THE globalist parasites have a problem. Their climate scam is withering on the vine. Their fake plague scam is being exposed. Their implementers Starmer, Macron, Blair, Gates, Soros and the like are widely reviled.
An uncomfortable number among the great unwashed are thinking for themselves. They are exposing the truth. Disguising the truth as ‘disinformation and misinformation’ is not working.
To implement the UN’S Agenda 2030 the parasites need to control every media outlet. For all its faults, X still allows some freedom of expression. Too many of their crimes are being exposed. Therefore, they are following the age old tactic of Problem, Reaction, Solution to remedy the situation. This involves the creation of a problem, the demand for a resolution and the implementation of an authoritarian response.
One of their latest attempts involves football. Football, they think, will engage the minds of a difficult-to-reach constituency.
I played football at a reasonable standard into my late 30s. During one of my final appearances as a defender, I was confronted by a speedy young winger half my age. I distinctly remember an opposition supporter shouting: ‘Come on, Simon, you can easily get past that relic.’
Had that happened in the last few months I could no doubt have reported the individual for an ageist hate crime. As you can imagine, much harsher words were bandied about in the heat of battle but I shall leave those to the imagination of the readers. In my experience personal insults have always been part of the game.
Black players have always been the subject of insults because of their colour. The excellent John Barnes was regularly pelted with bananas but he turned his disgust into pity for the manipulated idiots who threw them. He appreciates that people are conditioned by their environment, the media and authorities to elicit certain responses and that racism in sport cannot be eliminated by gestures such as kneeling at the start of games.
However, the decades-old problem of racial abuse in sport is currently being weaponised to crackdown on X using the Problem, Reaction, Solution playbook.
In a report highlighting a reported increase in such abuse, Sky News reports on Kira Rai, a player for an insignificant fourth division women’s football team who has allegedly been the subject of racial slurs (the majority of these have come from Asia and Europe). The article goes on to blame X. The corpulent Cheshire Chief Constable, Mark Roberts, tells the Sky reporter: ‘We’re seeing more reports, which is depressing,’ adding: ‘There has been some slippage recently with X.’
In a perverse appeal for a crackdown on free speech, Alba Kapoor, Racial Justice Lead at Amnesty International UK, has chimed in saying: ‘The news that suspected online hate crimes have quadrupled already this season in English football sadly reflects the wider trend of X and other social media platforms amplifying misinformation and hate . . . The Government must recognise that the self-regulation model for social media companies is clearly failing, and this will only get worse until it intervenes.’
Her comments are remarkably similar to those of her boss Sacha Deshmukh, who declared that ‘X created a staggering amplification of hate’ following the murder of three children in Southport.
We are invited to believe that it was X rather than Axel Rudakubana who generated the hate, just as Gary Neville has instructed us to associate ‘angry middle-aged white men who voted for Brexit’ with the killing of innocent Jews in north Manchester reportedly by an evil, thrice-wed, drug-addled, wife-beating Muslim. Heaven forfend that Deshmukh or Neville would blame these incidents on the immigration disaster of successive governments over the past 30-plus years.
Incidentally, how easy would it be for the supposed ‘problem’ of the increase in ‘online hate crimes’ to have originated from the 77th Brigade and their associates?
Wittingly or unwittingly, Kira Rai, Alba Kapoor and Sacha Deshmukh are but three more small cogs in a very big New World Order machine. Being called ‘a relic’ encouraged me to run faster and tackle harder. I suggest that instead of crying to Sky News, Peterborough United’s Miss Rai uses the abuse to do the same.










