The political landscape is characterised by a dual reckoning with two distinct state sanctioned atrocities against the British people. One is the (largely) historical, but still ongoing phenomenon, of South Asian, Arab and Somali rape gangs, which operate on a kinship basis and which engaged in the long-term victimisation of White children. The other is the highly contemporary issue of Channel migrant assaults, in which bogus asylum seekers housed at the expense of the British taxpayer, predate upon the young and vulnerable in their immediate surroundings.
Recriminations for the former only really started when Elon Musk reposted transcripts from the Oxford grooming last year, while the recriminations for the latter started after the Southport atrocity. Of course these do intersect on occasion, such as asylum seeker involvement in rape gangs in Glasgow as well as the participation of illegal immigrants in rape gangs highlighted by the Casey report. The inter-ethnic sexual victimisation of White women and children by non-white men has, more than anything else, driven the delegitimisation of the British state. It has produced a condition of simmering low level civil unrest which occasionally erupts into actual communal violence, as we witnessed in Ballymena. Its now an anodyne and unoriginal point, and one espoused by everyone from Steve Laws to Daniel Hannan, that we are in a 'pre-civil war' condition.
My point is not to regurgitate this type of analysis, because in fact ,while the global situation is favourable to us, the future remains highly uncertain. Many are confident of apocalyptic premonitions of a Yugoslav style conflagration on British soil. But the greatest danger is complacency in this liminal period between political epochs. Undoubtedly we have witnessed an 'Overton shift' but this doesn't guarantee the latter part of this century will manifest as our ideal preference. There are a number of futures which could plausibly emerge, which, while constituting an exit from the status quo, would also be suboptimal historical outcomes. It's also possible that in the context of a global economic crash, and the immediate alleviation of concerns about migration which would accompany a Reform government, that a far-left party could take power. I think the latter is unlikely, but the 2030s will be a period of contestation, not necessarily right-wing hegemony.
I write this article for a different purpose. It is unfortunate to say that the defining Chernobyl crisis of the British state-immigrant sexual violence against British children-is still to a large extent refracted through the prism of Islam.