Sir Apex Tv Official
302 posts

Sir Apex Tv Official
@SirApexTv
Bringing The Best Footage Of Real Life Events, Dangerous Places In & Around The UK ! and America YouTube sir apex tv
Birmingham Katılım Kasım 2021
126 Takip Edilen208 Takipçiler
Sir Apex Tv Official retweetledi

@JohnSlinger What about lorries? Why is that not listed buddy ?
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@linmeitalks There is hardly any white people on that bus you dumb bitch
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Why can’t white people sit next to them in every empty seat, unless they are racist and hate them purely for the colour of their skin. 🧐
Ćřüèłłä@CruellaXiii
Life in London. No place for white people
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Sir Apex Tv Official retweetledi
Sir Apex Tv Official retweetledi
Sir Apex Tv Official retweetledi

There comes a point in the life of any nation when difficult questions can no longer be deferred—when the distance between what is said and what is experienced becomes too wide to ignore. The United Kingdom is approaching that point.
In recent weeks, a series of serious criminal cases has done more than shock the public conscience; it has exposed, with uncomfortable clarity, the growing disjunction between the stated intentions of our immigration and asylum system and its real-world outcomes. These are not merely isolated failures. They are indicators—warnings—that something more fundamental is amiss.
The first duty of the state is not rhetorical, but practical. It is to ensure the security of those who live under its laws. When that duty is perceived to falter—when enforcement appears inconsistent, when removal mechanisms stall, when legal protections are seen to be stretched beyond their intended purpose—public confidence does not simply diminish; it fractures.
For too long, the national conversation has been conducted in abstractions. We are told of openness, of compassion, of the moral necessity of maintaining a liberal society. These are serious principles, and they deserve serious defence. But principles untethered from enforcement do not endure—they erode. A system that cannot distinguish, with clarity and consistency, between those who abide by its laws and those who violate them invites not respect, but scepticism.
The projections of the Office for National Statistics make plain that migration will remain a defining feature of the coming decade. This reality is not, in itself, a crisis. What risks becoming a crisis is the apparent mismatch between scale and state capacity—the sense that the mechanisms of control, accountability, and integration are not keeping pace with the demands placed upon them.
And it is here that the argument must sharpen. A government that cannot enforce its own rules does not merely govern poorly; it undermines the legitimacy upon which its authority rests. Laws that exist only on paper, obligations that are honoured selectively, and assurances that fail to materialise in practice—these are not the hallmarks of a confident state. They are the symptoms of drift.
None of this requires the abandonment of liberal values. On the contrary, it requires their preservation through credibility. As John Stuart Mill understood, liberty is not sustained by sentiment alone, but by a framework robust enough to protect it. Order is not the enemy of freedom; it is its precondition.
What is needed now is not another cycle of reassurance, nor a retreat into slogans, but a reassertion of seriousness. That means a system in which the consequences of serious criminality are clear, consistent, and enforced; in which legal processes are not endlessly elastic; and in which the distinction between protection and permissiveness is restored.
This is, ultimately, a question of political will. Not whether the problem can be addressed—but whether it will be.
Because the alternative is already visible: a slow, grinding erosion of trust, a public increasingly unconvinced that the institutions designed to protect them are equal to the task. No society can sustain that indefinitely.
The choice, therefore, is not between compassion and control, as it is so often caricatured. It is between coherence and contradiction—between a system that commands confidence and one that steadily loses it.
And that is a choice that cannot be postponed forever.
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@richardVB70 Just full of backward thinking folk, easily manipulated.
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@hudnaxela @GreenPrtyDushka @ZackPolanski What response would you prefer I could go on and on, frankly I cba because the brain washed will never understand! When you see it, you can’t unsee it ! So when you finally do remember me :)
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Thanks for all the lovely comments and support from media round this morning.
Great to see Green Party membership ticking up as we enter a really crucial week.
Let's end Rip Off Britain.
Join.greenparty.org.uk
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@SirApexTv If i dont this as a kid. My mum would've threw her ashtray at me & somehow still managed to begin hittnng me with the newspaper before it hit me
I'd be that black and blue at school next day teachers would think i was a new pupil
Those kids need a good hard slap with a brick
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@KTHopkins Would love to know what they are going to disclose regarding this waiting patiently
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