Everywhere we look in modern Britain we see evidence of a two tier society




Now, it seems that almost everywhere we look in modern Britain today, we see more evidence of a two-tier society. It began with the Government’s response to the Southport atrocities. Keir Starmer, the man who took the knee to the Black Lives Matter mob, decided to brutally crack down on rioters and protesters. Then, the Prime Minister decided to withhold information from the public about Axel Rudakubana, claiming that it would prejudice his trial. Then, it emerged that he had condemned acts of terror in the past before they went to trial.Matthew Goodwin gave his take on the two-tier justice GB NEWS Next, we saw the sentencing guidelines change, with ethnic minorities potentially receiving preferential treatment when being sentenced.Indeed, just today, Baroness Falkner, the chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, has said that this could amount to discrimination against white men. Well, it doesn’t end there.LATEST DEVELOPMENTS Some of you will remember this, a Palestine Action activist defacing an anti-painting of former British Prime Minister Arthur Balfour at a Cambridge University college about this time last year.While the police have ended their investigation into Palestine Action, this was a case in which the suspects were filmed, and the group involved publicly took responsibility for it.So, why, I ask, have the police dropped the investigation?Well, it seems that if your cause is fashionable enough, the rules don’t apply to you.Pro-Palestine protesters in London GettyIf you’re a white working-class person in this country who riots or protests following the Southport atrocities, you will face the full force of the law.You’ll be fast-tracked through the courts and often sentenced to prison for things you wrote on social media in the privacy of your own home.But if your cause involves Palestine or some other fashionable luxury belief that the elite class agrees with, you’ll get off scot-free.A few days ago, polling showed, however, that only 13 per cent of British people support this approach to two-tier justice.Just 13 per cent support two-tier justice. The vast majority of hardworking, taxpaying British people out there reject this two-tier justice system, as indeed do I.These sorts of beliefs are supported by a fringe minority, while the majority of people reject them outright.These policies are destroying trust in our judiciary. They’re destroying trust in our legal system, the police, and politics. They must be brought to an end.If we are going to restore any common sense to our system and our country, we must oppose two-tier justice.