Like many other Britons I was pleased by the announcement that at last there will be some sort of national inquiry into the problem that Britain has with Islamic Rape Gangs. For those new to this story the background is this: For decades these gangs have been operating in Britain’s towns, cities and villages. Gangs of Muslim men, often including members of the same families, have been grooming, sexually assaulting, torturing and sometimes murdering young White British girls, along with Sikh and Hindu ones. These crimes might have a history going back to the 1970’s and 1960’s. What’s worse is that the Muslims who have taken part in these rape gangs have too often escaped from the consequences of their actions. These Muslims have to a large extent escaped punishment because of failure by police to recognise what was going on in some cases but in others it has been because the police along with other state agencies such as local and national politicians, the National Health Service, Social Services along with Whitehall have seemingly deliberately failed to tackle these gangs for ideological reasons or to protect ‘community cohesion’. To cut a very long and extremely scandalous story shorter, those in authority who should have protected the British people allowed gangs of Muslims to rape British children but for various reasons did sod all about stopping these gangs.
For years there has never been a proper national inquiry into the activities of these gangs, even though such an inquiry was clearly sorely needed, or into the political, policing and administrative ecosystem whose members took the view that it was better to let these Islamic Rape Gangs operate than shut these gangs down. Britain’s Labour government refused an inquiry when it was called for back in January 2025 but after the report by Baroness Casey was published about a week ago seemingly changed the government’s mind on the issue of the need for an inquiry.
But the main worry for me and probably for many other Britons is this: Because Sir Keir Starmer the Prime Minister changed his mind on the need for an inquiry so quickly does this mean that he and his government have got some sort of whitewash planned?
I reckon that there is the strong possibility of a whitewash being planned. Also the government could exploit other legislation or future legislation to try to shut this issue down among the public and the media both traditional and alternative.
I believe that although Starmer and his government might have been blind-sided to a certain degree by the sheer horror of what is in Baroness Casey’s report, it’s also not beyond the bounds of possibly that a snake like Starmer would not have agreed to an inquiry unless he saw some way to minimise that inquiry’s scope and power. Starmer has every political reason to deliberately stymie the inquiry and therefore protect the mostly Labour supporting types and Labour local authority members and Labour’s Moslem voters, who have been implicated in covering up these crimes and maybe even being involved with the actual crimes themselves.
I can see a whole host of methods by how this whitewash might be achieved. Firstly there’s the question of who is going to chair this inquiry and what the inquiry’s terms of reference will be? It’s almost inevitable, because of the nature of inquiries and the need for them to gather and properly examine evidence that whoever chairs this inquiry will be a judge or a Kings Counsel or an academic. Although it’s quite cynical on my part I do wonder if because the inquiry chair is going to come from the ‘blob’ or deep Establishment how independently minded will they be? Starmer’s government could pick someone to chair this inquiry who is so tainted by DEI nonsense or is an enthusiast for multiculturalism or has one eye on career advancement that the inquiry will not look too deeply at geographical areas where Islamic Rape Gang activity is suspected of going on but has not yet been revealed nor will they examine those aspects of Britain’s adminisphere that have helped to cover up or minimise the attention given to these Rape Gangs? Even if a relatively honest and unbiased chair can be found for this inquiry and it does have the broader terms of reference that it might need, how much power will the inquiry have to compel witnesses to attend, secure physical documentation relating to these crimes from potential destruction and carry out IT forensics on the systems used by those suspected of a cover up? Will the inquiry have the power to call those politicians who are alleged to have made statements that give the impression of the creation of a permissive environment for the Rape Gangs, for example the former Prime Minister Gordon Brown to explain themselves? It might be the case that some of these politicians may not have said what has been attributed to them but they should make that denial in a place such as an inquiry where their denials can be publicly heard and publicly examined.
As this inquiry is being set up by a Labour government I have very little confidence that this inquiry will look at in any depth the alleged political corruption that has assisted the activities of these Rape Gangs that is said to have gone on in Labour administered local authority areas or among Labour Party supporters. Labour have every political reason imaginable for not having an inquiry look too closely at what has gone on in the local areas that Labour control. There’s other historical Labour leaders from nearly half a century or more back who I might have trusted to have an honest or mostly honest inquiry into this issue, but not Starmer’s Labour government. I’d rather trust a wily political operator like Wilson or Callaghan or even a failed leader like Foot to do this rather than Starmer. The Labour Party is not what it once was. It is no longer the political arm of Britain’s working classes. It is now dominated by Islamic interests and the obsessions of the middle class liberal left and therefore it’s unlikely to want to look too deeply into the subject of the Rape Gangs that have done great damage to working class people and working class communities. With what the Labour Party has descended into being it’s also unlikely that Labour or those friendly to Labour will want to look into the religious and cultural drivers behind the Islamic Rape Gangs either.
It is also possible that future legislation might be used to de-fang or neuter this inquiry. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the ‘Islamophobia’ blasphemy law that Labour and its Islamic backers want to impose on the rest of us, might be used to exclude vital evidence about the influence of the ideology of Islam from being considered by the inquiry. In such a case this would make the inquiry worthless as a means of investigating why these horrific crimes occurred because the inquiry could not take or examine evidence that might contravene the law by being ‘Islamophobic’.
There’s a whole host of ways that the inquiry could be sabotaged by the very same government that has ordered it to take place. This is because the British state from its lowest to its highest levels is broken. Just as you would not expect to drive from Lands End to John O’Groats in a car with a badly cracked wheel rim without trouble so it is that we cannot expect a British state that is the equivalent of a badly cracked wheel to carry out an honest and effective inquiry into the incredibly traumatic and deep seated problem of Islamic Rape Gangs and those who colluded with them.
We the people of Britain need to stop being distracted by nonsense and keep a very very close eye on this inquiry. This is because the potential for it to go wrong or be corrupted is very great indeed. This inquiry is one ball that we cannot afford to take our eyes off of.