British man arrested for Facebook post supporting anti-immigration riots
A British man is awaiting sentencing for a Facebook post in which he supported the anti-immigration riots that have spread throughout the UK.
Riots wrack Britain
Violent riots broke out in several cities and towns last week after 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana entered a dance class in Southport and stabbed to death three girls aged six, seven, and nine, and wounded ten others.
Police did not release Rudakubana’s name for over 48 hours after the stabbing spree, during which time some suspected the attacker to be Muslim. While Rudakubana reportedly does not belong to the Islamic faith, the act is seen by some as another anti-White attack fueled by the government’s “diversity” messaging.
Crowds have taken to the streets in at least five cities after the murders, setting fire to a police van and causing other damage. Rioters have also clashed with police and protested outside a mosque, with some reportedly shouting “we want our country back” and “save our children.” At least one riot has been blamed on what the govenment and media label a “far-Right” group, the English Defence League. Others gathered in protest outside 10 Downing Street, waving English flags and shouting “stop the boats.”
Man denied bail over Facebook post
While the Labour government is mobilizing 6,000 police officers to quell the anti-immigration riots, other members of law enforcement are going after taxpayers who express support for them.
28-year-old Jordan Parlour was arrested for a Facebook post encouraging rioters to target the Brittania Hotel in Leeds, which reportedly houses illegal migrants. The post came around the same time that the hotel allegedly had a window broken by rioters.
“Every man and his dog should smash the f**k out of the Britannia Hotel,” Parlour wrote, adding: “Cos they are over here living the life of Reilly, off the tax you hard working people earn, when it could be put to better use.”
Parlour was arrested at his girlfriend’s home and brought before a judge, who denied him bail. He will be sentenced this Friday by the Leeds Crown Court and faces over a year in prison.
“In my view you are going to receive an immediate custodial sentence given the nature of the offence and the background and the background climate it was committed against,” the judge told Parlour, denying bail because there are “substantial grounds to believe that [your case] would not go to court on Friday,” and “you might get frustrated, angry and upset again.”
Parlour is reportedly the first person to be arrested for a social media post supporting the riots. Until now, arrests for disfavored speech have primarily targeted critics of gender ideology.
Migrant riots good, English riots bad
The new Labour government has been criticized for cracking down on the anti-immigration rioters — over 100 of whom are likely to be charged as terrorists — while allowing Muslim rioters to rampage freely.
Birmingham Police were absent Monday night when hundreds of migrants, mostly Muslim men, attacked a bar, destroyed cars, and chased down journalists.
Last month in Leeds, West Yorkshire Police fled from a 2,000-strong mob of Muslim and Romanian rioters who destroyed a police vehicle and set a bus aflame. Police officers on the scene took flight, saying afterward they had been met with “a barrage of bricks and missiles.” The police remained largely absent for several hours as the rioters set fire to the neighborhood. Firefighters refused to enter the area, fearing for their own safety.
A “number of people” were arrested in connection with the riot. According to independent journalists, one of those was a British woman who was arrested on the spot after making “racially insensitive” remarks about the rioters.
In response to the recent anti-immigration riots, Prime Minister Keir Starmer promised to increase surveillance and censorship to clamp down on the “far-Right,” earning him the nickname “Two-Tier Kier.”