Susan retweetledi
Susan
1.3K posts

Susan
@Anne67S
| 🏴🇬🇧🏴🏴🇬🇧🏴 | @RestoreCov_ | Coventry Restore Member 🇬🇧🏴 |
London, England Katılım Eylül 2025
459 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi

I feel like many people still don’t quite understand the level of depravity inflicted on those little girls — or just how young they were.
Think of your sister, daughter, or granddaughter as a child. Picture them. Think of how young and vulnerable they were.
Lucy Lowe was 14.
Vicky Round was 12.
Becky Watson was 11.
Charlene Downes was 11 or 12.
Sammy Woodhouse was 14.
Victoria Agoglia was 13.
Sarah Wilson was 11.
And there are countless more.
They were children. Many barely out of primary school, so young and in no way responsible for the atrocities committed against them.
Think about what gangs of Pakistani-Muslim men put those little girls through. Now imagine it was your sister, daughter or granddaughter.
Pakistani-Muslim grooming gangs plied them with alcohol and drugs, they raped them in graveyards, they put them into the back of taxis and drove them to be gang-raped by 20+ of their friends, they dismembered them and sold them as kebab meat, they inserted a pump into their anal cavity and had multiple men sodomise them at once, they raped them on filthy mattresses above takeaway shops, they forced panties down their throat to muffle the screams, they threatened to murder them if they told anyone, they brutally beat them, they killed them and torched their houses with their family inside, they picked them up from local authority care homes to be raped, they forced them to take crack cocaine and heroin, they convinced them they loved them so they could abuse them, they killed their unborn children, they targeted the most vulnerable and marginalised, they told them no one would believe them, they forced them to get abortions, they passed them round like a piece of meat, they threatened to kill their families, they gaslit and manipulated them.
And that is just a fraction of the abuse inflicted by Pakistani-Muslim grooming gangs in Telford, Rochdale, Rotherham, Oldham and elsewhere. That is just a tiny percentage of the horror that thousands of little girls faced at the hands of their abusers.
Now think about the people that were meant to protect them. Who comes to mind? Police, local councils, social services, sexual health clinics, schools, care homes.
But they didn’t.
Those in positions of power turned a blind eye for decades while little girls were being raped, tortured, and murdered.
They branded them “white slags”, “child prostitutes”, and “paki shaggers”. They walked in on victims naked and drugged with 20+ adult men and only arrested the child, they arrested girls for prostitution and handed them back to the same men that were exploiting them, they added the victims to dockets as co-defendants in their own abuse, they downplayed the scale of abuse, they refused to investigate reports, they paid for the taxi rides the girls got raped during, they silenced whistleblowers (like @MaggieOliverUK), they blamed the girls for their own abuse, they tried to block inquiries, and more.
Imagine all of this happened to your sister. Or your daughter. Or your granddaughter.
Now think again about how young they were, how vulnerable, how innocent.
And understand the true horror of child sexual exploitation and the depravity of Pakistani-Muslim grooming gangs.

English
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi

Remember that 19 Yazidi girls were burned alive in iron cages by ISIS for refusing to convert to Islam and become sex slaves.
ISIS paraded them through the streets of Mosul, then burned them in front of hundreds of people.
Not a single Muslim or Palestinian activist protested for the Yazidis!

English
Susan retweetledi

Yesterday’s march was far more impactful than we can imagine. It sent a clear message to Parliament, Keir Starmer, and the Labour Party: no matter what vile rhetoric they spill, the UK is united. We will not stay silent. The people are fighting to take our country back — and we will win.
The Labour Party and other politicians calling us racists, violent, or far-right extremists is nothing more than fearmongering. And the good news? It no longer works.
We are united.
We are strong.
We are fighting.
We will get our country back!
🇬🇧🏴🏴🏴
#Restore #RestoreBritain
English
Susan retweetledi

The Fat Feck ain’t 18, he’s not even 18 stone, never mind guess his age, guess his weight
A Syrian asylum seeker appeared in court accused with the rape of a young woman in a public toilet on Bournemouth seafront on Wednesday.
Mohammed Abdullah, 18, allegedly attacked the 20-year-old woman in the toilet in Undercliff Drive, Bournemouth, at about 2am on July 6.

English
Susan retweetledi

This is what real Britain sounds like.
A British Navy veteran, straight from the front line of what our government has done to our country.
“I’ve had enough… I don’t want Islamists in my country. I’m prepared to fight for this country.”
They’ve pushed too far. The veterans are waking up. The people are waking up.
Unite The Kingdom.
Share this everywhere!
🎥 @HannasWorldUK17
English
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi

Thank you all for your engagement with my last post on this woman and the #UTK Rally, well, turns out she lost her job. This is an update as of 25th of April.
She still went today!
#Racism #UTK #LabourParty #RestoreBritain #FreeSpeechUnion
youtube.com/shorts/geV0FBh…

YouTube
English
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi

An account on YT called Shady Shae walked through the Unite the Kingdom protest today to talk with some of the attendees that Keir Starmer called far-right extremists.
One guy he spoke with is Iranian and knows where the UK is headed. That is why he attended.
The erosion of social cohesion and trust will be the downfall of western civilization.
English
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi
Susan retweetledi

I wasn’t there in London yesterday.
My body wouldn’t allow it anymore.
So I watched it from a chair at home,
a war pensioner staring at a screen,
watching thousands march streets
I once marched in uniform.
And honestly… part of me wished I was there.
Just to stand amongst ordinary British people again
without feeling like loving your country
has somehow become something shameful.
Before the march had even begun
they’d already made their minds up about them.
Called them divisive. Dangerous. Extremists.
Yet what I saw on that screen
looked nothing like the picture
being painted before the rally had even begun.
I saw veterans.
Families carrying Union Jacks.
Working people. Pensioners. Young lads singing in the streets.
Ordinary faces the media stopped understanding years ago.
The police barriers stretched across London,
creating sterile zones through the heart of the city,
yet beyond them the streets felt alive again.
You could feel it even through a screen.
Flags moving like waves beneath grey skies.
Crowds packed beneath the shadow of Parliament.
Big Ben standing over it all
like Britain itself was silently watching.
And amongst all the chants, speeches and noise,
one moment stayed with me more than any other.
The prayer.
For a few seconds the shouting disappeared
and something older seemed to hang in the air above London.
Not politics.
Not parties.
Something deeper than that.
That’s what people are really fighting for.
The feeling that the country they grew up loving
is slowly slipping away
while they’re told not to notice.
The strange thing was
they didn’t look angry to me.
They looked united.
Hopeful even.
Like people remembering
they were not alone.
And sitting there watching it all unfold,
I realised something.
A nation rarely dies dramatically.
It fades slowly
when its own people become afraid to defend it.
But yesterday proved something important.
The old spirit is not dead yet.
Not while thousands still march beneath the flag.
Not while veterans still care about this country.
Not while ordinary people still refuse to give up on Britain.
And watching from home,
I realised I was witnessing something deeper.
People trying to hold onto a country
they feel slowly slipping away.

English
Susan retweetledi


















