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Muslim CAN’T BELIEVE He’s Getting ARRESTED After Doing the UNTHINKABLE!!

Hello sir, you got your passport with you? Yes.

Can I see it, please? Yes.

At this time, you’re under arrest.

Why? For sexual assault that took place.

So, the moment you just watched there is the moment a man accused of one of the most sickening crimes imaginable is arrested at Gatwick Airport.

Just look at his reaction.

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Not horror, not shame, not devastation for the victim, but disbelief the police are actually there for him.

A vulnerable young woman leaves hospital.

She should have been safe.

She [snorts] should have been protected.

Instead, she was followed, attacked, dragged into a car park, and yes, the worst happened.

And now the man responsible is behind bars.

But here’s the question millions of people are asking.

Is this really justice? Because while ordinary people are told to watch their language, watch their posts, and watch their opinions, the country keeps seeing horrific crimes, weak sentences, and a political class that only seems interested in outrage when it fits their preferred narrative.

And you know, this isn’t the only case because I’ve got another shocking case from Telford to talk to you about where a young man was allegedly targeted, kidnapped, bundled into the boot of a car, taken away, and tortured reportedly because he spoke to a female relative.

And at the same time, we got Kia Stalmer jumping straight into the Edinburgh attacks and saying they appear to be motivated by anti-Muslim hatred.

So apparently speculation is irresponsible, unless of course it comes from the prime minister.

So let’s get into this.

Before we start, make sure you hit the like button, subscribe to the channel, and uh let me know what you think of all this in the comments because this one, it’s not easy to talk about.

It involves a a a great case.

It involves a kidnapping and a torture case.

And it it involves a prime minister who seems very selective about when people are allowed to discuss motive, ideology, cultural hatred.

[snorts] And most importantly, it involves victims, real victims, people whose lives have been damaged while the rest of us are expected to keep quiet, moderate, you know, moderate our language and pretend we’re not noticing what’s happening to our country.

Now, let’s be very clear.

This isn’t about blaming every Muslim.

It’s not about blaming every Pakistani.

And it’s not about saying every community is responsible for the actions of criminals.

But it’s absolutely about asking why the public are constantly told.

They mustn’t notice patterns.

They mustn’t ask difficult questions and mustn’t demand answers when horrific cases keep appearing.

Because if a man does this, it’s the victim that matters.

If a man kidnaps and tortures somebody, the victim matters.

If violence is being justified by ideas about honor, family control, or women speaking to the wrong person, then the public has a right to talk about it.

Not because ordinary people are hateful, but because ordinary people are sick of being lied to.

The first video shows uh Sulaman McKesh being arrested at Gatwick Airport.

Now, according to Sussex Police, McKesh admitted what he did to the woman in in Worthing after an incident on the 11th of March.

The victim was a woman in her 20ies.

Reports say she had just left hospital in an incredibly vulnerable state when she was attacked in a car park.

Now, I’m not going to go into unnecessary graphic detail because the victim deserves dignity, but what happened to her was evil.

And the key point here is simple.

This woman needs safety.

Instead, she became the victim of a serious attack.

Now, watch the rest of this arrest footage.

Hello, sir.

You got your passport with you? Yes.

Can I see it, please? Yes.

At this time, you’re under arrest.

Why is that? For a sexual assault that took place.

I will confirm the details.

I will confirm the details.

Put your hands across your front.

You do not have to say anything may harm your defense if you do not mention when questioned.

Something you later rely on.

Anything you do say may be given evidence.

Do you understand the caution I have just given you? Yeah.

Yeah.

So this is recording.

There is nothing in there.

When it gets to the police station, anything that’s found in there will be booked in as your property.

Okay.

Have a seat.

If you were there, tell me why you were there.

No comments.

Tell me who you met.

No comments.

Was that male or you? No comments.

Where were you when this took place? No comments.

Is that similar to your jacket? No comments.

Is there anything that you would like to comment about this image that we have? No comments.

And you’ve replied no comment to all all of the questions.

Is there anything you would like to add to the to the situation? No comment.

No comments.

You know, when you look at that, you’ll see exactly what people are reacting to.

Because when you see footage like that, the public, they don’t just see an arrest.

They see the gap between what the political class sets and what ordinary people experience.

We’re told this place is safe.

We’re told this system works.

We’re told justice is being done.

But then people see cases like this and ask, “How did this happen? How was a vulnerable young woman able to leave hospital and be set upon like that? Where was the protection? Where was the deterrent? And when the sentence comes down, people ask another question.

Is the punishment anywhere near enough? Because for the victim of all this, it’s not just a court case.

It’s their life.

It’s the trauma they now have to carry.

And it’s something that can change someone forever.

And while the offender counts down the years until release, the victim may live with it for decades.

That’s why people get furious because they’re extremists.

Not because they’re hateful, but you know, but because they see a justice system that’s completely detached from the seriousness of the crime.

And this is where the public mood is hardening.

People are tired of hearing about reduced terms, automatic release, early release schemes, overcrowded prisons, rehab language, and all the usual excuses.

Because the question is this, when this happens to somebody, in this case a young woman, why does the criminal justice conversation so often become managing the offender? Why is it not [snorts] first, second, and third about the victim? Why? Why isn’t it about public safety? Or what about the deterrence? Why is it not about making sure people who commit these crimes are removed from society for a very long time? Because if the state can’t protect women after they’ve left hospitals, and what exactly is a state for? We’re taxed, policed, lectured, regulated, watched, and we’re told what we can say and what we can’t say, what we can post and what we can’t post.

But when a vulnerable woman is attacked after leaving A&E, the same system suddenly looks it looks weak, slow, and inadequate.

And people have had enough of it.

But it doesn’t stop there because the second case is also absolutely shocking.

This one came from Telford.

A 21-year-old man was kidnapped.

The footage reportedly shows men arriving, grabbing him, and forcing him into the boot of an Audi.

A relative tries to stop them.

They’re pushed away.

The victim reportedly manages to open the boot from inside the car and tries to escape, but they’re stopped.

He’s then taken away and tortured in a storage unit.

And according to reports, the reason given in court was that they just spoken to a female member of their family.

Think about that.

A man allegedly speaks to the wrong woman and the response is kidnap.

a boot of a car, a storage unit, and torture.

It’s not normal, is it? It’s not something Britain should ever have to tolerate.

It’s not something we should be afraid to talk about, is it? Have a look at this clip.

Now, this is the start of the footage and uh you can see what happens here.

I basically come out of the car [snorts] very, very quickly.

And they obviously get someone to the car, open the boot, and they go and you can see someone trying to put a stop to it and uh they they basically have it on their toes and away they go.

You know, that footage is actually very chilling because it’s not just a drunken argument outside a pub.

It’s organized.

It’s targeted.

And you know, it’s men turning up, taking someone from a property and treating them like they had no rights at all.

And the part that will disturb a lot of people is the alleged motive.

Because when a case involves this kind of activity connected to family control, honor, shame, or a woman speaking to somebody, the public should be allowed to ask very serious questions.

Where do these attitudes come from? Why are they allowed to exist here? Why are we importing problems that should have no place in a modern western country? And why is the establishment in this country so terrified of having this conversation? Because you know what would happen if ordinary people said openly what many are thinking? They’d be accused of hate.

They’d be accused of division.

They’d be accused of stirring things up.

But the real division comes when the authorities just refuse to be honest about what’s going on.

And the real danger comes when victims are ignored because the facts are just uncomfortable.

And the real extremism is pretending that silence is compassionate when of course it certainly isn’t.

Silence protects nobody except the people who benefit from it.

Now this brings us along nicely to Kia Starmer because at the same time as ordinary people are told not to speculate, not to generalize, not to jump to conclusions, Starmmer himself appears to have commented on the attacks that happened in Edinburgh by saying the suspect appears to be motivated by anti-Muslim hatred.

Now, let’s be clear.

If innocent people were attacked in Edinburgh because they were Muslim, you know, that’s obviously wrong.

It’s disgusting and it should be condemned.

Violence against innocent people, no matter whether they’re Muslim, Christian, whatever it is, it’s never acceptable.

And no one should be attacked because of their faith, their background, or the way they look.

That’s not the issue.

The issue is the double standard.

Because when the when the victim is Muslim, the the language from the top becomes instant, clear, moral and forceful.

The prime minister can talk about hatred, the media can talk about motive, campaign groups talk about ideology, and the whole establishment know they know exactly what to say.

But when the victim is a young woman attacked after leaving a hospital or a young man kidnapped and tortured after allegedly speaking to a female relative, suddenly we’re told to be cautious.

Suddenly we’re told not to notice background.

And suddenly we’re told not to ask cultural questions.

Suddenly the same people who jump to conclusions in one case demand silence in another.

That is what people are angry about.

It’s not the condemnation of violence against Muslims, the anger’s over the selective moral outrage.

So, let’s have a look at this clip of what Starman says.

Injured in the appalling attack in Edinburgh, which appears to be motivated by anti-Muslim hatred.

And Mr.

Speaker, let’s be clear.

In this country, an attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.

We will not stand for it and the perpetrator will face the full force of the law.

So there it is.

That’s what people are noticing because ordinary people are expected to wait for the police, the courts, the facts, the official line.

But when the narrative suits the establishment, suddenly the motive can be discussed immediately.

And that’s why trust is collapsing.

People, you know, they don’t believe the rules are being applied equally.

This is the thing.

They don’t believe the same standards are used for everyone [snorts] and they don’t believe the same outrage is shown for every victim.

They believe the political class has their favorites.

They believe some crimes are amplified and others are just buried.

And they believe some victims are treated as symbols while others are treated as inconvenient facts.

And whether politicians like that or not, that perception is now everywhere.

This country, it can’t survive on double standards.

It can’t survive with one rule for one group and one rule for everyone else.

And it can’t survive if victims are filtered through politics before they’re given comparison.

An attack victim deserves justice.

A kidnapping victim deserves justice.

A Muslim victim of a hate attack deserves justice.

A white workingclass victim deserves justice.

A child victim deserves justice.

A woman attacked by a stranger deserves justice.

Justice it shouldn’t depend on whether the case is politically convenient.

And this is where we’re going so wrong.

Everything is being viewed through politics.

Everything’s being filtered through identity and everything is managed through optics.

But ordinary people, they’re not stupid.

They can see what’s happening and they can see when something is called terrorism immediately.

They can see when something else is treated as isolated and they can see when the media zooms in.

They can see when the media looks away.

They can see when politicians get emotional with it all or when they go quiet and to be blunt, they’re sick of it.

So what should happen? First, all of these violent offenders should face proper sentences that reflect the lifelong damage they’ve done.

Second, dangerous criminals involved in kidnapping, torture, and organized violence should be removed from the public for a very long time.

Third, the government should stop treating prisons as an inconvenience and start treating public safety as the priority.

Fourth, police and prosecutors should be honest about motive where motive is relevant regardless of who the offender is.

And fifth, politicians should stop policing ordinary people’s speech while failing to protect ordinary people’s streets because people, they’re not asking for special treatment.

They’re asking for equal treatment.

They’re asking for honesty, justice, and they’re asking for leaders who care as much about the vulnerable women leaving hospital as they do about a headline that fits their narrative.

That it shouldn’t be controversial.

It should be the bare minimum.

So, when you look at these three situations together, I think they reveal something very dark about this country.

A woman’s attacked after leaving hospital.

A young man is kidnapped and tortured.

The prime minister comments on motive in another case while ordinary people are constantly told not to do the same.

And through it all, the public are expected to pretend the systems working.

It’s not.

Trust is breaking.

Confidence is collapsing.

And people are no longer willing to be shamed into silence because asking questions is not hatred.

Demanding justice is not extremism.

And noticing double standards is not dangerous.

What is dangerous is a country when the public are more afraid of speaking the truth than criminals are of committing the crime.

That’s the country we, you know, we have to stop becoming.

Let me know what you think of it all in the comments.

Thanks very much for watching.

Hit the like button, subscribe to the channel, share me on your socials, and I’ll talk to you soon.

Two glue.

 

Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.