exploitation,
[07:51:47] arranging child prostitution, and a variety of associate offenses, including drug supply.
[07:51:52] Such cases demonstrate that criminal law is capable of imposing severe sentences, including
[07:51:56] life imprisonment, where the offending person is effectively grave, yet these outcomes tend
[07:52:00] to occur only after extensive investigations and multiple failures of early intervention.
[07:52:05] The law's capacity to punish extreme wrongdoing is therefore clear, but its capacity to prevent
[07:52:09] wrongdoing remains contestable.
[07:52:11] Yeah, because they don't want it. The reason why is because they're afraid of drawing a conclusion. That's you know inappropriate, right?
[07:52:17] That's clearly it.
[07:52:19] And this is about why people doing this. You're gonna stop reading five minutes in.
[07:52:26] Okay.
[07:52:32] What is this? You think that's gonna make me like stop the reading?
[07:52:37] Like let's assume that you're right.
[07:52:39] I mean, I can't prove you wrong, so why would I even try?
[07:52:45] Who cares?
[07:52:46] Why would I care what you think?
[07:52:50] Anyway, another critical dimension concerns trafficking and modern slavery legislation.
[07:52:55] And also, by the way, Muslims can be white, by the way.
[07:52:59] It's not even true.
[07:53:00] But anyway, I don't want to get in and have a huge argument about this.
[07:53:03] Modern slavery activism is 15, criminalism is driven trafficking, sexual exploitation,
[07:53:07] The intention was passing it to recognize organized sexual exploitation involves coercion.
[07:53:11] However, critics argued that the conceptual overlap between trafficking offenses and conditional
[07:53:15] sex offenses often created uncertainty and charging decisions.
[07:53:19] The distinction between trafficking and exploitation is not always straightforward, particularly
[07:53:22] when the victims are groomed into apparent compliance rather than transported by force.
[07:53:26] This ambiguity may complicate prosecutions and returs a deterrent of the law.
[07:53:33] The legal framework also extends beyond criminal liability to encompass civil and human rights
[07:53:37] obligations. Article 3 of the Human Convention of Human Rights imposes a
[07:53:41] positive duty on the state to investigate credible allegations of rape and
[07:53:45] serious sexual assault. Courts have held that systemic failures and
[07:53:48] investigation may constitute breaches of fundamental rights, even when perpetrators
[07:53:52] are ultimately prosecuted. The principle is of particular importance in
[07:53:56] organized exploitation cases where victims have frequently alleged
[07:54:00] prolonged institutional inaction. I think this is true. Yeah, of course.
[07:54:07] You know, let me start, Delphan, man, that's a lot, man, it's really a lot.
[07:54:11] This crazy, it's about revealing truth. Yeah, you gotta figure out what's going on.
[07:54:17] Hmm.
[07:54:21] The law, therefore...
[07:54:24] Alright.
[07:54:25] Oof.
[07:54:26] A lot of lock-in.
[07:54:28] A lock-in recognizes the state authorities may bear responsibility not only for direct wrongdoing,
[07:54:33] but also for failures to prevent and respond to grave abuses.
[07:54:36] Despite the extent of legal architecture, the operation of the law in practice has been
[07:54:41] inadequate.
[07:54:42] One recurring criticism is that the legal framework places significant emphasis on the
[07:54:46] individual criminal acts while sufficiently addressing patterns of organized exploitation.
[07:54:52] Exactly, right?
[07:54:53] Because basically it takes a village to raise a child, apparently in a lot of these places
[07:54:57] it also takes a village to rape a child.
[07:54:59] You have a bunch of these people that are doing this collectively and they're cooperating
[07:55:03] with them.
[07:55:04] to family members that are okay with it.
[07:55:06] That's everything, right?
[07:55:07] And so that's it.
[07:55:09] And anyway, rape gangs typically operate
[07:55:12] through networks characterized by manipulation,
[07:55:14] coercion, and economic exploitation.
[07:55:16] The law's traditional forces focus on discrete offenses
[07:55:20] can obscure the systematic nature of such conduct.
[07:55:23] Although conspiracy and trafficking offenses
[07:55:25] partially address the gap,
[07:55:27] there seems to be remains no single statutory offense
[07:55:30] to fully captures a phenomenon
[07:55:32] of organized sexual exploitation
[07:55:34] that is distinctly structured form of criminality.
[07:55:36] A further difficulty lies in evidential challenges.
[07:55:39] Grooming often involves psychological manipulation.
[07:55:42] No, I don't believe this.
[07:55:43] I think that honestly, if they're sharing the media,
[07:55:46] that means it's being tracked.
[07:55:48] They just don't wanna read the logs.
[07:55:51] I think you could instantly prove this,
[07:55:52] but we'll see what happens.
[07:55:54] Grooming often involves psychological manipulation
[07:55:57] that undermines the credibility of the victims
[07:55:59] in the eyes of the investigators and the juries.
[07:56:01] The legal concept of consent
[07:56:03] remain central to main sexual offenses,
[07:56:05] yet it can be ill-suited to situations involving vulnerable
[07:56:07] children conditioned by their abusers to acquiesce.
[07:56:11] While courts have recognized that a parent consent
[07:56:13] by the illusory in such context,
[07:56:15] the statutory framework continues to rely heavily
[07:56:18] on a more straightforward form of evidence.
[07:56:20] This has at times, bear, bear, agree, basically like,
[07:56:23] you know, the way that we have it structured
[07:56:25] allows this to happen, right?
[07:56:27] Because like, you know, okay, you consent, right?
[07:56:29] You've got basically a gun to your head to do it,
[07:56:31] so it doesn't really count.
[07:56:32] I think that's pretty obvious.
[07:56:34] This is at times created barriers to the prosecution
[07:56:36] and contributed to perceptions
[07:56:37] that the law inadequately reflects
[07:56:39] the reality as a course of exploitation.
[07:56:42] Very clearly.
[07:56:43] Moreover, the laws reliance on post-talk punishment
[07:56:45] raises broader questions about preventive capacity.
[07:56:47] statutory offenses are designed to respond
[07:56:50] once exploitation has occurred or it is immediately planned
[07:56:52] preventing the mechanisms such as risk orders
[07:56:54] and safeguarding duties exist.
[07:56:56] But their effectiveness depends on institutional vigilance
[07:56:59] and interagency cooperation
[07:57:01] where such cooperation fails, the legal framework offers
[07:57:04] limited remedies beyond retrospective accountability.
[07:57:07] This is insufficient to address the organized exploitation
[07:57:10] that occurs over extended periods.
[07:57:13] Failure to invoke existing sentencing powers, that's right.
[07:57:17] And so this is the other big component too.
[07:57:21] Because like they could do something about this
[07:57:23] by saying it's a hate crime, but they don't apply it.
[07:57:26] So sentencing got like hate crimes are basically white crimes.
[07:57:30] like white people can commit hate crimes other races can't commit hate crimes
[07:57:34] this is the problem
[07:57:42] the crime disorder act of nineteen ninety eight cents in council guidelines
[07:57:45] explicitly permits and in cases demonstrated hostility required
[07:57:49] uh... and uplift in the impose sentence were in offenses aggravated by racial
[07:57:53] or religious hostility evidence in grooming gang trials is repeatedly shown
[07:57:57] precisely this. The victims described as white slags, white trash, kufar bitches, or whenever
[07:58:02] they were told only good for men like me to fuck and use like trash, perpetrators shouted
[07:58:06] a la luk bar and boasted of racial superiority. Yet, as far as public records are concerned,
[07:58:11] racial aggravations have never once been invoked against any anti-white rape gangs, either
[07:58:16] by prosecutors or by judges. This is a stark contrast to what tends to happen whenever
[07:58:22] white criminals are held to account for interracial crimes. Prosecutors did not hesitate, for instance,
[07:58:27] to pursue aggravating charges against Darren Osborne after he murdered a crowd of Muslims
[07:58:32] with his van in 2017, sentencing Osborne to life imprisonment with a minimum tariff of
[07:58:37] 43 years. The judges cited Schedule 21 of the Criminal Justice Act to confirm that a
[07:58:42] murder done for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, or racial, or ideological
[07:58:46] cause counted alongside a terrorist connection. Which, again, I think that makes sense, but
[07:58:51] But the problem is it's only being applied one dimensionally, right?
[07:58:54] That's it.
[07:58:56] Sentences and rape gang cases, meanwhile, have remained at the lower end of the scale.
[07:59:00] Following from four to 12 years, Tremend convicted to raping dozens of children for years rather
[07:59:04] than the life sentences or the 20-plus year tariffs that the offending merited.
[07:59:09] Shadow Minister Justice drew attention at our hearings for the fact that many of these
[07:59:13] involved in rape gangs serve as little to a third to half of their sentence.
[07:59:19] Isn't that crazy?
[07:59:22] Oh my God.
[07:59:23] Worse still, foreign national perpetrators, many from Pakistan and other Muslim-majority
[07:59:27] countries, were rarely deported after sentencing despite clear powers under the UK Borders Act
[07:59:33] in 2007.
[07:59:34] Instead, they were housed, fed, and on release, allowed to reoffend or return to their communities.
[07:59:41] In the Quilliam Foundation's analysis of the 264 convictions, the overwhelming majority
[07:59:45] of perpetrators received terms that bore no relation to the lifetime harm inflicted.
[07:59:51] Even high-profile cases such as Rothorham-Rothdale ringleaders have received effective tariffs
[07:59:56] that allowed release after serving less than half their sentence.
[07:59:59] The leniency persisted despite the organized predatory and repeated nature of the crimes.
[08:00:05] Yep, British courts repeatedly allowed cultural background to function as a de facto mitigating
[08:00:11] factor.
[08:00:12] I think it should button the opposite way yeah I I yeah it's I feel like a little
[08:00:20] yeah it's very true but wrong direction uh in one Bristol case uh documented the
[08:00:26] quay and report a defendant argued that forcing a girl to have sex with his
[08:00:29] friends was simply Somali culture and tradition
[08:00:32] well wow that doesn't sound good and uh in Rotherham another claim western
[08:00:39] girls' clothing invited provocative use. These arguments were entertained rather than dismissed
[08:00:43] outright. Judges and defense counsel cited cultural sensitivity to avoid empowering the far right
[08:00:50] or damaging community cohesion, the very phrase used by the case review to explain
[08:00:55] like cases were shelved pre-2012. These people sold you out and they had your kids raped so
[08:01:01] So they didn't want to look bad.
[08:01:05] I wonder, I wonder what I think.
[08:01:08] You guys want to guess what I think you should do
[08:01:10] to people that did this?
[08:01:12] Ah, geez guys, I really wonder.
[08:01:14] It's a mystery.
[08:01:28] No more, we know, good.
[08:01:31] Is that an infinite bag of chips?
[08:01:45] Yeah, it is actually.
[08:01:47] It never runs out.
[08:01:53] The result is men who viewed white British girls as subhuman property received discounts
[08:01:57] unavailable to those of any other category of defender.
[08:02:00] This is not justice under the law of the land, it is the importation of foreign honor shame
[08:02:05] norms in the British courtroom with the explicit acquiescence of senior police officials, prosecutors
[08:02:11] and judges.
[08:02:13] Party politics.
[08:02:14] As I can't say his name, Pranam told the Esquiree Central Left Party's viewed Muslim voting
[08:02:19] blocks as a protected base and aggressive prosecution or deportation risked losing those
[08:02:24] votes.
[08:02:25] That's exactly what I've said the entire time.
[08:02:27] Chronic electoral defendants on such blocks paralyzed far too many levels of government.
[08:02:32] Political actors across the board, national, local, and devolved knew about the organized
[08:02:36] crime gangs for decades, yet put electoral survivals and so-called community relations
[08:02:41] in fear of racism.
[08:02:46] Accusations before child protection.
[08:02:48] Labor Party figures proved especially guilty of making electoral calculations where they
[08:02:52] should have been looking out for the nation's children.
[08:02:54] combined with demographic shifts in swing seats this got in the way of
[08:02:57] concerted in action
[08:02:59] scottland refused to hold its own inquiry before finally caving in february
[08:03:02] two thousand and twenty six that's literally four months ago
[08:03:06] and i i continues to fall uh... failed to record a fender ethnicity or to
[08:03:10] create specific child exploitation markers
[08:03:13] early warnings from the nineteen eighties onwards went
[08:03:16] like no word because addressing the offending wrist
[08:03:19] uh... addressing the offending wrist political cost
[08:03:23] politics mattered more than protecting your kids
[08:03:26] that's it
[08:03:29] and uh... politics place retention of power above the state of arts why so
[08:03:33] uh... allowing the games to operate with impunity for decades politicians
[08:03:36] received direct briefing seven multi agency meetings red internal
[08:03:40] intelligence and still denied knowledge blocked increase silence critics in
[08:03:45] order to cleave to muslim voting blocks this was not in this is happening in
[08:03:49] america too
[08:03:51] uh... this was not ignorance of the crimes but calculated repeated nationwide
[08:03:54] abandonment of children
[08:03:56] this is the labor party
[08:03:58] bears the primary responsibility for the longest most of the brick cover-up
[08:04:02] will labor and reform are both guilty of this
[08:04:06] they they both are
[08:04:15] labor as former conservative uh... counselor
[08:04:17] lian billington emphasize our inquiry
[08:04:20] labor dominated the local councils in n p's repeatedly
[08:04:23] and prioritize electoral dependence on pakistani muslim communities
[08:04:27] above the safety of children
[08:04:29] uh... jess philips in p and i saw in p maintained public silence on ethnic
[08:04:34] religious patterns on the gangs
[08:04:35] well their constituency suffered evidence shows labor politicians
[08:04:39] prioritizing avoiding far-right empowerment narratives and so called
[08:04:43] community relations over protecting victims
[08:04:46] In all of them, Labour councillors and leadership received one of our whistleblowers' social workers' disclosures.
[08:04:52] And the symbi-independent units retaliated against the whistleblower and took no remedial action.
[08:04:57] The same pattern occurred in Rotherham and all these other places too.
[08:05:01] Labour councils surrendered streets, ignored parental reports and allowed perpetrators to operate,
[08:05:07] among other reasons because Muslim voting blocks were electorally vital.
[08:05:11] Former Directive Constable and Rochdale Rape Gang,
[08:05:15] whistleblower Maggie Oliver has criticized
[08:05:18] the mayor of Greater Manchester,
[08:05:20] which of whom Oliver herself has worked for
[08:05:22] failing to piece together a full picture of
[08:05:24] information necessary to combat the Rape Gangs.
[08:05:27] They sold you out for votes.
[08:05:29] They did. It sold you out.
[08:05:30] All this. Isn't that crazy?
[08:05:32] It's insane. Let me go back.
[08:05:37] Where am I at here? Despite ordering some of
[08:05:38] the preliminary independent reviews and
[08:05:40] CSE across child sexual exploitation across Manchester. Burnham stands accused of focusing
[08:05:45] exclusively on the failures of the past. Oliver is on record suggesting that two trustworthy
[08:05:51] reviewers resigned from the final phase of Burnham's inquiry dealing with years 2019 to
[08:05:56] 25 because they were blocked by Greater Manchester Police from accessing vital documents. When
[08:06:02] we had come to see what and believe that Wilson PR machine was wheeled out and it was already
[08:06:08] in a public arena. When it comes to leadership and courage and gripping what is now, unfortunately,
[08:06:14] heat a Burnham turned away, we missed a huge opportunity to bring changes that are needed.
[08:06:19] That's because they don't care about that. They care about maintaining power. That's
[08:06:22] always what they've cared about. Even reviews that did produce valuable findings had seldom
[08:06:26] been followed decisive action. Commissioned in 2017, Burnham's limited and independent
[08:06:31] review conducted that authorities had failed to protect children from pedophile gangs
[08:06:36] in manchester olden rockdale however no officers were filed
[08:06:40] that's it near never any consequences no officers were fired or stripped of their
[08:06:45] pensions for the historic failings exposed nor has burnham exercised his
[08:06:50] power as police and crime commissioner a position he automatically holds as an
[08:06:54] extension of miss mayor ality to prosecute any of the officers found to
[08:06:59] have failed to victims of the predatory gangs zero accountability
[08:07:03] uh... labor politicians did not merely failed act but they actively denied that
[08:07:07] the problem existed smeared those raising alarms and block local inquiries
[08:07:12] that would reveal the full scale they sacrifice thousands of white working
[08:07:16] class girls to electoral allegiance with pakistani muslim communities to the
[08:07:21] general reputation of multi-cultural is among the public
[08:07:24] and uh... more sacrifices under the alter of multi-cultural ism isn't that cute
[08:07:30] uh... such institutional paralysis was not accidental but political for even
[08:07:35] when even a few labor politicians such as serah champion did speak up they were
[08:07:39] dismissed
[08:07:40] and uh... and rockstar oxford telephoned and dozens of other towns
[08:07:44] labor-controlled councils and police forces repeatedly shelled investigations
[08:07:48] threatened whistleblowers of racism accusations instructed officers
[08:07:52] to not record the ethnicity of the perfect of the perpetrators
[08:07:56] don't write it down
[08:07:58] don't do it
[08:08:01] the twenty uh... fourteen jay report exposed to labor counselors and senior
[08:08:05] officials in rotham
[08:08:06] dismissed the systematic rape of fourteen hundred girls because to do
[08:08:09] otherwise risked alienating the pakistani community
[08:08:12] the pattern was repeated worldwide
[08:08:15] and uh... this betrayal carried into government in january two thousand and
[08:08:18] twenty five labor and peace
[08:08:20] voted in mass against a conservative amendment calling for a national
[08:08:23] statutory inquiry into grooming gangs, the amendment was defeated by 364 votes to 111,
[08:08:30] I guess, I don't know, that's a one, not an I, but I don't know, Sir Keir Starmer,
[08:08:36] uh oh, uh oh, finally.
[08:08:39] And his front bench abstained and opposed the measure, dismissing public concern as
[08:08:43] far right agitation.
[08:08:45] It took sustained external pressure, including the damning of Casey National Audit and the
[08:08:50] independent inquiry and public outrage to force a U-turn in June 2025. Even then, the
[08:08:56] government watered down local inquiries with reports that plans for five separate reviews
[08:09:01] were quietly dropped to, quote, avoid offending Pakistanis.
[08:09:05] Oh my God.
[08:09:16] Wow.
[08:09:18] Jesse Phillips appointed Safeguarding Minister
[08:09:20] had much to do with the show and contempt the Labor Party.
[08:09:23] Survivors resigned from her victim panel and discussed,
[08:09:27] condemning the process as a sham.
[08:09:29] Phillips apologized for the delays but retained the full backing of Cure Starmer.
[08:09:33] Under her watch, ethnicity recording remains patchy, and the anti-white aspect of these
[08:09:38] horrendous crimes continues to be downplayed.
[08:09:41] This is the same labor party that has consistently weaponized accusations of Islamophobia to
[08:09:45] silence anyone who stated the obvious, that the gangs were and remain overwhelmingly Pakistani
[08:09:51] Muslim men.
[08:09:53] As a result, the nation has suffered decades of state-enabled child rape on an industrial
[08:09:57] scale.
[08:09:58] That's a big one.
[08:10:00] That's a good sentence, I like that sentence.
[08:10:03] Labor's government's so-called independent inquiry in the grooming gangs announced in
[08:10:08] December 2025 and aired by Baroness Anne Lawnfield is a masterclass in institutional evasion.
[08:10:15] Its draft terms of reference finalized in March 2026 to deliberately confine the scope
[08:10:21] to group-based child sexual exploitation and abuse in a handful of relevant local areas.
[08:10:27] The inquiry is explicitly time-limited, targeted and proportionate, and framed as an exercise
[08:10:32] in examining failures in practice and obstruction by statutory services.
[08:10:36] There is no mandate to examine the national scale of the problem, the overwhelming ethnic
[08:10:41] and religious profile of the perpetrators, the honor and shame-based cultural derivers,
[08:10:45] or the role of political correctness and editorial cynicism that allowed the abuse to forish
[08:10:50] for decades.
[08:10:52] and survivors are notionally placed at the center, yet the terms of reference carefully
[08:10:58] avoid the very questions that the public and the survivors have demanded to be answered
[08:11:03] for decades.
[08:11:04] This is not an inquiry designed to deliver truth or justice, it is a containment exercise.
[08:11:09] Yeah, they're throwing you a bone.
[08:11:11] They tell you a little bit just so they make you happy.
[08:11:14] They don't actually want to solve the problem, they want you to think that they're solving
[08:11:17] the problem, so they can effectively disarm you.
[08:11:22] what they're doing. Yeah, look, yeah, exactly. Look, we're doing something exactly. By narrowing
[08:11:27] the focus to local operational failures and excluding any systematic analysis of the demographic,
[08:11:32] cultural and religious patterns that witnesses have repeatedly described, the government
[08:11:36] has ensured that the most uncomfortable truths, not at least those that implicate labor's
[08:11:40] own chronic dependence on certain voting blocks, will never be confronted. The very government
[08:11:45] that once resisted national inquiry has now given us one with terms so tightly drafted
[08:11:50] that cannot possibly disturb the political consensus that enabled the rape
[08:11:53] gangs
[08:11:54] none of this will expose what really happened is structured precisely so that
[08:11:58] it cannot
[08:12:00] well the core grooming gangs were overwhelmingly kakastani muslim
[08:12:03] networks operating with political protection the label parties complicity
[08:12:06] with far beyond mere negligence
[08:12:08] in multiple documented cases both sitting in former labor counselors and
[08:12:12] figures were them themselves perpetrators of child sexual abuse
[08:12:16] either that or they directly shielded abusers within the grooming gang
[08:12:19] ecosystem
[08:12:20] this is not a coincidence it was the inevitable consequence of a party that
[08:12:24] treated pakistani muslim communities
[08:12:26] as precious voting banks even what's on members were raping children or tipping
[08:12:30] off predators
[08:12:36] this whole lot
[08:12:39] since the going on you are kidding you said you see one for a while yeah i
[08:12:42] mean it's
[08:12:43] It's 200 pages, like really close to the end,
[08:12:47] but we're not at the end.
[08:12:49] Lock in.
[08:12:51] I told you I was gonna do it.
[08:12:53] I said I was gonna do it,
[08:12:54] I said I was gonna do it, I do it.
[08:12:57] Just the way it is.
[08:13:00] Anyway, direct perpetrators within the labor ranks.
[08:13:03] Warden Azir Ahmed, former labor council member,
[08:13:06] was convicted in 2022 of multiple child sex offenses,
[08:13:11] including the rape of a 13-year-old girl.
[08:13:13] Jailed for five and a half years.
[08:13:15] Ahmed had been a labor counselor since 1990
[08:13:18] and was elevated to peerage by Blair.
[08:13:20] Survivors described him as part of the same networks
[08:13:23] that enabled Rothrand's grooming gangs.
[08:13:25] A survivor publicly demanded that he be stripped
[08:13:27] of his peerage and truly shamed.
[08:13:29] The former labor counselor pleaded guilty
[08:13:31] to sex offenses against a child
[08:13:34] after approaching a 13-year-old asking if she was a virgin.
[08:13:38] The labor counselor Carol Clark faced formal complaints after allegedly warning her pedophile
[08:13:42] son of his impending arrest in a grooming gang-related investigation while simultaneously voting
[08:13:49] on grooming gang matters.
[08:13:50] The former later MP, Evor Chaplin, was arrested for grooming a 15-year-old child in 2025.
[08:13:57] These were not isolated bad apples.
[08:13:59] These were labor members operating in the very councils where grooming gangs thrived
[08:14:03] under political cover.
[08:14:05] Enablers in positions of power.
[08:14:07] So now we go down the list. Beyond direct offending, senior labor figures either failed
[08:14:13] the crackdown on rate gangs or obstructed efforts to do so.
[08:14:17] Sean Wright, remained opposed despite knowing the scale of the abuse, resigned only after
[08:14:24] the J report exposed his department's catastrophic failure. Roger Stone, presided over local
[08:14:30] government during the cover-up that documented in the J report. Multiple, Rotherham Labor
[08:14:36] councillors interfered with police investigations, tipped off perpetrators or dismissed victims
[08:14:41] as making lifestyle choices, the lifestyle of being raped, to protect community relations
[08:14:46] and votes. While Keir Starmer was a director of public prosecutions, it has been reported
[08:14:52] that 13,000 suspected rape gang members and pedophiles were let off with warning letters.
[08:14:58] You better stop that.
[08:15:02] Better stop.
[08:15:03] You gotta stop raping.
[08:15:06] We've had enough of your bullshit.
[08:15:08] Oh my god.
[08:15:10] I stated earlier the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, repeatedly insisted there were no grooming
[08:15:15] gangs operating in the city.
[08:15:16] He described evidence from whistleblowers as politically motivated.
[08:15:19] He told the London Assembly that child sexual exploitation in the capital is far more...
[08:15:24] Oh, it's so complex.
[08:15:27] And it doesn't fit grooming gang style patterns on display across deprived northern towns.
[08:15:32] These statements he made despite the fact that the Metropolitan Police had in its possession
[08:15:36] reports of young girls being plied with alcohol and drugs and then raped by groups of men
[08:15:42] in hotels and other locations across London.
[08:15:45] A Daily Express investigation revealed that Khan had direct access to these documents
[08:15:50] and the very patterns of offending that he had denied.
[08:15:53] had read these files and yet continued to deny the existence of grooming gangs.
[08:15:57] Well, even if he hadn't read them, he would have denied them no matter what.
[08:16:06] Siddiqui's an apologist.
[08:16:09] Overall the Labor Party did not just fail to prosecute the gangs.
[08:16:12] In some cases, its own members were the abusers.
[08:16:15] And in most cases, its counselors, leaders, and ministers put loyalty to Pakistani Muslim
[08:16:20] voting blocks before child safety.
[08:16:22] No other political party has such well-documented track record of direct involvement and with
[08:16:27] institutional protection of industrial-scale child rape.
[08:16:32] This was at large part due to Labor's own electoral self-interest.
[08:16:36] The Conservative Party, when holding national power from 2010 onwards, failed to impose mandatory
[08:16:43] ethnicity recording for child sexual exploitation offenders and failed to launch a nationwide
[08:16:49] statutory report, despite scale becoming public throughout Rotheram Jay report and other revelations.
[08:16:55] Successful conservative-led governments have allowed the same local cover-ups to continue
[08:16:59] unchecked in non-labor areas and did nothing to force data transparency or protect children
[08:17:05] outside of labor strongholds.
[08:17:07] The national political environment under conservative administrations permitted the gangs to operate
[08:17:12] for another decade without systematic disruption.
[08:17:15] a proud islamophile the former conservative minister rory stewart
[08:17:19] is a stand-up example of the malaise within the party
[08:17:22] stewart once stated on his podcast with alistair cambell the rest is politics
[08:17:26] that the grooming gang phenomenon
[08:17:28] is no more than a small-scale small-scale blight largely confined to the north
[08:17:33] of england thank you as to the subs i appreciate it never feel like you have
[08:17:36] to support me
[08:17:37] i'd much rather you support the organizations that are actually trying
[08:17:40] to advocate against this if you want me to be honest
[08:17:43] uh... all all i can do like uh... you know i i can just let people know
[08:17:47] nobody has to sell nobody has to support me i'm doing great
[08:17:50] just the way it is keep in mind
[08:17:53] at the very least this down place the national pattern documented in witness
[08:17:57] statements in towns and cities across the country that was reinforced the
[08:18:00] political reluctance to confront the full scale
[08:18:03] sammy woodhouse that david cameron is early as two thousand twenty five and
[08:18:07] told him everything that she knew up to an including the fact that many child
[08:18:11] victims were still being criminalized. The number of prominent figures within the
[08:18:15] Conservative Party have become more vocal about the rape gang phenomena to
[08:18:18] miss the issues rising political salience and even so Conservative
[08:18:23] Prime Minister is from David Cameron to Rishi Sunak have done very little in
[08:18:27] government because they want the votes too. They act like they don't but the
[08:18:32] reason why they're doing this is they're trying to act like it doesn't matter.
[08:18:37] Scottish politics. John Lamont's MP's evidence to our inquiry shows the same
[08:18:42] reluctance operated north of the English border. Suggestive successive
[08:18:47] excuse me Scottish governments across parties with clear labor influence in
[08:18:51] earlier periods refused to commission a dedicated national inquiry into grooming
[08:18:56] gangs failing to introduce specific CSE markers and fell short of routinely
[08:19:01] recording the ethnicity of the offenders. The data gap prevented the
[08:19:05] development of any proper national picture and enabled rate gain networks to continue
[08:19:10] unchecked in both Erbun and rural Scotland.
[08:19:14] Pregnancy, abortion, and children born of rape.
[08:19:19] What a fucking tagline.
[08:19:21] Oh good, let's read this.
[08:19:24] Gangs deliberately use pregnancy as a tool of control.
[08:19:27] Girls as young as, wait, four?
[08:19:31] I thought it meant 14.
[08:19:32] No, four.
[08:19:33] were raped repeatedly, some until they became pregnant.
[08:19:37] Preparators then exploited the pregnancy
[08:19:39] to bind the victims to them, prevent it,
[08:19:41] and exert ongoing coercion.
[08:19:43] Victims endured multiple pregnancies
[08:19:45] while still children themselves.
[08:19:46] Some miscarried under the physical and emotional trauma.
[08:19:49] Others were coerced into abortions.
[08:19:51] Those who carried the term gave birth to children
[08:19:54] and were left without support, education, or protection.
[08:19:57] Many of these victims had themselves been born of rape
[08:20:00] to mothers who suffered identical exploitation.
[08:20:02] This is generational, like I said.
[08:20:04] The state would often remove the babies for adoption
[08:20:07] and then place the same, that's what the Epstein file,
[08:20:09] that's what they did in the Epstein files too.
[08:20:11] But over there, I guess it's the British state doing it.
[08:20:13] That's interesting.
[08:20:15] Anyway, the same failing care system
[08:20:17] while leaving the young mothers in the environments
[08:20:19] where the abuse continued.
[08:20:20] Intergenerational trauma became institutionalized.
[08:20:24] Abortions were sometimes arranged by the perpetrators
[08:20:27] or their associates, often in back street conditions
[08:20:29] that caused lasting physical damage.
[08:20:31] Medical services recorded the pregnancies and injuries,
[08:20:34] but discharged the girls back to the abusers
[08:20:37] without safeguarding or long-term support.
[08:20:39] Social services in the NHS treated the pregnancies
[08:20:42] as isolated medical events rather than the evidence
[08:20:44] of organized child rape.
[08:20:46] The state severed the maternal bond
[08:20:48] while failing to break the cycle of abuse.
[08:20:51] The other babies remained with their mothers
[08:20:54] who were themselves still children,
[08:20:55] producing immediate harm typically involving
[08:20:58] a disrupted education, substance addiction,
[08:21:00] mental collapse, and their repeated contact with the criminal justice system.
[08:21:05] Victims who had been born to rape, to earlier victims, described the same patterns repeating
[08:21:09] across generations.
[08:21:11] Every statutory agency encountered these pregnancies, hospitals to sexual health clinics, to recorded
[08:21:17] genital injuries, STIs, pregnancies from 11 to 16-year-olds, but made no protective
[08:21:23] rituals.
[08:21:24] They were all complicit in it, and they all said that it was okay.
[08:21:29] ignored it. They turned a blind eye and they did it on purpose.
[08:21:38] Mental health services discharged girls after suicide attempts linked to the pregnancies
[08:21:41] without trauma care. Social services closed cases and returned the young mothers to risk
[08:21:46] environments. Police failed to investigate the rapes that caused the pregnancies, even
[08:21:51] when the perpetrators were named and known. Licensing authorities allowed the taxis that
[08:21:57] transported pregnant girls to continue operating.
[08:22:00] The family law courts made things worse for victims
[08:22:03] across the board, often by awarding rapists,
[08:22:06] parental rights over the very children
[08:22:08] begotten from their heinous crimes.
[08:22:11] And in some cases, such rapists have even been allowed
[08:22:14] to apply for a contact order to meet their grandchildren.
[08:22:23] Not good.
[08:22:25] Yeah.
[08:22:27] not good. Impact on survivors. The rape gangs destroyed the lives of hundreds of thousands
[08:22:33] of children. That's not true. It destroys the entire family. Like, it doesn't, it destroys
[08:22:38] the parents, it destroys potentially the younger people that are going to be the kids
[08:22:42] of these people. This is, it's an AOE effect. It doesn't just, obviously the children are
[08:22:47] the worst affected, but that's just one part of it.
[08:22:53] Survivors live with permanent physical and psychological damage that no institution can
[08:22:56] never properly address. They carry lifelong PTSD, complex trauma, addiction,
[08:23:02] chronic pain, interrupted education, criminal records, lost children and lived
[08:23:06] with permanent fear. Many attempted suicide and sadly some succeeded.
[08:23:10] Others lost their own children due to the same system that failed them. The
[08:23:13] state did not nearly fail to protect the survivors, but it confounded the harm
[08:23:17] by criminalizing them, discharging them from hospitals without support,
[08:23:21] removing their babies and leaving them in environments where the abuse could
[08:23:24] continue. The evidence shows a national pattern of lifelong devastation inflicted on children who
[08:23:30] were raped, trafficked and pregnant and then abandoned by every agency meant to help them.
[08:23:36] Fiona was raped repeatedly from age 13 while in care. She became pregnant at 15 and her child
[08:23:41] was removed for adoption while she remained in the same exploitative environment. Due to her abuse,
[08:23:47] she developed psychosis at 17 and mutilated her own legs with a blade because the gangs had
[08:23:52] complimented them during her abuse. She now lives with profound PTSD, substance dependency,
[08:23:58] and long-term physical health complications due to her abuse. By the way, from a purely utilitarian
[08:24:03] perspective, this costs people money. Fucking somebody's head up like this, this is gonna cost
[08:24:09] people money forever. It's not just like, oh my god, this is bad. Now you have to also take
[08:24:14] care of this person too, because they're so fucking fucked up, right? Duh, I wonder why.
[08:24:19] Michelle suffered near daily rape from age 13 became pregnant four times as a child four times as a child
[08:24:27] Endured miscarriages and a chorus abortion gave birth while still a teenager
[08:24:32] She describes her childhood and future as destroyed as she lives with PTSD that affects every day of her life
[08:24:38] Koli was raped repeatedly from age 11 contacted multiple STIs as a 13 year old
[08:24:43] Starved to five stone 70 pounds drugged with heroin imprisoned in her own home
[08:24:48] home and publicly humiliated. She now carries severe genealogical damage and
[08:24:53] glyphone trauma. Leanne was abused from infancy, trafficked and subjected to
[08:24:58] extreme violence including penetration by objects, strangulation, backstreet
[08:25:02] abortions. She gives us profound physical injuries and a total lack of trust in
[08:25:06] every institution. Not a blamer. Grace was groomed from an early adolescence,
[08:25:11] raped while intoxicated, entered violent domestic relationships and watched
[08:25:15] her own children abused. She suffers severe mental illness, displacement, and ongoing stalking.
[08:25:20] Kate endured a decade of trafficking, filmed blackmail, red rooms of torture, animal rape,
[08:25:27] and witnessed murders of other girls. She received an NRM conclusive grounds,
[08:25:32] but despite this has received very little support and lives with trauma that she has to manage daily.
[08:25:37] Anna's recorded assault at 13 led to ostracism, repeated interruptions, sorry, interrupted
[08:25:43] education and lasting mental health damage. Jen was forcibly converted, married, and then
[08:25:49] controlled under religious coercion, and now she has complex PTSD and lives in fear for her daughter.
[08:25:55] Leanne was held captive, beaten and raped while pregnant at 15. She miscarried and now suffers
[08:26:01] chronic fibromyalgia and psychological trauma. Taylor was gang-raped across multiple towns,
[08:26:08] and she carries lifelong psychological harm.
[08:26:11] Jane was trafficked from a care placement,
[08:26:14] developed severe eating disorder, was sectioned,
[08:26:16] and the left was laughing physical and psychiatric damage.
[08:26:20] Rachel's daughter, age 12, was raped, bullied,
[08:26:23] and abandoned by police and school.
[08:26:25] She took her own life.
[08:26:28] Every survivor describes the same long-term consequences,
[08:26:33] destroyed education and employment prospects,
[08:26:35] broken relationships, inability to trust adults and institutions,
[08:26:40] chronic physical pain addiction, repeated suicide attempts,
[08:26:46] loss of children, and a permanent sense of shame and worthlessness
[08:26:49] implanted by the gangs and reinforced by the state.
[08:26:53] The human cost is not abstract but measured in ruined lives,
[08:26:57] lost futures, and children born into the same hell
[08:27:01] their mothers endured.
[08:27:05] Conclusions.
[08:27:06] Evidence from high-profile convictions compiled data on group child sex
[08:27:09] voice predictions indicates a clear over-representation of Pakistani Muslim men
[08:27:14] as members of the rape gangs.
[08:27:16] However, when examining the religious dimension, often inferred from published
[08:27:20] names and court records and reliable reporting, the proportion of Muslim
[08:27:23] perpetrators appears even higher than the ethnic Pakistani figure alone would
[08:27:28] suggest.
[08:27:29] Analysis of conviction lists, such as those compiled by researchers from the late 1990s
[08:27:33] and onwards, have found that approximately 90% of those convicted in relevant grooming
[08:27:38] cases bore distinctively Muslim names a stark contrast to the 6% of the population that's
[08:27:45] apparently Muslim.
[08:27:46] It's a pretty, pretty high ratio, right?
[08:27:54] 6% of the population, 90% of the convictions for grooming gangs.
[08:28:02] What are the odds of that?
[08:28:05] The pattern arises because near we all documented Pakistani perpetrators in these cases have
[08:28:09] Muslim names and additional convictions have involved the Muslim men from other backgrounds.
[08:28:13] For example, Somalia, Iranian, Syrian, Turkish and mixed groups and predominately Islamic
[08:28:17] names.
[08:28:18] Non-Muslim participants remain exceptions, often isolated incidents in smaller or mixed
[08:28:23] groups.
[08:28:24] recurring observations drawn from judicial outcomes, inquiries, and other public records
[08:28:29] establish a basis for advocating improved official data collection on the religion of perpetrators
[08:28:34] and in group based child sexual, in all, I think in all crimes.
[08:28:39] You need to be, it's very clear that certain races commit certain crimes more often.
[08:28:42] Like I know this is politically incorrect to say, but it's politically incorrect, but
[08:28:46] it is actually in fact correct.
[08:28:48] Yeah, this is true.
[08:28:49] And we need to be looking at that because it's real.
[08:28:52] If you're not willing to look at reality, then you're living in a fantasy and you're
[08:28:56] hurting other people.
[08:28:57] You can't do that.
[08:28:59] Current national data frequently lacks robust recording of ethnicity and religion is even
[08:29:03] less systematically captured, limiting evidence-based analysis and responses, enhanced mandatory
[08:29:09] recordings of both ethnicity and religion, alongside other characteristics for suspects
[08:29:13] of convicted offenders in these offenses, would enable clearer identification of patterns
[08:29:18] and better informed prevention strategies and more proficient policy interventions.
[08:29:23] While addressing long-standing criticisms of data inadequacies highlighted in government
[08:29:27] reviews and reports, the evidence heard in this inquiry is unequivocal, overwhelming,
[08:29:32] and devastating in its clarity.
[08:29:35] Organized networks of Muslim men systematically raped, trafficked, drugged, impregnated, and
[08:29:39] destroyed the lives of thousands upon thousands of British children across every region of
[08:29:45] the United Kingdom for decades.
[08:29:48] when the docking in the patterns from rotham, telford, rochdale, oxford, newcastle, oldham,
[08:29:52] hushfield, it's a lot of places, all right.
[08:29:56] They're all the other shires.
[08:29:59] The dozens of the other towns and cities are extrapolated nationally.
[08:30:02] The scale reaches at least 250,000 victims.
[08:30:08] This is not a collection of isolated local scandals.
[08:30:11] It is a national scandal of industrial scale child rape and modern day slavery enabled,
[08:30:17] protected and prolonged by the deliberate failures of the British state at every single
[08:30:22] level.
[08:30:23] The testimony of the survivors and their families leaves no room for denial or equivocation.
[08:30:28] Sally watched her daughter's life unravel.
[08:30:31] Although her daughter has admitted to lying on occasion, the police privately acknowledged
[08:30:34] grooming, yet in public communications treated her as only a liar.
[08:30:39] Marlon has had his parental authority stripped away so his daughter could be returned to
[08:30:43] the very place where she was raped.
[08:30:45] Whitney's reports of exploitation were dismissed
[08:30:47] while her own childhood trauma was used
[08:30:49] to undermine her credibility as a mother.
[08:30:51] Rachel Shaw, her 12-year-old autistic daughter,
[08:30:54] discouraged from pursuing justice bully relentlessly
[08:30:57] and ultimately driven to her death by an overdose
[08:30:59] after the authorities failed her at every turn.
[08:31:01] Fiona Michelle, Chloe Marie, Grace, Anna, Kate,
[08:31:05] Leann, Taylor, Jane, Lily, and so many others
[08:31:09] described the same relentless pattern,
[08:31:11] repeated rape, gang rape, blackmail with filmed abuse,
[08:31:15] Pregnancy used as weapons of control, miscarriages,
[08:31:18] coerced abortion, and the cycle of birth to children
[08:31:21] who entered the world already condemned to the same cycle.
[08:31:25] These were not all vulnerable children
[08:31:27] and narrow sense of authorities preferred to believe.
[08:31:30] Some came from stable homes, middle class families,
[08:31:32] and loving parents.
[08:31:34] The perpetrators targeted them precisely
[08:31:35] because they were unguarded by the collective male
[08:31:38] protection that some minority communities could mobilize.
[08:31:41] The gangs operated under an honor and shame
[08:31:44] based clan code that treated non-Muslims, especially white working class girls, as property
[08:31:49] available for sexual use.
[08:31:51] They transported victims between towns, shared them among brothers and friends, and forced
[08:31:56] conversions to Islam, followed by an unregistered religious marriage that justifies the abuse
[08:32:02] by describing the girls as easy meat, white trash, or morally inferior.
[08:32:07] The same networks targeted Sikh girls until Sikh communities responded with collective
[08:32:11] male protection.
[08:32:13] White girls receive no such defense because, again, any white man doing this would be accused
[08:32:19] of racism.
[08:32:20] It's not because white men would not do this, it's because they're not allowed to do this.
[08:32:25] Every institution existed to protect children instead enabled the gangs.
[08:32:30] Police forces across England and Scotland discouraged reporting, criminalized victims,
[08:32:35] destroyed evidence, and allowed known rapists to walk free on bail, and in some cases actively
[08:32:40] participated in or shielded the networks. Social care removed parental authority, placed children
[08:32:46] in trafficking hubs inside children's homes, and in semi-independent units closed cases despite
[08:32:52] clear evidence of exploitation, destroyed records, and retaliated against whistleblowers. The NHS
[08:32:59] recorded genital injuries, multiple STIs in 13-year-olds, pregnancies caused by rapes,
[08:33:05] and suicide attempts yet discharged the children back to their abusers the same night without
[08:33:11] safeguarding or trauma care. Schools watch older men collect girls at the gate, heard
[08:33:17] disclosures of rape and toilets and excluded the victims rather than protecting them.
[08:33:23] Tasking licensing authorities renewed permits for the very drivers who formed the logistical
[08:33:28] background of the trafficking networks and collapsed in the face of organized protests
[08:33:33] when basic safety measures were proposed.
[08:33:36] The media self-centered the ethnic and religious pattern
[08:33:40] for fear of being labeled racist.
[08:33:42] Social media platforms became the primary tools
[08:33:45] for the initial grooming, distribution of rate videos
[08:33:48] and coordination between perpetrators.
[08:33:50] Politics, especially the Labor Party,
[08:33:52] bears the heaviest responsibility.
[08:33:55] Counselors and MPs sat on the very authorities
[08:33:57] that covered up the abuse.
[08:33:59] They were briefed as early as 2003
[08:34:01] through the crop multi-agency group yet later denied the knowledge when finally forced to act
[08:34:07] the labor government produced a national inquiry whose terms of reference were so tightly drawn
[08:34:13] limited to group-based child sexual exploitation in a handful of relevant local areas,
[08:34:21] time-gated and deliberately excluding any systematic examination of the demographic,
[08:34:26] cultural or religious drivers that it cannot possibly confront the truths
[08:34:31] that this inquiry has heard. Labor did not merely fail to protect children. It actively
[08:34:36] obstructed justice, suppressed ethnicity data, voted against a proper national inquiry,
[08:34:42] and sacrificed tens of thousands of white working-class girls to the alt- that's what I said,
[08:34:47] to the altar of multiculturalism and electoral over arithmetic.
[08:34:53] Ma'am, that's exactly what I said.
[08:35:01] True. Yes, true.
[08:35:04] A Conservative Party, while in a national government from 2010 onwards, failed.
[08:35:09] It did not impose mandatory ethnicity recording, nor did it launch a nationwide statutory inquiry,
[08:35:14] despite the Rotherham Jay report and other revelations.
[08:35:17] Rory Stewart, a former Conservative minister, publicly described the issue as a small problem confined to the north of England.
[08:35:24] He downplayed the national reality and thus showed the attitude of at least, at the very least, a section of the party,
[08:35:30] party. Scottish politics mirrored the same reluctance, refusing a dedicated
[08:35:34] inquiry and failing to record offender ethnicity. The human cost is incalculable
[08:35:39] and permanent. Survivors carry lifelong PTSD, complex trauma, addiction, chronic
[08:35:45] physical pain, interrupted education, criminal records, lost children and
[08:35:50] unrelenting fear. Many of the attempted suicide repeatedly, many have attempted
[08:35:56] suicide repeatedly, and some have succeeded. Others have lost their own children to the
[08:36:00] same failing system that failed them. The gangs used pregnancy as a deliberate weapon
[08:36:05] for control, and the state compounded the harm by removing babies for adoption or placing
[08:36:11] them in care while abandoning the young mothers and the environments where the abuse continued.
[08:36:15] The child mothers. Intergenerational trauma has been institutionalized. The state recorded
[08:36:21] the injuries, the STIs, the pregnancies, and the disclosures yet chose votes, so-called
[08:36:27] community relations, and fear of racism accusations over the protection of British children.
[08:36:34] Whistleblowers you tried to expose the truth, such as a silky worker, cave and vines, Tommy
[08:36:40] Robinson, and countless other protected parents were suspended, bankrupted, subjected to
[08:36:45] to dawn raids, asset freezing, and gagging orders.
[08:36:49] Again, Rupert Lowe had a raid on his house too.
[08:36:51] The rule of law failed and racial and religious aggravation
[08:36:56] almost never applied to the few that were convicted.
[08:36:59] National offenders were rarely deported
[08:37:02] and sentences bore no relation to the lifetime
[08:37:04] of destruction that was inflicted.
[08:37:07] This inquiry has heard the testimony.
[08:37:09] It has seen the documents
[08:37:10] and it has recorded the names of the officers,
[08:37:12] social workers, counselors,
[08:37:15] Ministers and institutions that failed the evidence is now overwhelming and refutable the rape gangs did not operate in the shadows
[08:37:23] But with the active and passive consent of the British state the betrayal was total
[08:37:31] Man
[08:37:33] They got the receipts they need them. I mean like that's really what it is like. Yeah, you got to have those receipts. What do you mean?
[08:37:39] Selling out their country. Yeah, and this is it. I wonder why they're trying to ban social media guys
[08:37:44] Geez, it's really interesting. Yeah, it's probably just a really big coincidence, isn't it?
[08:37:49] You're doing great. I know and I just mean one second. I gotta do something
[08:37:58] And will their names in a document be calling them out? Well, not yet
[08:38:02] They're probably gonna go through the legal process to not complicate it by making it public, right? I think that makes sense
[08:38:08] The evidence presented this inquiry by victims and whistleblowers demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that the rape gangs operated
[08:38:14] with either the active or passive consent to public authorities.
[08:38:18] More or less, every institution failed.
[08:38:20] The state knew the patterns, recorded them, and then often destroyed the evidence of
[08:38:24] harm and chose political convenience over child protection.
[08:38:27] Any government that aspires to restore justice, eliminate the gangs, and protect the next
[08:38:31] generation must implement the following recommendations.
[08:38:35] Only then can the British state begin to make up for its profound betrayal of hundreds of
[08:38:41] thousands of British children.
[08:38:43] justice response. Victims must be placed at the center of criminal justice process. They
[08:38:47] must have the right to be informed of all decisions to attend sentencing hearings and
[08:38:51] to submit victim personal statements that carry statutory weight. Independent sexual
[08:38:55] violence advisors must be funded nationally and assigned to every grooming gang victim
[08:39:00] from the moment of the first report. Sentences. The current sentencing guidelines are grotesquely
[08:39:05] inaccurate for organized child rape. I don't think that they are. I don't think that these
[08:39:10] These guys should go to jail at all, actually.
[08:39:13] That's what I think.
[08:39:14] I don't think we should send them to jail.
[08:39:18] Seems like a bad idea.
[08:39:25] No jail time?
[08:39:26] Totally agree.
[08:39:28] The sentencing council must be required for statute to revise its guidelines so that group-based
[08:39:33] child exploitation carries a starting point in life imprisonment with a maximum tariff
[08:39:37] of 50 years for ringleaders and 25 years for participants.
[08:39:41] Racial or religious motivation, multiple victims, trafficking across counties, pregnancy caused
[08:39:47] by rape, the use of filming or blackmail must each be spelled out as statutory or aggravating
[08:39:53] factors that push sentences toward their maximum extent.
[08:39:58] Current sentencing must be prohibited where multiple victims are involved.
[08:40:02] Humidive sentencing must be the default.
[08:40:04] The number of politicians, including Rupert Well-MP, have also called for a referendum
[08:40:09] on reintroducing the DEFT penalty for the most heinous crimes.
[08:40:13] There is a case to be made that this is more than proportionate where rape gangs are concerned.
[08:40:18] I think we should do it all the time.
[08:40:21] That's my opinion.
[08:40:23] Immigration deportations and denaturalizations.
[08:40:26] Every foreign national convicted of group-baked CSE must at the very least be deported.
[08:40:31] Many British citizens convicted of these offenses who hold dual nationality must lose their
[08:40:36] citizenship automatically upon conviction, rendering them liable for deportation.
[08:40:41] This ought to apply retrospectively to all of the convicted in the past.
[08:40:46] The Home Office must publish annual deportation figures broken down by national background
[08:40:51] and offense type.
[08:40:52] Where a perpetrator has family members in Britain who have supported, harbored, or failed
[08:40:56] to report the offending, the entire immediate family unit must also face deportation proceedings
[08:41:03] themselves unless they can prove either active cooperation with authorities or no prior knowledge.
[08:41:09] The evidence from what, yeah, and by the way, I agree with this, you should start by assuming
[08:41:13] that they knew. You start guilty. That's the way I see it. You start guilty and you have
[08:41:20] to prove you're innocent. Shouldn't even be here in the first place. Should be lucky
[08:41:29] we're letting them leave. It's my thing. The evidence from witnesses, convictions,
[08:41:34] and the case the audit shows a clear, open representation to Muslim men, particularly
[08:41:38] Pakistani heritage in these organized networks. The inquiry has not ignored this. Mosques,
[08:41:43] Madrasas, and community organizations that have harbored or failed to report perpetrators
[08:41:48] must face investigation and if find guilty, if found guilty, be closed.
[08:41:52] The immediate deportation of anyone nested within any of these subcultures, eroding attitudes
[08:41:58] that dehumanized non-Muslim girls must be pursued.
[08:42:02] The nations of the world are not identical.
[08:42:04] Ultra-select the border control.
[08:42:06] Attentive to general patterns in sending countries is therefore also vital to the long-term happiness
[08:42:11] and continued existence of the host of the peoples across the West.
[08:42:16] policy must be immediately reflecting this evidence. Anyone from a country whose nationals
[08:42:21] are disproportionately represented in a rape gang convictions must no longer be entitled
[08:42:26] to a visa. This should be applied ruthlessly. Our young girls must come first.
[08:42:32] Special measures for child witnesses and grooming gangs must be strengthened, pre-recorded evidence,
[08:42:37] remote testimony, and screens must be the default. Cross-examination that re-traumatizes
[08:42:41] the child must be prohibited. The court must appoint a specialist intermediary in every
[08:42:46] case. The CPS must create a dedicated national unit for a group-based child sexual exploitation
[08:42:57] with specialist prosecutors trained in trauma-informed practice. Charging decisions must no longer
[08:43:03] be influenced by community impact or by fear of racism allegations. Failure to charge a
[08:43:09] a clear case must be reviewable by the Attorney General and should result in criminal liability
[08:43:14] for those who do not carry out their duty.
[08:43:17] Exactly.
[08:43:19] Overseas Task Force.
[08:43:20] It has been established that organized gangs chiefly of Pakistani heritage have not only
[08:43:25] groomed, raped, and tortured thousands of women and girls across Britain, but have also
[08:43:30] trafficked such victims overseas, particularly to Pakistan and other countries, like the
[08:43:35] guy that said he took his kid to Iraq.
[08:43:37] Remember that?
[08:43:38] evidence of the independent hearings, early-day motions in Parliament, and of course the survivor
[08:43:43] testimonies presented to this inquiry served to suggest as much. The intent by perpetrators was
[08:43:49] to exert near total control to prevent disclosure of the abuse, to obstruct homegrown investigations,
[08:43:55] and to continue inflicting abuse in environments with weaker safeguards.
[08:44:00] The full extent remains under-investigated due to historical institutional failures,
[08:44:05] not failures, intentional failures.
[08:44:11] By police, councils and social services
[08:44:13] often link to concerns over racism, allegations,
[08:44:16] or inadequate cross-border cooperation.
[08:44:19] This must be rectified.
[08:44:21] It is therefore recommended that a dedicated task force
[08:44:23] established within the Foreign Commonwealth
[08:44:25] and Development Office,
[08:44:26] working with a close liaison with the Home Office,
[08:44:29] Police Forces and National Crime Agency
[08:44:31] and its international partners.
[08:44:33] This unit should prioritize identification
[08:44:35] location safeguarding and urgent repatriation of affected British women and girls. This means
[08:44:41] enhanced constitutional support, intelligence sharing on missing persons cases reported in
[08:44:46] known grooming hotspots, targeted reviews of passports and travel records linked to known
[08:44:51] perpetrators, and diplomatic pressure on destination countries for victim extraction and evidence
[08:44:56] gathering. Compensation. A national compensation scheme for grooming victims must be set up at once.
[08:45:04] something similar already exists in the form of criminal injuries compensation
[08:45:08] established in theory to seek compensation on behalf of people
[08:45:11] physically and mentally injured because of a violent crime that's right
[08:45:14] because they're totally fucked they're fucked for life right
[08:45:18] and uh...
[08:45:19] seek a uh... truly does so by suing authorities and perpetrators directly
[08:45:23] but it's proven time and time again to be unfit for the purpose in all sorts of
[08:45:26] ways
[08:45:27] despite providing evidence that helped convict the leader of rothram based
[08:45:30] that rape gang, Sammy Woodhouse has refused compensation by CISA on the grounds that she
[08:45:36] had consented to her own abuse.
[08:45:38] Well, sorry, was refused, not did, has refused.
[08:45:43] Sammy Woodhouse was refused compensation because she consented to her own abuse.
[08:45:49] In our view, awards should be updated to reflect the lifelong harm documented in suburban
[08:45:52] testimony, including loss of education, employment, mental health, physical health, family health.
[08:45:58] The scheme must be funded as a levy on all convicted perpetrators, assets, and by the
[08:46:04] defined benefit punishments enjoyed by the public servants, either by police forces or
[08:46:10] social services found guilty or dismissed for culpable negligence.
[08:46:15] The law must place the protective family at the center of safeguarding.
[08:46:20] As such, the core principle should underpin the safeguarding reform is the recognition
[08:46:24] that a child's family tends to represent the first, strongest, and most effective line
[08:46:28] of defense against exploitation. While there are circumstances in which children cannot
[08:46:32] safely remain with their family unit, exploitation cases generally differ from traditional intrafamilial
[08:46:38] abuse models. President safeguarding systems do not always reflect this distinction. Families
[08:46:45] may experience responses that frame them as primarily the contributors to risk rather
[08:46:49] than the potential safeguards against it. This can result in reduced trust between families
[08:46:54] professionals, parental disagreements from safeguard procedures, delayed information
[08:46:58] sharing, and increased isolation of the child from protective relationships and perpetrators
[08:47:03] exploiting divisions between families and agencies.
[08:47:07] So basically, they treat the family like the criminals, and big fucking surprise, that's
[08:47:12] going to cause people to do a whole lot more, right?
[08:47:16] That's a lot.
[08:47:17] Yeah, so basically, it exacerbates the problem, makes the problem worse just by the nature
[08:47:23] of the way that it's applied, right? So that's it. Yikes, he's still reading? Yeah. Yeah,
[08:47:30] it's not done yet. I said I was going to do it. I'm assuming some of the last pages are
[08:47:38] probably just like, you know, like kind of like a, you know, like a true attributions,
[08:47:44] right? But like, oh, then I'm not going to read, I don't need to read every single one
[08:47:46] of those, right? But like, I mean, this is, this is still the meat of it, right? We're
[08:47:50] are still in the meat.
[08:47:52] Official research strongly reinforces
[08:47:54] relational approaches to child sexual abuse,
[08:47:58] so child sexual exploitation.
[08:47:59] Big difference, huh?
[08:48:00] Recognizing the protective networks, including parents,
[08:48:02] siblings, extended family, peers, and no criminal
[08:48:04] munitionships are essential to reducing vulnerability
[08:48:07] and disrupting exploitation.
[08:48:08] Once removed from the family and the community networks,
[08:48:11] children as a general matter become more vulnerable
[08:48:13] to grooming, missing episodes, trafficking,
[08:48:16] and other forms of harm.
[08:48:17] A family first approach is therefore
[08:48:20] essential. We recommend the construction of a safeguarding framework in which families
[08:48:24] are recognized as primary protective factors wherever safe family support is prioritized.
[08:48:31] Contextual safeguarding approaches are strengthened and residential care is used proportionally
[08:48:36] as is a last resort rather than a default response to exploitation risks. This proceeds
[08:48:41] from the understanding bolstered by our inquiry that where rape gangs are concerned, parents
[08:48:46] and carers are more often protective than the cause of agents.
[08:48:50] Needless to say, this family first approach should never prevent the size of intervention
[08:48:54] in cases where home environments are deemed unsafe.
[08:48:56] Obviously, the point is safeguarding authorities must first establish on fitness as some family
[08:49:00] environment before residential placement becomes the response.
[08:49:03] Parents also have statutory right to be informed of all the risks of their child, to receive
[08:49:06] copies of all the assessments and plans, and to challenge any decision undermines or removes
[08:49:10] their parental responsibility.
[08:49:12] practical assistance involved, including emergency housing and relocation when needed, the state
[08:49:18] should not interfere with a family's ability to protect itself from harm. There it is. Legislative
[08:49:25] response. Well, this is important. The existing legislative framework is fragmented, inconsistently
[08:49:32] applied, and deliberately blind to the ethnic and religious patterns documented in this inquiry.
[08:49:37] As we have noted above, the Sexual Offenses Act of 2003, the Modern Slavery Act of 2015,
[08:49:43] among the other relevant statues, already contain powers that were never used to any
[08:49:47] significant effect against the rape gangs. Ethnicity Recording Tube remains either patchy
[08:49:52] or absent. Group-based child sexual exploitation is not even a distinct defense within its own
[08:49:57] sentencing guidelines. What? That's not even against the rule? Oh my god. That's crazy.
[08:50:06] Okay. The results sent some system that records thousands of individual offenses while concealing
[08:50:12] deliberately or otherwise the organized nature of predation. The single comprehensive Child
[08:50:18] Sexual Exploitation Act must be enacted at once. This new statute would create a specific
[08:50:22] offense for organized group-based child sexual exploitation understood as participation in
[08:50:28] networks that groom, traffic, and exploit children for sexual purposes. Whether it be not for each
[08:50:33] individual act, but separately proven with mandatory minimum sentences and aggravating
[08:50:38] factors for racial or religious motivation, it must reverse the presumption that a child can
[08:50:44] ever consent to sexual activity with an adult, especially in a group. I thought we worked
[08:50:50] through this like years ago, like decades ago, centuries ago, duh, of course, obviously.
[08:50:59] Courts to date have recognized the apparent acquiescence, maybe the product of coercion
[08:51:04] or psychological manipulation, but statutory formulation has not fully reflected this aspect
[08:51:09] of child sexual exploitation. It must also impose a statutory duty on every relevant public authority
[08:51:16] to record and publish the ethnicity, immigration status, nationality, and religion of both the
[08:51:21] victims and the perpetrators in all such cases. This would entail a speedy repeal of any legislation
[08:51:28] that forbids authorities from collecting any relevant ethnicity or religious data.
[08:51:33] Last of all, it must criminalize, as we shall elaborate below, any provably culpable failure
[08:51:39] or refusible on the part of public officials to act on rape gangs for fear of inflaming
[08:51:44] community tensions, or inviting anti-racist media scrutiny.
[08:51:48] This would build upon existing principles concerning misconduct in public, but providing
[08:51:53] a clearer and more enforceable standard.
[08:51:56] Parliament should mandate enhanced sentencing for offenses committed as part of an organized
[08:52:01] network, including a minimum custodial term and expanded use of whole life orders and
[08:52:06] extreme cases.
[08:52:08] The gravity of such offending, often involving prolonged abuse, trafficking, and commercial
[08:52:13] exploitation, justifies the harshest possible sentences.
[08:52:18] Absolutely. True.
[08:52:27] A broader constitutional question arises concerning the interaction between human rights law and the prosecution of organized sexual exploitation.
[08:52:35] is frequently argued that existing rights frameworks have been interpreted in
[08:52:38] ways that inhibit robust enforcement
[08:52:40] or contribute to institutional caution
[08:52:43] a comprehensive review of the human rights act of nineteen ninety eight
[08:52:46] should therefore be undertaken
[08:52:47] with a view of recalibrating the balance between individual rights and the
[08:52:51] protection of vulnerable victims
[08:52:53] reform should focus on ensuring that rights-based arguments cannot be deployed
[08:52:57] to obstruct investigations
[08:52:59] precautions or deportation proceedings
[08:53:01] the human rights act is just another fucking way
[08:53:04] that they use to
[08:53:06] uh... inhibit and
[08:53:08] basically uh...
[08:53:10] like render ineffective
[08:53:12] uh... any sort of western culture
[08:53:15] uh... in my opinion
[08:53:17] like i i don't i don't believe in any of that i think that's all bullshit
[08:53:21] it's just basically it's just a lot more emotional blackmail
[08:53:24] i don't recognize that having any validity whatsoever
[08:53:28] and nobody who actually cares about doing the right thing should
[08:53:32] and uh... anyway
[08:53:34] uh... ensuring the rights-based arguments can be deployed to obstruct
[08:53:36] investigations
[08:53:37] uh... involving serious sexual offending indeed is probably preferable to
[08:53:41] repeal the human rights act of nineteen ninety eight
[08:53:44] then to allow it to continue in its current form yet scared of it
[08:53:47] there are a lot i don't want those people have any rights
[08:53:50] well take away
[08:53:51] of edges but just get rid of
[08:53:54] the equality act of two thousand ten if not repealed altogether should never be
[08:53:58] applied to criminal justice and safeguarding context
[08:54:01] anti-discrimination principles must not operate as a deterrent to the identification of risk
[08:54:06] patterns and enforcement of criminal law.
[08:54:08] Short of a full repeal, at very least legislative amendments clarify that equality protections
[08:54:14] can neither be revoked or used to shield criminal conduct nor to restrict lawful investigative
[08:54:19] practices based on evidence-based risk assessment.
[08:54:23] Preventive mechanisms must be significantly expanded to address the evolving nature of
[08:54:27] child sexual exploitation, and the organized grooming networks at present.
[08:54:31] The criminal justice system remains a heavily reactive, intervening, most decisively only
[08:54:36] after the serious offenses have already occurred and the victims have suffered lasting harm.
[08:54:42] While prosecution and punishment remain essential, greater emphasis must be placed on early
[08:54:46] intervention, disruption, risk management, and the order to prevent abuse before it escalates.
[08:54:52] One vital reform would be to ensure the wider and more proactive use of these sexual or
[08:54:56] risk orders, SROs, and related civil preventive orders.
[08:55:01] In principle, these powers allow authorities to impose restrictions on individuals who
[08:55:06] demonstrate concerning behavior characteristic of sexual abusers, even where a criminal conviction
[08:55:12] has not yet been secured.
[08:55:15] Greater readiness to deploy them would give police officers and safeguarding agencies
[08:55:19] more confidence to intervene sooner rather than later, whether by restricting contact
[08:55:24] with vulnerable children, monitoring online activity, limiting access to certain locations,
[08:55:31] or preventing association with suspecting grooming networks.
[08:55:34] Such measures would help close the gap between suspicion and prosecution, where many offenders
[08:55:39] currently continue operating unchecked.
[08:55:42] For similar reasons, compulsory monitoring arrangements for high-risk offenders should
[08:55:47] be strengthened, individuals with histories of sexual violence, exploitation, trafficking,
[08:55:52] or other organized abuse should be subject to more rigorous supervision through the electronic
[08:55:57] monitoring and regular risk assessments, mandatory disclosure requirements, and closer multicultural
[08:56:03] agency, multi-agency oversight.
[08:56:05] Given the increasingly digital nature of grooming, monitoring should also include online behavior
[08:56:11] and communications were legally proportionate.
[08:56:14] supervision would not only reduce opportunities for
[08:56:17] offending, but also improve intelligence gathering on
[08:56:20] wider criminal networks.
[08:56:22] Oh my God.
[08:56:24] True.
[08:56:27] Mandatory reporting duties for institutions represent
[08:56:30] another crucial preventative safeguard. School social
[08:56:33] services, healthcare providers, care homes, charities and
[08:56:36] other organizations working with children should be placed
[08:56:38] under a clear legal obligation to report suspected abuse,
[08:56:42] exploitation or grooming activity to the appropriate authority. Too often, institutional failures
[08:56:48] out of fear of reputational damage or uncertainty about the procedures have allowed warning signs
[08:56:54] to be ignored. We saw so many examples of that, right? There's like dozens of examples of this.
[08:57:00] Yes, of course. And a statutory duty would create far greater accountability, encourage earlier
[08:57:06] referrals, and strengthen interagency cooperation. Failure to report on serious concerns, particularly
[08:57:11] by professionals and positions of trust should carry meaningful disciplinary and potentially
[08:57:16] criminal consequences. I completely agree. You have to go after these people directly.
[08:57:21] Expanding preventative powers, however, must remain consistent with the principles of proportionality,
[08:57:26] due process, and basic freedoms. Safeguarding, including judicial oversight, regular review
[08:57:31] mechanisms, and clear evidential thresholds are necessary to ensure the expanded powers are not
[08:57:35] used arbitrarily. Nevertheless, for the protection of vulnerable children as at stake, the balance of
[08:57:40] public policy should favor earlier intervention rather than waiting for a reputable harm to occur.
[08:57:46] Finally, the overarching legislative objective should be to recognize organized child sexual
[08:57:51] exploitation as a form of structural criminality. This requires a shift in both legal doctrine
[08:57:56] and institutional culture. The law must move from reactive punishment to proactive eradication
[08:58:03] of networks that exploit vulnerable children. Without such a shift, existing cultures or sorry
[08:58:08] statutes. However, numerous or severe in theory will continue to operate as
[08:58:14] instruments of respective justice rather than effective protection. So true. The
[08:58:25] following principles must be enshrined in the aforementioned child
[08:58:28] Exploitation Act.
[08:58:29] We really have to go back to this?
[08:58:34] Oh God.
[08:58:36] Oh God, we really gotta go back to this.
[08:58:40] Ah, fuck, come on.
[08:58:41] Really?
[08:58:42] What year is this?
[08:58:44] Fuck.
[08:58:45] Alright.
[08:58:46] Children can never consent.
[08:58:48] Okay.
[08:58:49] The Act must prohibit any agency or court from treating a child's previous behavior,
[08:58:55] clothing, intoxication, or quote, lifestyle choices as mitigation or consent.
[08:59:00] Any professional who uses such language in reports and proceedings must face disciplinary
[08:59:05] action and potential criminal sanction."
[08:59:07] And I like the sound of that.
[08:59:10] Accountability encourages competence.
[08:59:12] The act must contain greater clarity in the law detailing the positive expectations to
[08:59:16] which public-facing bodies with the statutory duty of care must be held accountable.
[08:59:21] front-line professionals it is of course everybody's duty to safeguard children. The
[08:59:25] clarification should be to such to require the relevant duty holder be it an
[08:59:29] individual, an organization, or some other entity to take proactive, affirmative
[08:59:34] steps to save children from group-based exploitation. Reach of this duty,
[08:59:38] whether by provable incompetence, deliberate malpractice, must be an
[08:59:43] offense. Repeated failure to act on known safeguarding indicators has been one of
[08:59:48] the defining characteristics of rape-gang scourge across Britain.
[08:59:52] Public bodies must therefore face legal, clear accountability whenever serious neglect occurs.
[08:59:58] Crimes committed by child victims of grooming on the behalf of their abusers lack the mens
[09:00:03] rea, guilty mind, to count as a criminal in a conventional sense.
[09:00:08] The act must expunge the criminal records of any child or young person convicted of
[09:00:13] crimes, including prostitution, drug possession, or public order offenses that occurred while
[09:00:19] and because they were forced to do so.
[09:00:22] You mean they didn't have this?
[09:00:25] Duh.
[09:00:27] The presumption is that they should have, the convictions were a direct result of either
[09:00:31] manipulation or coercion.
[09:00:33] Name Sammy's law after Sammy Woodhouse.
[09:00:35] This would be for the benefit of the survivors.
[09:00:36] This is, she was the one that didn't get the money.
[09:00:40] Proven rapists forfeit their parental rights.
[09:00:42] The action make it unambiguous that rapists upon conviction automatically use their parental
[09:00:48] rights.
[09:00:49] I would say their existence rights, but parental rights is a good first step over the children
[09:00:56] born at such rates.
[09:00:58] Sharia marriage.
[09:00:59] The act must prohibit Sharia marriages.
[09:01:01] Too often these have served as a pretext for abusers to exercise greater course of control
[09:01:06] over their victims.
[09:01:07] This is because Sharia courts effectively operate as a parallel judicial system, recognized
[09:01:12] in British law, but not of British law. This enables them to govern life of Muslim communities
[09:01:17] and by extension the life of any victims groomed by such communities in ways that are counter
[09:01:22] to our long-established norms and customs. All front-line response. True. Scourge. I
[09:01:31] like that. Scourge. You like that? It's good. Every front-line petition official. Police
[09:01:37] Police officers, social workers, teachers, GPs, nurses, taxi licensing officers, school
[09:01:43] staff, and youth workers must receive mandatory annual training on group-based child sexual
[09:01:49] exploitation.
[09:01:50] This training must convey the documented ethnic and religious patterns, the tactics used by
[09:01:55] the gangs, the signs of grooming, and the legal duty to act.
[09:02:00] Failure to act on clear indicators must carry a professional risk and in serious cases,
[09:02:06] criminal consequences.
[09:02:07] The National Public Awareness Campaign must be launched so that parents, neighbors and
[09:02:11] communities know exactly what to look for and who to contact.
[09:02:15] Default response of every agency must shift from disbelief and victim blaming to immediate
[09:02:20] protection and investigation.
[09:02:22] While policy change is required to hold statutory services to account, the delivery of such
[09:02:27] practices must be carefully monitored.
[09:02:29] Improving training is key.
[09:02:31] Many initiatives emphasize the need for multi-agency working, but delivery, more than emphasis,
[09:02:37] essential to effective safeguarding in practice. Previous reviews have documented the gaps in
[09:02:42] multi-agency processes. Many of them noticed as a result of the failures of the child's safeguarding.
[09:02:48] A crucial point to consider is that each service has its own guidelines, practices, and processes,
[09:02:54] all of which contribute to gaps in communication, referrals, and the like. You have to redo the
[09:02:59] whole process. This is true. And to make sure like, you know, this is like kind of like what I did,
[09:03:03] right with the oh I don't have it open yeah like I mean this is like for example like my show
[09:03:09] like they need to do a chart like this for the entire judicial system that way you see how the
[09:03:15] different systems connect and where they come in and out and all of that that's what they should do
[09:03:20] I mean anybody that cared would do that I mean logically they would do that obviously
[09:03:26] where is this here in 2022 who's the point to consider is each service is in Godline's right
[09:03:32] Okay, this means engaging in open conversations,
[09:03:34] demonstrating professional curiosity,
[09:03:36] and airing on the side of over-sharing information
[09:03:38] to safeguard children.
[09:03:39] In 2022, the British Journal of General Practice
[09:03:43] published an article on the work of Sharon Dixon,
[09:03:46] these different people, I'm gonna go through the names.
[09:03:48] Relationship building is at the heart
[09:03:50] of multi-agency working.
[09:03:52] It read, and sharing stories and findings
[09:03:55] can be part of this.
[09:03:56] When research is primarily conducted and shared
[09:03:58] within single agency professional meetings
[09:04:00] and publications, opportunities to do this may be missed.
[09:04:03] This buttresses the findings of this inquiry.
[09:04:06] Cross-agency training is vital to facilitating multi-agency
[09:04:09] working.
[09:04:10] We therefore recommend that cross-agency child safeguarding
[09:04:13] training be made mandatory for all statutory services.
[09:04:17] The inquiry further recommends that the agencies work together
[09:04:19] to agree the joint working practices and the policies
[09:04:23] to prevent confidentiality acting as a barrier
[09:04:26] to sharing pivotal information in circumstances that may not
[09:04:29] only serve to protect children, but prove life-saving.
[09:04:32] Safeguarding posters, outlining signs of child grooming
[09:04:36] and exploitation should be displayed in public areas
[09:04:39] of all health clinics, including GP surgeries,
[09:04:42] sexual health clinics, A&E departments, inpatient areas,
[09:04:46] and mental health clinics, and any other area
[09:04:48] assessed by those attending health care facilities.
[09:04:51] This should be attended to schools and youth centers.
[09:04:55] Let's go drink a drink.
[09:04:59] Yeah, amazing. This isn't all in place. Yeah, I thought like, weren't you supposed to already
[09:05:06] have this? Like, I would assume so, right? I mean, duh. But maybe not. I don't know. Let's
[09:05:11] keep going. Policing must be reformed from the ground up. Every force must be required
[09:05:16] to record the ethnicity, immigration status, nationality, and religion of both victims
[09:05:21] and perpetrators in all child sexual exploitation cases. A national marker for group based child
[09:05:27] sexual exploitation must be mandatory. Specialist child sexual exploitation units must be established
[09:05:34] and in every force with dedicated resources for proactive disruption. Ethno-religious
[09:05:39] lobbying against proper law enforcement must be resisted on principle.
[09:05:44] Policing. The current framework in which the law enforcement approaches child exploitation
[09:05:48] is untrue to the real-world nuances of the problem. In order to reform better, police
[09:05:53] Police must deepen their cooperation with other multi-agency CSE panels designed to
[09:05:58] identify and safeguard children at the risk of exploitation.
[09:06:02] At present, the efforts take place largely at a local level without sufficient coordination.
[09:06:07] Multi-agency CSE panels either also lack statutory footing or a nationally mandated operational
[09:06:13] framework.
[09:06:14] As a result, performance varies from place to place.
[09:06:17] Evidence from serious case reviews and major inquiries, including those arising from
[09:06:21] educations, investigations, sorry, in Rothram and Rochdale games indicates the lack of consistent
[09:06:28] playbook set down nationwide contributed to safeguarding failures.
[09:06:32] So basically, there's no, there's no actual like overarching structure to this.
[09:06:38] It's just, you know, they're all kind of taking shots in the dark.
[09:06:41] What about corrupt cops though?
[09:06:42] Again, you never, you're never going to reduce this to zero.
[09:06:46] It's about getting close to zero.
[09:06:48] It's about re, it's about approaching zero.
[09:06:51] It's not about reaching zero, it's about approaching zero.
[09:06:55] That's the way that you should look at all forms of crime,
[09:06:58] reduction, and law enforcement.
[09:07:00] What does that mean?
[09:07:01] That you're never gonna get rid of all of it.
[09:07:03] There is no silver bullet solution
[09:07:04] that gets rid of all of these problems.
[09:07:07] But there are different elements that you can do
[09:07:09] to apply to make them happen less commonly.
[09:07:12] Does that make sense?
[09:07:15] And so we call therefore for the immediate introduction
[09:07:18] of multi-agency coordination on CSE
[09:07:21] and a uniform operational framework.
[09:07:23] Such reforms would improve consistency
[09:07:26] and maximize accountability.
[09:07:29] When effective, multi-agency CSE panels tend
[09:07:32] to demonstrate well-defined referral thresholds,
[09:07:34] pathways, regular strategic meetings
[09:07:36] between police departments and children's services,
[09:07:38] clear lines of accountability,
[09:07:40] Norfolk is also praised for track record
[09:07:42] on these very fronts.
[09:07:43] There exists a dedicated multi-agency exploitation team
[09:07:47] embedded alongside policing.
[09:07:49] The proven model of such success stories
[09:07:51] a service of foundation for any future reforms. Police should also be trained to interview
[09:07:56] rape gang suspects in relation to their religious beliefs and investigate the witness evidence
[09:08:02] of the victims in relation to the religious elements of their abuse. The fear of offending
[09:08:07] cultural sensitivities should be removed completely from the culture that permutates
[09:08:12] modern policing. Fuck their culture, fuck their religion, fuck the way it is, you fuck with
[09:08:18] kids, you should be glad you're not getting killed. That's the way I see it. I guess that comes later.
[09:08:26] Healthcare, the NHS must be specified in law to owe a duty to care to survivors of rape gangs.
[09:08:33] Every sexual health clinic, GP surgery, A&E department and mental health service must trigger
[09:08:39] an automatic safeguarding referral for any child presenting with STIs, genital injuries,
[09:08:45] These pregnancies are repeated self-harm linked with exploitation.
[09:08:50] I would say, just period, discharge of a child back to a known risk environment without multi-agency
[09:08:57] protection plan must be prohibited.
[09:09:00] Trauma-informed care must be commissioned nationally for all rape gang survivors.
[09:09:04] Backstreet abortions and pregnancies caused by rape must be treated as crimes, not private
[09:09:09] medical matters.
[09:09:11] In March 2026, the government published an updated version of working together to safeguard
[09:09:17] children, a statutory governance manual on multi-agency working to support, help and
[09:09:23] protect children.
[09:09:24] The governance provides a summary of changes within the updated version, as well as an
[09:09:28] appendix glossary on group-based child sexual exploitation.
[09:09:34] This glossary defines group-based child exploitation, two or more individuals whether identified
[09:09:39] or not, who are known to or associated with one another that are known to be involved
[09:09:44] with or to facilitate the sexually exploitation of children.
[09:09:47] Being involved with the sexual exploitation of children includes example, introducing
[09:09:52] them to other individuals for exploitation, trafficking a child for the purpose of sexual
[09:09:56] exploitation, taking payment for sexual activities of the child, or allowing their property to
[09:10:00] be used for sexual activities of the child, like letting people use an apartment building
[09:10:05] or something.
[09:10:06] This can be perpetrated within or beyond the family by both children and adults, and groups
[09:10:10] can be organized and loosely linked.
[09:10:13] Trauma-informed care must also be conditioned nationally for survivors of organized sexual
[09:10:19] exploitation.
[09:10:20] Survivors frequently experience long-term psychological trauma, addiction, self-harm,
[09:10:24] homelessness, PTSD, depression, and difficulties engaging in health care services.
[09:10:28] Gee, guys, I wonder why.
[09:10:31] Yet, support provision remains inconsistent, an overwhelming number of participants of
[09:10:35] of whom we engage with during inquiry
[09:10:37] have reported struggles of accessing
[09:10:40] the appropriate psychological support
[09:10:41] and process trauma to facilitate recovery.
[09:10:46] There's a lot.
[09:10:48] Survivors need more specifically focused attention
[09:10:52] than is customary with cognitive behavioral therapy.
[09:10:54] The report recommends compassion-focused therapy
[09:10:57] should form a central component
[09:10:59] of therapeutic confusion provision for survivors.
[09:11:02] Survivors commonly present with profound shame,
[09:11:05] self-blame, disassociation, emotional dysregulation,
[09:11:10] complex trauma symptoms, substance dependency,
[09:11:13] depression, self-harm, and difficulties
[09:11:15] forming safe interpersonal relationships.
[09:11:18] These psychological patterns are not incidental.
[09:11:20] They are frequently the direct coincidence
[09:11:22] of prolonged coercion, humiliation, degradation,
[09:11:26] violence, and institutional abandonment.
[09:11:29] Yeah, they try to sigh off into making it,
[09:11:31] thinking it's their fault.
[09:11:32] It's pretty simple.
[09:11:35] What is it, uh, compassion-focused therapy?
[09:11:41] Um, sophisticated targets, uh, these with psychological patterns,
[09:11:44] grooming processes deliberately conditioned victims to internalize guilt,
[09:11:48] complicity, worthlessness, and emotional dependency upon perpetrators.
[09:11:52] Many survivors consequently describe themselves as not particularly victims of violence,
[09:11:56] but as dirty, weak, complicit, or beyond help.
[09:12:00] These shame-based feelings persist even after physical safety has been secured
[09:12:04] has been secured, CFT seeks to directly strengthen this and soothing system through compassionate
[09:12:11] imagery, emotional regulation training, attachment repair, and reduction of self-attacking cognition.
[09:12:18] Emerging evidence suggests that compassion-based interventions are effective in reducing PTSD
[09:12:23] symptoms, shame, depression, and self-criticism among trauma survivors.
[09:12:29] Importantly, many survivors of organized exploitation distrust authority figures.
[09:12:34] Oh, geez, guys, I wonder why?
[09:12:37] And struggle with conditional clinical relationships due to repeated betrayal.
[09:12:41] There you go. CFT offers a non-punitive, non-papalogalizing framework that validates survival responsiveness rather than framing victims as dysfunctional or resistant.
[09:12:50] This is particularly important for survivors previously criminalized, disbelieved, or blamed by professionals.
[09:12:55] In view of these, CFT should be commissioned nationally within specialist survivor services.
[09:13:01] NHS trauma pathways should include CFT as a recommended intervention for survivors' organized
[09:13:07] sexual exploitation.
[09:13:09] Clinicians working with grooming game victims should receive specialist training in shame-informed
[09:13:14] compassion-based approaches.
[09:13:16] Long-term therapy provision should be prioritized over short-term duration crisis interventions.
[09:13:23] and survivor services should incorporate peer-based compassion recovery models alongside formal
[09:13:28] psychotherapy.
[09:13:31] Support should also be made available to family members, especially to children.
[09:13:33] Yeah, that's something that people don't talk about enough.
[09:13:35] The family members obviously are affected by this tremendous amount.
[09:13:40] This is a whole lot.
[09:13:43] And yeah, it fucks up the entire family, not just the person it's happening to.
[09:13:48] As for physical health, pregnancies in children under 16, abortions following suspected rape
[09:13:53] Concealed pregnancies, forced terminations, and suspected backstreet abortion should be
[09:13:57] treated as safeguarding and potentially criminal matters rather than solely private medical
[09:14:03] episodes.
[09:14:04] The child must always be regarded as a victim in need of protection.
[09:14:08] As we have seen, the physical after-effects of exploitation did not end when the abuse
[09:14:12] itself ended.
[09:14:13] In many cases, as we have seen, the trauma carried over into the lives of the children
[09:14:17] born through rape.
[09:14:19] The continued institutional invisibility of these children reflects a broader reluctance
[09:14:23] to confront the wider human consequences of organized sexual exploitation. As such, these
[09:14:29] children should be formally recognized within safeguarding legislation as a valuable category
[09:14:34] requiring specialist support. We further recommend the creation of a national research program
[09:14:39] examining the long-term social, psychological, and developmental and safeguarding outcomes
[09:14:44] of children born through organized sexual violence, that's probably a good idea.
[09:14:49] It is.
[09:14:50] Yeah.
[09:14:51] The near total absence of British research in this field represents a major institutional
[09:14:57] blind spot.
[09:14:59] It's intentional because they don't want it to look that bad.
[09:15:02] Mandatory training should also be introduced for all frontline NHS staff on how to identify
[09:15:06] and engage with various grooming dynamics, course of control of this association and
[09:15:10] trauma prevention.
[09:15:12] associated abuse, boyfriend model exploitation. Yes, you're 35-year-old boyfriend whenever
[09:15:18] you're 12. Okay, I think I've got another word for that.
[09:15:22] And honor-based abuse. Moldable inquiries have identified recurring pattern in which
[09:15:27] professionals fail to intervene because the victims were perceived as troubled, consenting.
[09:15:31] That's right, the 11-year-olds were consenting, and making lifestyle choices. Last of all,
[09:15:37] we recommend the establishment of the specialist of NHS Child Sexual Exploitation Units with
[09:15:42] documented histories of organized abuse. These should combine forensic medicine,
[09:15:46] safeguarding expertise, mental health services, survivor advocacy, and long-term
[09:15:50] trauma support. Their purpose would not only be treatment, but also early
[09:15:55] identification of organized exploitation patterns. Every survivor should be
[09:16:00] guaranteed a long-term access to a specialist counseling, psychiatric
[09:16:04] treatment, sexual health care, reproductive health care, addiction
[09:16:07] support, legal advocacy, and housing assistance regardless of whether
[09:16:11] criminal proceedings are ongoing. For private prosecutions and civil litigation, the law provides
[09:16:17] comprehensive and powerful mechanisms for victims, their families, and other concerned parties
[09:16:22] for the widespread grooming, rape, and trafficking offenses. These mechanisms operate through
[09:16:29] two principal routes, civil action seeking compensation together with other remedies for
[09:16:34] harm suffered, and number two, private prosecutions where public authorities have failed or refused
[09:16:40] to act. Both avenues draw directly on the extensive range of offenses and institutional
[09:16:46] failures documented in such cases.
[09:16:48] I'll make sure if I got some. Make sure my food order was getting here.
[09:16:54] Uh, very important. Uh, I don't know how I sit. What do you mean they're still at the
[09:17:00] store? I put it in like an hour ago. What, really? What the fuck are they doing? Anyway,
[09:17:07] Let's go, let's go, keep on, keep on, let's go.
[09:17:09] Both avenues draw directly upon the extensive range
[09:17:12] of offenses and institutional failures documented
[09:17:14] in such cases, such as as R versus Karar,
[09:17:17] and they can be deployed strategically to secure justice
[09:17:20] and expose systematic shortcomings
[09:17:22] and deter future offending without sole reliance
[09:17:24] on reluctant state prosecutors or local officials.
[09:17:27] Reluctant state prosecutors,
[09:17:29] AKA traders who should be executed.
[09:17:33] I didn't say that, I'm just kidding.
[09:17:35] No, no, I didn't really mean that.
[09:17:37] I didn't mean that at all.
[09:17:38] Civil actions against the perpetrators themselves
[09:17:42] to begin with the core torts of assault and battery.
[09:17:45] The claims arise whenever non-consensual sexual conduct,
[09:17:50] physical violence or coercive acts occur,
[09:17:52] as repeatedly evidenced with the grooming
[09:17:54] and exploitation patterns that involve extreme brutality,
[09:17:57] sustained assaults, and the use of drugs
[09:17:59] to facilitate offending victims.
[09:18:02] Offending, victims can recover damages
[09:18:04] from physical injuries, pain, suffering, loss,
[09:18:06] loss of earnings, medical expenses, with courts empowered to award aggravated or exemplary
[09:18:11] damages where the conduct is shown to have been sadistic or humiliating, so like every
[09:18:16] single time.
[09:18:18] False imprisonment forms another head claim of every case involving trafficking or confinement,
[09:18:24] where perpetrators can be shown to have restricted the liberty of victims through threats, abduction
[09:18:28] or control within the United Kingdom for sexual exploitation.
[09:18:31] This tort directly mirrors the trafficking offenses under sections 57-59a of the Sexual
[09:18:37] Offences Act of 2003 and Modern Slavery Act.
[09:18:41] Modern Slavery Act.
[09:18:43] How do you need that?
[09:18:45] For 2015, allowing victims to seek substantial compensation for the deprivation of freedom
[09:18:50] and the psychological trauma that accompanies it.
[09:18:53] A separate but highly relevant civil claim is available under the Rule in Wilkinson vs.
[09:18:58] Downton in the old magic.
[09:19:01] The intentional infliction of emotional distress.
[09:19:05] This tort captures the grooming process itself and the supply of controlled substances to
[09:19:10] lower resistance, the repeated humiliation of the long-term mental health inflicted on
[09:19:15] child victims.
[09:19:16] Courts have recognized that such a deliberate conduct, often accompanied by threats to families,
[09:19:22] meets the threshold of outrageous behavior calculated to cause psychiatric injury, thereby
[09:19:27] opening the door to compensation even when physical injury is absent.
[09:19:31] In addition to these private law remedies, every eligible victim retains the statutory
[09:19:40] right to apply for payments from the criminal justice compensation scheme of 2012.
[09:19:45] This scheme explicitly covers violent sexual offenses, including rape of a child under 13,
[09:19:51] assault by penetration and sexual exploitation and operates independently of any criminal
[09:19:57] conviction providing a safety net of state-funded awards that can reach tens of thousands of
[09:20:03] pounds depending on the severity of harm.
[09:20:08] Civil liability extends equally to public authorities whose failures have enabled heinous
[09:20:13] crime offenses, negligence claims against police forces, local councils and social services,
[09:20:19] NHS bodies succeed where duty of care is established and breached through systematic
[09:20:25] ignoring of reports, the failure to investigate warnings, and the prioritization of so-called
[09:20:31] community relations.
[09:20:34] Over child protection, Rothrand Metropolitan Borough Council, for example, has already
[09:20:39] paid millions of pounds in settlements precisely because its institutional culture prevented
[09:20:44] effective safeguarding. Malfeasants, misfeasants, excuse me, in public office
[09:20:49] supplies additional and potent tort, which is again like this, you know, like
[09:20:53] legal, where claimants can prove that officials acted with bad faith or malice,
[09:20:58] such as deliberately shelving investigations out of fear of being
[09:21:02] called a racist. The tort requires evidence of targeted harm, but carries
[09:21:07] the potential for exemplary damages and personal liability against individuals
[09:21:12] and officers or counselors, claims under the Human Rights Act have effectively proved especially
[09:21:18] effective in this context.
[09:21:20] Article 3 imposes a positive obligation on the state to protect individuals from inhuman
[09:21:26] and degrading treatment and to investigate grave crimes such as rape with efficiency
[09:21:31] and promptness.
[09:21:32] The landmark Supreme Court decision of DSD of Commissioner of Police in 2019 confirmed
[09:21:38] that systematic investigative failures breached this article giving rise to
[09:21:42] damages for the victims
[09:21:43] so there you go they can basically get the money back at there's something that
[09:21:46] really was fucked up which is good that's the way it should be
[09:21:52] confirm systematic failures given rise to damages the victims that were let
[09:21:55] down by repeated inaction more recent authority and at the uh... chief
[09:22:00] constable of north hamston shire uh... verses woodcock reinforces the police
[09:22:05] forces may be held liable
[09:22:06] in damages where they fail to protect individuals from foreseeable third-party harm,
[09:22:12] encompassing breaches of both Article 3 and Article 8 for respect of public and private life.
[09:22:18] Or sorry, private and family life. These human rights claims that can run alongside negligence
[09:22:23] actions that have been resulted in substantial compensation rewards while simultaneously forcing
[09:22:28] policy changes within failing institutions at a drink.
[09:22:40] Further statutory routes arise under the Children Act of 1989 and the Children Act of 2004,
[09:22:47] which place clear duties on local authorities to safeguard children and protect their welfare.
[09:22:53] Breaches of these duties, particularly where vulnerable children were in care and were groomed
[09:22:57] or assaulted by these positions of trust support civil claims for damages. Section 16-19 of the
[09:23:03] Sexual Offenses Act creates specific criminal offenses for adults in positions of trust who
[09:23:08] engage in or incite sexual activity with children under their care. Many such cases.
[09:23:14] And both same facts ground civil liability for breach of statutory duty. Vicarious liability
[09:23:20] principles allow claimants to hold authorities responsible for the acts and omissions of their
[09:23:26] employees such as social workers, care home workers, NHS personnel who either
[09:23:31] committed offenses or turned a blind eye. Whether broader policy decisions
[09:23:35] contributed to the scandal, judicial review, proceedings remain available to
[09:23:40] challenge unlawful failures to act, providing a route to quash decisions and
[09:23:45] compel proper investigations. Private prosecutions supply the criminal
[09:23:49] counterpart with these civil remedies that are available to any person or
[09:23:53] organization with sufficient interest in the case.
[09:23:57] The full spectrum of the offenses committed by the perpetrators can be prosecuted privately
[09:24:01] under the Sexual Offenses Act of 2003, including the rape-contrary section, rape of a child
[09:24:08] under 13, contrary to Section 5, assault by penetration, contrary to Section 2, sexual
[09:24:14] assault, contrary to Section 3, inciting a child to engage in sexual activity.
[09:24:19] You don't want to do that.
[09:24:22] Signs 8 and 10, arranging or facilitating child sexual exploitation, grooming contrary
[09:24:28] to Section 15.
[09:24:29] Okay, there's plenty of other sections you get the idea.
[09:24:32] There's plenty of these.
[09:24:33] The Sexually Serious Crime Act of 2015 broadened these conventions by replacing outdated references
[09:24:39] to child prostitution with a wider concept of sexual exploitation of a child while the
[09:24:44] Modern Slavery Act criminalizes trafficking for sexual purposes with a maximum sentence
[09:24:49] of life imprisonment.
[09:24:51] In decent images, offenses causing inciting or prostitution for gain, or even rarer but
[09:24:56] documented instances of animal cruelty linked to the offending can otherwise be pursued.
[09:25:02] Where public authorities or their employees have themselves committed crimes, private
[09:25:06] prosecutions are equally viable.
[09:25:09] Misconduct is a huge thing, and unless you hold those people accountable directly, those
[09:25:19] Those are the people that are just going to get away with it, because unless you know
[09:25:23] that your head is on the chopping block, chopping block, excuse me, there's no reason for you
[09:25:28] to change what you're doing.
[09:25:30] There's no reason because there's no inhibiting factor that punishes you or holds you accountable.
[09:25:36] That's the issue.
[09:25:37] Republic authorities or their employees have themselves committed crimes, private prosecution,
[09:25:41] and revival.
[09:25:42] Miss Conduct, the Public Office, perverting the course of justice, or aiding and abetting
[09:25:45] in the primary offenders can all be charged against police officers, counselors, social
[09:25:50] workers, or care staff who deliberately obstructed investigations or protected perpetrators.
[09:25:55] The same principles apply to family members or community figures who shielded rapists
[09:26:00] through intimidation of victims, concealment of evidence, or active assistance in trafficking
[09:26:04] networks.
[09:26:06] Precedents such as HM Advocate vs. Collins illustrate the gravity in which the courts
[09:26:10] abuse and trust in care settings, and private prosecutors can seek the same life sentences
[09:26:17] with extended maximum terms that were imposed in R v. Carrara in 2013 for the depraved and brutal
[09:26:24] and sadistic nature of gang activity. The procedural route for private prosecutions is a
[09:26:29] straightforward yet powerful. The summons or warrant is issued by magistrates court upon
[09:26:35] presentation of evidence that satisfies the Evidential Public Interest Test, after which
[09:26:43] the case provides of any other criminal matter, which the CPS restraining the power to take over
[09:26:49] and continue or discontinue it. The mechanism bypasses institutional reluctance, ensures that
[09:26:54] such cases of those involving absconded offenders and protected family members reach court
[09:27:00] and creates public record of the offending so that they can support parallel civil claims
[09:27:05] in combination. Civil actions deliver financial redress and accountability for harm, while private
[09:27:11] prosecutions deliver criminal convictions, long custodial sentences, and the public
[09:27:16] condemnation necessary to dismantle the networks. Together they form a complete legal strategy
[09:27:22] capable of delivering justice where state agencies have historically fallen short.
[09:27:26] The next steps.
[09:27:30] Excuse me.
[09:27:41] Publish the inquiry's full witness statements.
[09:27:43] Seek out further witness statements so that more victims can tell their story.
[09:27:47] Name within Parliament to those that have found enabled the rape gangs continued initiating
[09:27:51] civil proceedings and private prosecutions were appropriate.
[09:27:55] We have had more women come forward since the formal hearings took place, being no doubt
[09:28:02] that we intend for our rape gang inquiry to have a long life well beyond the publication
[09:28:06] of this one report.
[09:28:08] It will be updated.
[09:28:09] And as we learn more about the more horrific blight on our national story, this is the
[09:28:13] initial phase of a longer mission, larger mission, to make sure that no such avoidable
[09:28:19] atrocities can ever happen again.
[09:28:22] a concluding message from Rupert Lowe MP, Rape Gang,
[09:28:25] and Korea Chair.
[09:28:27] I want to thank you for taking the time to read our report.
[09:28:31] I hope that it has gone some way in helping you understand
[09:28:34] the horror that has unfolded in almost every British town
[09:28:38] and city over the last 50 years.
[09:28:40] Participating in our hearings, listening to the survivors,
[09:28:44] was one of the most harrowing experiences of my life.
[09:28:47] It is impossible to understand how such evil has been
[09:28:50] allowed to flourish on such a horrifying scale.
[09:28:54] The inquiry was founded because of the authorities
[09:28:56] failed to act, and the politicians failed to act,
[09:28:59] and the civil service failed to act.
[09:29:01] Everyone failed to act.
[09:29:03] We will not make the same mistake again.
[09:29:06] We will provide a platform for further victims
[09:29:08] to tell the nation their story.
[09:29:10] I will name perpetrators using parliamentary privilege,
[09:29:13] and I will aim to put these people in prison
[09:29:16] through cooperation with the relevant authorities.
[09:29:19] If they fail to take the necessary steps, we will deploy private prosecutions to obtain
[09:29:24] justice at last.
[09:29:26] The ultimate objective of our inquiry is clear.
[09:29:29] Put rapists and their enablers behind bars.
[09:29:32] There will be more news to come very soon on that front.
[09:29:35] Thank you for your time and attention in reading this historic report.
[09:29:39] Rupert Lowe MP, The Rape Gang Inquiry.
[09:29:49] Well, how about that?
[09:29:59] I'm going to link it to you guys.
[09:30:06] Here's the video right here.
[09:30:07] Here's it right here.
[09:30:08] Make sure to give it a like and share it.
[09:30:09] That's Rupert Lowe's account.
[09:30:11] You know, they raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to do this from 20,000 people.
[09:30:15] Put the money together to make this happen.
[09:30:18] As I said, promises made, promises kept.
[09:30:21] I said I was going to read the entire thing in one fucking stream, and there we just did
[09:30:26] it.
[09:30:27] Nine and a half fucking hours.
[09:30:30] Easy.
[09:30:31] Easy.
[09:30:32] Light work.
[09:30:33] It's nothing.
[09:30:34] That was a joke.
[09:30:35] We're only halfway done now.
[09:30:40] So no, I'm not worried about it at all, boys.
[09:30:44] I would say I hope you guys enjoyed it, but I hope you didn't.
[09:30:48] all you are in something
[09:30:52] this is a lot
[09:30:53] as a whole last lot
[09:30:56] read it twice yes exactly
[09:30:58] and uh... it's just nuts man
[09:31:01] holy fucking shit
[09:31:03] i don't even know what else to say
[09:31:05] and i'm gonna link you guys the image are sorry that the inquiry itself to
[09:31:10] actually i don't know if i can i i i i i i i would just like the other page again
[09:31:13] If you want to go through all of the appendices and everything else, right?
[09:31:19] Uh, there it is. Kick once link to, yeah.
[09:31:21] If we can get, let me get the link over to kick as well and, uh, make sure I do that.
[09:31:25] Give me one second, guys. I want to go ahead and walk in. There you go.
[09:31:29] Uh, there it is right there. And, uh, oh, the rate limit. I got rate limited.
[09:31:34] If somebody can get it over on the rumble too, that'd be great.
[09:31:37] I don't want to get rate limited on there, on there as well. So yes.
[09:31:41] How do you feel about it all?
[09:31:45] Well it's really simple.
[09:31:47] I think this is the tip of the iceberg.
[09:31:49] I think this problem has manifested across every western country.
[09:31:54] I think that it's happening in Germany, I think it's happening in France, and I think
[09:31:57] that the extent that we know that it's happening in the UK, this is the tip of the iceberg.
[09:32:03] This is the beginning, it is not the end.
[09:32:05] This is basically what you were able to uncover with a cursory investigation with no actual
[09:32:12] institutional power to form any level of discovery or any form of court-ordered discovery, you
[09:32:20] know, data collection, information recovery at all.
[09:32:25] This is basically, this is at 1% power.
[09:32:29] This is also happening in America.
[09:32:32] It's happening in America.
[09:32:33] It's happening in Canada.
[09:32:35] It's happening all across all western countries, and the reason is the same every single time.
[09:32:41] It is people that are afraid to call this out because they don't want to be called racist
[09:32:46] and because they want to maintain the voting block of these people.
[09:32:51] That's the reason why it's that simple.
[09:33:01] What do you think will happen after this?
[09:33:03] I think that the European people, the British people, have one or two more chances of having
[09:33:09] this be solved without violence.
[09:33:14] That's what I think.
[09:33:16] I think they have a couple more chances left.
[09:33:18] Rupert Lowe is probably one of their last chances to solve this problem without it being
[09:33:22] violent.
[09:33:23] Thanks for the subs I appreciate it never needed always appreciated honestly if you
[09:33:43] could donate you want to donate money to some of these survivors groups some of these people
[09:33:47] that are advocating. Go ahead. They need it more than I do. I'll tell you that.
[09:33:52] DuPoA is expensive, but it's not that expensive. I'm doing alright. Thank you, though.
[09:34:02] Mmm. And let it be known that all of the people who asked me to talk about and look at the
[09:34:14] the Epstein files and everything, even though they were weaponizing it very clearly to attack
[09:34:20] Donald Trump and to subvert conservative values. I did so immediately and without reservation
[09:34:26] because there is a greater evil at play. Those same people will never look at this. They
[09:34:32] will never pay this any credibility. It's because they don't actually care about kids
[09:34:36] getting raped. They just care about the right kids getting raped.
[09:34:58] You eat like a dog? Thanks.
[09:35:04] I appreciate it.
[09:35:07] So true, yeah.
[09:35:11] They're evil, they are.
[09:35:15] They're ruined for reading through it.
[09:35:17] It was easy.
[09:35:19] It was the right thing to do.
[09:35:24] If you spend all this time and you develop a platform
[09:35:27] and you invest yourself and making your own channel
[09:35:31] You know, building your own brand and everything, and you're not willing to use it for a situation like this.
[09:35:38] What the fuck was it all for?
[09:35:42] What's the point?
[09:35:49] That's the way I see it.
[09:35:56] Shock dogs? I don't think you should shock dogs. I think that's rude.
[09:35:59] What's the mean to the dog?
[09:36:01] Is it your longest stream?
[09:36:02] No, I've done tons of like 14, 15 hour streams, just nothing bro.
[09:36:07] Y'all gotta remember, I'm in my prime.
[09:36:10] I'm in my prime, boys.
[09:36:12] I'm 28.
[09:36:14] That's fine.
[09:36:16] That don't mean shit to me.
[09:36:18] Like I might go and probably go maybe, you know,
[09:36:21] probably go exercise, eat some dinner,
[09:36:23] talk to some other people, play some fucking video games, and chill out.
[09:36:27] And hopefully I see you guys tomorrow, too
[09:36:30] You know, I don't know if I'm beyond tomorrow or not my voice if you want me to be honest
[09:36:35] Feels the exact same as whenever I started my stream
[09:36:40] I'm not even
[09:36:43] I'm gonna begin to bother it. It's nothing
[09:36:46] So yeah, you sound fine. I do
[09:36:49] So we'll see what happens
[09:36:51] Also, I'd kind of like to sleep in but you know like that I probably if I wake up and it's it's 12 30 and I've got to
[09:36:56] Be lied by one. I'll probably be alive
[09:36:58] So we'll see what happens
[09:37:03] See Saturday, right?
[09:37:06] Actually is Saturday. Yeah, okay very funny Saturday is world Eagle Day
[09:37:13] I have a handful of things that like I've already been doing some research on it
[09:37:19] I
[09:37:20] have a plan right now of what I'm going to do. I'm going to basically fine tune
[09:37:27] that plan. There's also another big update that I have about the Roach
[09:37:33] Council and it's gonna be on Discord. I feel like it's inappropriate to do like
[09:37:38] a lot of promo right now considering the topic so I'll talk more about that
[09:37:42] either tomorrow or the day after but that's currently what the plan is. It's
[09:37:49] It's really just that simple.
[09:37:50] Have you seen a new character for Street Fighter?
[09:37:57] Tifa?
[09:37:58] Yeah, I thought it was great.
[09:37:59] No, not religion, but take it for what it's intended.
[09:38:02] God bless you for doing this.
[09:38:03] I never...if people want to say like, you know, they're trying to have a Jew, a Muslim,
[09:38:11] a Christian, a Hindu, a Buddhist or whatever the fuck, I'll take all the positive feelings
[09:38:16] I can get.
[09:38:17] Okay?
[09:38:18] I'm not gonna shy away from I'm not gonna. I'm not gonna reddit atheist my way out of that
[09:38:27] That's it
[09:38:34] The Ali adventures Ali at one million tales and stream I don't know what this
[09:38:39] You know block me on discord. I probably didn't have you blocked. I probably just ignored you
[09:38:44] What do you read this in early in I think I almost just did right
[09:38:48] Have you heard of the Austin bomb? No I haven't. Not hanging out for like maybe 10 more minutes
[09:38:55] and then I want to call the day. You know, got a lot of shit going on.
[09:39:03] Busy guy. What do you think labeling is racist? Why do you think labeling racist works so
[09:39:09] much in the UK? Because it gets you put in jail. That's why. It gets you put in jail.
[09:39:15] And it's also that you have a Karenocracy, and so like you're completely ruled over by
[09:39:32] people who are more afraid of losing the adherence to the consensus than living the truth.
[09:39:41] a huge problem. The BBC has completely ignored the rape inquiry. Well, I knew I would probably
[09:39:48] be the main person to talk about this, like besides, like, you know, Elon, right? There's
[09:39:54] Elon, a few other guys, right? Like Rupert, well, obviously. But like, besides, in terms
[09:39:58] of like a creator, I'll probably be the biggest person that's willing to talk about this and
[09:40:04] provide a platform to it. And that's the reason why I do it. There are a few
[09:40:12] others, but yeah. Yeah, but I mean, I don't I'm not trying to like ego anybody,
[09:40:16] but like, I probably have the most viewers, right? It's probably not even
[09:40:19] remotely close. But so it's and it's also like, I mean, and that that that carries
[09:40:24] its own weight as well.
[09:40:29] Biggest women's advocate? Well, I've always been a big advocate for like, the
[09:40:33] The thing is that, just because I make jokes about women not knowing how to drive or having
[09:40:39] empathy for fucking criminals and shit, I feel like I've been probably the biggest advocate
[09:40:47] of women being treated like people.
[09:40:50] I think that's the difference.
[09:40:56] Longstream today?
[09:40:57] Yeah, it sure was.
[09:40:58] It was a really long stream.
[09:41:01] This is going to be all uploaded to YouTube?
[09:41:10] Probably yeah.
[09:41:11] Just put it out there because I thought.
[09:41:14] I bless you for reading all that bro.
[09:41:19] Thank you man.
[09:41:20] I appreciate it.
[09:41:21] Yeah it was a really long one.
[09:41:22] It sure was.
[09:41:23] It was a really long one.
[09:41:24] You're giving a rating to Siege of Orgammar?
[09:41:28] Instead you're doing this.
[09:41:29] I'm proud of you.
[09:41:30] I I never have wanted to reread it's more in my life. I hear that for one time
[09:41:37] Make it one long YouTube video that's the reason why I did it all in one shot by the way
[09:41:42] Because I felt like I would have the most impact
[09:41:44] You know it would be the hardest thing to do. It's like you gotta do that
[09:41:49] Dwarf food. Yeah. Yeah, I work for you
[09:42:00] I want to showcase your gold YouTube button.
[09:42:04] Maybe I'll do the diamond one if I ever get 10 million subs.
[09:42:08] I don't care about aquilates, I'm gonna flop.
[09:42:12] You know, I could just send it to my editor, so I'm gonna...
[09:42:16] It's just the way it is.
[09:42:19] I mean, maybe it'd be a good YouTube video, right?
[09:42:22] I mean, like, I don't know.
[09:42:24] It's just a thing.
[09:42:28] believe we're entering a violent century. I think that we will if we don't solve this problem.
[09:42:33] I think that's really it. If you don't solve this problem and address it appropriately,
[09:42:42] you will be entering a profoundly violent situation.
[09:42:46] Look at that later on.
[09:42:53] Well, ongoing sexual harassment, I've repeatedly subjected him, so he's getting raped and
[09:42:59] prison.
[09:43:00] Oh no.
[09:43:01] That's so bad.
[09:43:02] How could something like that happen?
[09:43:03] I'm so bad how could something like that happen is what happened to Google yeah
[09:43:20] What is this people talking about man?
[09:43:27] True.
[09:43:29] Thanks bro.
[09:43:31] You know what you fucking idiot, you shut the fuck up.
[09:43:40] You want please let me make some money dude.
[09:43:43] Come on man.
[09:43:46] Come on, dude!
[09:43:50] Just a little bit, man!
[09:43:53] Big fan!
[09:43:56] Shooting this shot, bro. Like, that's it.
[09:44:00] Oh, look, I really appreciated everybody watching for this today. I really do. Thanks a lot.
[09:44:07] Pretty important, pretty big stream, and hopefully I
[09:44:11] made you guys proud, and I did what I said I was gonna do, and
[09:44:14] And I'll hopefully be back on tomorrow. If not, I'll be back on tomorrow. There's the day after, right?
[09:44:21] But I do plan to be back on. Hopefully I'll be back on, but I'm gonna wake up and see how I feel, okay?
[09:44:26] So anyway guys, thank you all so much for watching. I really appreciate it, and I'll see you all tomorrow.
[09:44:31] Our boys. Peace!
[09:44:44] you
[09:45:14] you
[09:45:44] you
[09:46:14] you