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Featured on Aug 6, 2024 by Null: The UK frees rapists from prison to accommodate space for hundreds of anticipated arrests to be made during tomorrow's race riots.

On Monday 29th July at around noon, three young girls in the northern town of Southport were brutally murdered by a seventeen year old male who had travelled by taxi with a knife from a nearby village to a Taylor Swift-themed dance group for young girls, and committed a mass slaughter. Two girls were confirmed dead shortly afterwards, with a third being pronounced dead in hospital the next day. Several more girls and some adults also sustained serious injuries from stabbing.
Thread from the initial news reports of a mass stabbing in Southport
The authorities did not mention the killer's ethnicity, and stressed several times that the killer was "from Cardiff" to dispel rumours that the killer was an immigrant. They refused at first to reveal his name on the grounds that he is underage (although it turns out he was 17 years and 356 days old on the day of the attack). Although early fake reports circulated that the stabber was a Muslim immigrant, thanks to a mention in the Daily Telegraph that his parents were from Rwanda, Farms users soon found the identity of the father, which led to the certain knowledge that the killer is Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, the son of Rwandan immigrant parents, who was born in Cardiff in 2006 before moving to the North of England years later. This was eventually confirmed by the authorities after several days (presumably because they realised that "black 2nd generation immigrant" was preferable to the alternative theory of "Muslim illegal immigrant".
The killer at a younger age, and his newly released court sketch.
The three young girls killed, aged 6, 7, and 9. RIP. Several more were left in a critical condition.
As well as stressing his birthplace as being in Britain, the police almost instantly ruled out the attack being an act of terror. There has still been no information released about the grounds that the murder and attempted murder of an entire group of white girls by a black male was instantly dismissed as terror-related. While nothing has been confirmed, there have been some fairly credible posts saying that the killer was known by the authorities for being violent and having a "kill list" at school, This is at odds with some media pieces that have already tried to paint him as a quiet, misunderstood young lad.
He was a good boy
At a vigil for the victims the following day, another man (now identified) was arrested near the scene carrying a knife and clad in a balaclava.
Against the backdrop of a large rise in migrant/non-native crime in recent weeks, as well as years of tensions between the British population and the government's immigration policy, these events seemed to provide the spark for spontaneous civil unrest. In Southport on Tuesday, the day after the attack and shortly after the vigil, loose collections of protesters coalesced outside a Southport mosque and the situation turned into a riot, with walls destroyed, a police van burnt down, and many people injured.
The start of the unrest near a mosque in Southport on Tuesday
In the week since, the government and national media has harshly cracked down on the shadowy, "organised far-right" spectre in Britain, with the national broadcasters dedicating almost all of their news time focusing on the riot on a Southport street, rather than the attack that sparked the community outrage. Prime Minister Keir Starmer quickly announced severe, draconian surveillance measures and many government bodies promised a brutal response to unrest. This includes a brand-new "National Violence Disorder Unit", as well as a task force of 70 new Crown Prosecution Service lawyers to rubber-stamp convictions of protesters handed to them by the police, and the promise to intercept any undesirables "before they can even board a train".
The public was quick to notice the difference in this response to the native population's anger over the death of 3 young girls to previous instances of unrest. Just a couple of weeks prior, the Roma and Pakistani communities of Harehills, Leeds rioted over the removal of children from their negligent parents by social services, and the response was for the police to back off and the children be returned. Secondly, back in 2020, protests (which were supposedly illegal at the time due to COVID) and riots spread across the country due to the unlawful killing of the American criminal George Floyd by American police. As then-leader of the opposition, Keir Starmer's response was to kneel for the BLM movement and approve of the resulting small-scale cultural revolution that swept through the country .
Protesters have chanted "where were you in Leeds?" to the police, and people have dubbed the prime minister "Two-Tier Keir", in reference to the double standard displayed by his own actions, and the two-tier policing system that people believe systematically targets native British citizens while letting foreign criminals and residents of ethnic ghettos off.
The situation is still ongoing and is escalating going into the weekend, with a long list of planned protests in cities across the country over the next couple of days.
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