The Sceptic | Episode 41: David Shipley on the Rape Gangs Inquiry, Tom Jones on the Ballymena Riots and Ben Pile On Dimming the Sun
In Episode 41 of the Sceptic, host Laurie Wastell speaks to the following guests:
- David Shipley, writer on prisons, crime and justice, on Baroness Casey’s bombshell grooming gangs rapid audit and plus the Muslim lobby in the Home Office
- Tom Jones, writer and Conservative councillor, on what the Ballymena riots in Northern Ireland say about the fractious state of multicultural Britain
- And for our premium subscribers, Laurie speaks to journalist and Daily Sceptic regular Ben Pile, on the alarmism around dimming the sun, the mad crusade for solar panels in Britain and why the public has stopped buying the green fanatics’ narrative
Donate to the Daily Sceptic to access our premium content. Follow Laurie on X. Follow David on X. Read David’s latest on the Daily Sceptichere. Follow Tom on X. Follow Ben on X. Subscribe to the Daily Sceptic YouTube Channel here. Produced by Richard Eldred. Filmed at the Westminster Podcast Studio.
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A little diversity is colourful (no pun intended) and interesting. Too much diversity is overwhelming and threatening. If you assigned a rating from zero (no diversity) to 100 (maximum diversity) where does the UK stand?
I suspect that we are well beyond the Goldilocks setting in some cities, and below the Goldilocks setting in the countryside.
Starmer feels safe to allow a national enquiry. With the new definition of Islamophobia in place, it could be used to sabotage the enquiry. Anybody using phrases such as grooming gangs or Pakistani rape gangs could be threatened with prosecution.
If you open your borders to barbarians, you will get barbaric behaviour. If you open your borders to hordes of barbarians, why would you be surprised to get lots of barbaric behaviour?
The inquiry needs to take testimony under the oath (otherwise it is all simply meaningless, such as was the inquiry into the death of Dr David Kelly).
The inquiry needs to be taking testimony from witnesses summons to attend and give evidence under oath (otherwise the entire proceedings are meaningless, toothless, such as was the inquiry into the death of Dr David Kelly).
Civil Servents would do well to also observe this provision from amongst the nine principles of policing. Section 5 guides for: ‘constantly demonstrating absolutely impartial service to law, in complete independence of policy, and without regard to the justice or injustice of the substance of individual laws’