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We need to do something about mass immigration before it’s too late. Statistics show that if foreign nationals (non UK passport holders) were convicted of 100% of the sexual offences in London alone, they’d be committing at a rate 3.3x higher than British nationals. Women’s Safety Initiative are calling...

24,372 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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I asked the Safeguarding Minister, Jess Phillips, if she'd considered the impact that mass migration has on the safety of women and girls. She said that there's no reliable data on this issue. But that isn't entirely true. There is indicative data, and it is damning. It's true that people from any country, or culture, can be violence towards women and girls, including sexually. It's also true that, regardless of a person's background, we should come down hard on those who commit violent or sexual abuse. However, we should also recognise that not every culture has the same attitudes towards women and girls. In some cultures, for example, it's seen as indecent for a woman to walk around without her hair covered. In most cultures, it’s normal for men and women to be segregated for some things (like getting changed); in some cultures, men and women are segregated for many more things. In some cultures, physical and sexual violence towards women is commonplace. When men from those cultures come to this country, those are the cultural assumptions they bring with them. This makes intuitive sense. Why would we expect people to suddenly adopt British norms, habits, and behaviours, immediately upon arriving here? Particularly when so many people in the British state are unwilling to recognise that different cultures have different norms in the first place? That's not to say that everybody from these cultures poses a threat to women and girls. And of course, some of those people may have wanted to come here to get away from those very cultural expectations. But what we often see is that, 'per capita' (or per person), people from certain nationalities are more likely to commit certain types of crime when they come to the UK. That's particularly true in the case of illegal migrants, who are disproportionately likely to be young men - the group most likely to commit violent or sexual crime. Back in October, Labour MPs voted to block the release of detailed migrant crime data, which would have given us the full picture about how likely different migrant groups are to commit certain crimes. Some nationalities might be more likely to commit crime than British nationals. Others might be less likely. But at least we'd have the data, which would allow us to have an informed debate about this. However, thanks to the hard work of campaigners and journalists, we have some indicative data about the rates at which different nationalities commit crime, including crime which disproportionately targets women and girls. For example, data obtained from the Ministry of Justice last year showed that two nationalities, Afghans and Eritreans, were more than 20 times as likely to be convicted of a sexual offence than British nationals. This data showed that Afghans had a conviction rate for sexual offences of 59 per 10,000 people, while Eritreans had a conviction rate of 53.6 per 10,000 people. British nationals, on the other hand, had a conviction rate of 2.66 per 10,000. People have since disputed those figures. They say that, since the population figures used to work out this data are taken from the 2021 Census, we're likely to be undercounting the number of Afghans and Eritreans in the country. But even if that's true, the rate of conviction for sexual offences would still be much higher amongst Afghans and Eritreans than amongst British nationals. If this indicative data is wrong, then the Government should publish the full figures. Their failure to do so is a choice. We can collect a person's nationality when they're arrested, when they stand trial, and when they go to prison. People deserve to know what impact mass migration is having on the safety of women and girls. We need to be able to tell the truth about the fact that not every culture treats women in the same way, and that when people arrive here, they often bring that cultural baggage with them.

Katie Lam

174,473 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

Zeteo's Mehdi Hasan on ITV's Peston, "Just watched the video before I came on air with you. It's horrific thing to see, both the attack and the police disarming, uh, of this guy" "We've seen the number of anti Semitic incidents go up in the uk. I just saw a statistic, I think, from the Community Security Trust that something like 22% of antisemitic incidents in 2022 or 15%" "A small minority of anti Semitic incidents a few years ago cited Israel" "And I think a majority of them now do" "So they, that is that illusion, as you put it there" "I've spent my entire adult life, my professional career as a journalist trying to separate the two out" "As you know, I'm a very outspoken critic of Israel and especially this Israeli government and this genocide in Gaza. But, uh, I go out of my way to tell people on my side of the argument, do not do, do not do that" "Do not conflate, Jews and Judaism with Israel or even with Zionism" "And look, it becomes more complicated because of course many people in the Jewish community do support Israel. And that becomes a problem" "I think we need to be able to have these conversations, but at the same time all agreeing that violence is never the solution" "Anti Semitic violence is horrific, just as any other kind of racist or political violence is. But it's a conversation that has to be had" "We can't hide away from this" "There's a big debate about the definition of anti Semitism, the IHRA definition. Where do you put Israel in that definition?" "Clearly some people who are anti Zionist cross the line into anti Semitism, but many people who do don't" "And I think we have to be a little bit more nuanced" "We hear about these marches, that these are anti Semitic marches, which is absurd. I know many people who go in those marches who aren't anti Semitic at all. I know many Jewish people" "But is there an anti Semitic placard in there somewhere? Sure" "Is there an anti Semitic persons in there? Sure" "We just got to be able to break this stuff up because people are not going to stop protesting Israel" "And I don't think it's fair to ask people to stop protesting Israel" "But I think it is fair to say that we need to be able to talk about this stuff in a more nuanced way and all agree as a baseline point to" "So no matter what your views on Israel are, you cannot blame Jews anywhere in the world for what the Israeli government does"

Farrukh

56,816 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce