Seems we are on a fairly similar page. The regime clearly knows people are talking unfavorably. I can see on Twitter myself there has been a concerted effort to wash out bad news, tags on individuat hot spots like Bradford and Birmingham are being flooded with bots to prevent circulation of information, and the most self indulgent counter tags like #TopTierKier. That was painful reading.
In any case...Yes. I don't think the Republicans are uniting with anyone or it is even a case of the enemy of my enemy is my freind. They, both, have turned their gaze to a source of mutual dislike. One moreso than the other has the ability and inclination to act on it at the moment, but I don't doubt the other wouldn't either in the right circumstances.
Perhaps the Loyalists feel it more keenly because the Republic is a creeping boogeyman that is looming larger on the horizon, things like EU membership are very tempting to a part of the United Kingdom that voted to remain within the EU. Its not even just a Catholic vs Presbyterian thing anymore; because migrants, especially EU ones, also historically have favored Republican parties over the Unionist ones.
As a poor Brit living in the UK, how do I move to a better country? I have zero respect for engraland at this point. The majority of people here really are liberal brainwashed cucks who deserve to be enslaved by their government.
I mentioned the Irish Republic earlier in this thread, it's closest and British passport holders don't need to apply for anything to move there but you do have quite a wide range of options.
It will depend on what your skillset is. Some people like Nurses can move wherever they wish at any time, less in demand workers might need to retrain or work out how to overcome a point system. Many commonwealth countries do give priority access to Brits that said, so it is worth looking at. I can't give too much in the way of specifics because I'm not a Brit and I'm always in the long queue when travelling and getting visas.
Speaking about that though, a second one worth looking at is your heritage. Most European states practice some form of Jus Sanguinus ("Of the blood"). That is, anyone who is a decendant of a citizen is also a citizen.
How far you can go back can vary wildly. Anyone with a German parent is a German, but anyone who can prove with documentation that at any point in their history they had a direct Italian ancestor can claim Italian citizenship. Austria and Portugal both have provisions for decendants of citizens who fled persecution (The Portuguese have recently limited this, they previously extended it as far back as Muranos chased out by the Inquisition in the 1500's!). The most controversial of course being the Israeli, any Jew may settle under the Law of Return.
If you have any sort of diversity in your family background, look into it. If you claim it, you'll potentially be able to gain privileges like free movement in the EU, but also pass them onto your children. Some of them are limited; it's possible for a family to maintain foreign nationality outside of their homeland in perpetuity in some cases but only if every member in their direct line claimed it before their offspring is born.
Can you claim asylum in other countries now they're warning their citizens not to travel to the UK as it isn't safe here?
There's a list of countries that have accepted them since 2023 below, Canada being the most popular destination.