While Kemi Badenoch has just been eliminated from the Conservative Party leadership race, it has not come without the usual smears. She could have become the first black party leader and Prime Minister in any European government, yet this was never going to silence haters because she refused to be cowed by the Woke crowd and believes in Britain.
Indeed, even the possibility of being Britain’s first black Prime Minister did not exclude her from despicable smears. Badenoch, of course, could easily be linked to imaginary “fascism” and whatnot. Even as Britain today has no viable, well-organised “fascist” movement to speak of (nor any other English-speaking nation, for that matter).
Britain is a country gripped by a hysterical virtue-signalling cult. Nowhere else is the nation’s health system codified into a religion. The hysteria of “anti-racism” resulted in the covering up of rapes in Rotherham, Rochdale and Telford, all because authorities were petrified of being seen as “racist”. Something similar also happened with gang rapes in Sydney, greatly increasing racial tension in Australia.
Similarly, the “anti-fascist” cult is based entirely on imagination that some “fascist” movement is around the corner. The hysterical reaction to the display of national flags is one such example. The entire “anti-fascist” lie has effectively given Vladimir Putin the green light to commit genocide in Ukraine. It has nothing in common with Britain defeating fascism in Africa in World War II, for a start.
It’s ironic that the supporters of Donald Trump are accused of being a political cult, by the very people whose belief system resembles not merely a cult, but a full-fledged irrational belief system. A movement which claims to denounce greed and capitalism is in fact motivated by profiting out of an imaginary threat and providing lucrative employment for its cadres. They fund and administer a corrupt and bloated NGO sector.
Can you really take them seriously at all?