Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️

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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️ banner
Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️

Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️

@welshpaddy92

Welshman in Hong Kong 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰 Christ is King ☦️ Join Restore Britain: https://t.co/JL9h2qcBKp

Hong Kong Katılım Nisan 2026
512 Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️
I’ve been thinking for some time about where I stand on the politics of British culture, ethnicity and immigration into our country and I think I’ve managed to write it out coherently and consistently. Essentially this is my personal manifesto:
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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️
Absolutely overwhelmed with the love from the Restore Britain family! Thank you all so much for the follows, I’m trying to follow back as much as I can but rate limiting only lets me do about 10 at a time so will take a while
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Callum
Callum@AkkadSecretary·
It might genuinely be cheaper for Americans to spend a month in China than 1 week in the US on holiday. Hotel in Beijing I am in is ~$50 a night, the equal in Miami would be ~$300 a night Miami: 7*300=2100 Beijing: 30*50=1500 Meal out can easily be $4 for what is $30 in US
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Callum
Callum@AkkadSecretary·
Food cart in Beijing claiming the CEO of Nvidia tried the stuff on Trumps visit. So drink the same soy milk as the billionare.
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Callum
Callum@AkkadSecretary·
Chicken box
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RestoreBritain - Southport (ANDY)
I will not follow any Restore Britain supporters who have for example 6000 followers, but only follow 65. Just not on! We are all in this together are we not?
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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️
@transit_jam This is good. A lot of the rioters were young impressionable kids in an environment of mass disinformation in both media and schools. Besides, who wasn’t a radical in their youth? Rather than write off an entire generation of HK’s youth, it’s better to give them a second chance
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James 🇭🇰 Ockenden
James 🇭🇰 Ockenden@transit_jam·
In 2018 I proposed an amnesty programme for arrested and convicted Occupy youth. Somehow that annoyed people on all sides and I dropped the whole idea. But the Security Bureau's latest scheme for 2019 arrestees and convicts looks quite promising.
Nury Vittachi@NuryVittachi

By James Ockenden ANTI-CHINA AGITATORS have wasted no time spinning the Hong Kong government’s latest olive branch to riot arrestees as “forced re-education”. But the new “Positive Guidance” program, which sees young arrestees from the 2019-20 riots offered the chance to wipe the slate clean, is a very welcome initiative from the Security Bureau and should be celebrated as as humane and empathetic way to deal with some of the youngsters caught up in 2019-20 unrest. . I PROPOSED AN AMNESTY Back in 2018, I proposed an amnesty programme for those convicted around “Occupy Central” and other anti-China movements. This seems naïve on reflection, given the dark forces proven to be lurking within many of those movements, but the idea was for reconciliation to open a dialogue and rescue those who had fallen into the honey-tongued trap of black-clad violence. The proposal fell on stony ground and I didn’t consider it wise to push the idea further after 2019. Publicly, at least, compassion for fringe cases was not a priority while urgent national security issues raged. . BEHIND THE SCENES Yet I knew from friends at the Correctional Services Department that the government was, behind the scenes, taking rehabilitation of convicted 2019 youth seriously. One fellow playgroup dad who worked at a prison had only good things to say about many of the imprisoned 2019 youngsters and their attitudes to self-improvement: his stories, and those from others, did not tally with the tales of prisoner life shared from outside Hong Kong nor with the angry missives of a few hard-core activists. Not much of the rehabilitation work was public until recently. But by the end of February, a total of 1,325 “black-clad violence”-related convicted persons had voluntarily joined Project PATH, a rehabilitation programme yielding an incredible 0.4 percent recidivism rate (against Hong Kong’s overall 22.4 percent rate). And while the government worked to extend rehabilitation “after the prison walls” for released convicts, work was also afoot to tackle another group “before the prison walls”–those young people arrested during black-clad protests but not yet charged. . LED BY A POPULAR SINGER That low-key campaign became the Positive Guidance programme now going viral around the world after singer Hins Cheung King-hin announced he would lead mentorship groups of arrestees to the Chinese mainland for rehabilitation tours. The new voluntary programme, building on Project PATH concepts, offers welcome relief for the thousands of youngsters trapped in the limbo of being arrested in 2019-20 but not yet charged. An estimated 5,000 youngsters can voluntarily join the programme, learning Chinese history, value systems, and techniques for rebuilding family relations. . ARE THEY ‘RE-EDUCATION CAMPS’? Critics who claim this is forcing young people into “re-education camps” are missing the point. First, of course, these are entirely voluntary. But more importantly, the education is hardly more arduous than a driver education programme and, given the trade-off – a dropping of potentially serious criminal proceedings – it must be viewed as an olive branch for reconciliation rather than anything nefarious. Critics also say arrestees are considered innocent under Hong Kong law, until proven guilty, and therefore “rehabilitation” requires some acknowledgement of guilt. . APOLOGY LAWS I would draw a parallel here with Hong Kong’s apology laws. These were introduced to allow parties to apologize to each other without admitting guilt or liability. Before those laws were introduced, saying sorry could be an expensive legal mistake. Likewise with rehabilitation of these arrestees, we need to get away from strict “guilty/innocent” labels if we are to achieve any reconciliation. . YOUNG PEOPLE ACTED ON IMPULSE Of course it’s not just the anti-China elements calling foul on the rehabilitation schemes. The more hawkish critics will say these youngsters were arrested for a reason and they should pay the price. Well, first of all, a fair number caught up during the social unrest were regular folk, curious about the unfolding events. At protests and riots, I saw some very bad people I hope are off the streets for a long time. But I also saw a lot of kids who’d never been, for example, on a traffic-free highway before and couldn’t quite believe the strange freedom that brings. Police scooping up lunchtime protest offenders would find they had netted an indiscriminate mix of truly deplorable violent rioters with petrol bombs and curious locals enjoying a spectacle. As a Security Bureau spokeswoman told me in response to questions on the rehabilitation scheme, many young people acted on impulse and were “unwittingly caught by the law. Many of them deeply regretted their actions.” . BEING ‘IN THE SYSTEM’ IS STRESSFUL But secondly, many of those arrestees have been on police bail for seven years now, and that’s no picnic. I know from personal experience the pain here, even without a charge. For some of those youngsters, any excitement or glamor at being handcuffed and bundled into the back of a police van in front of hundreds of thirsty foreign photographers would have dissipated extremely quickly as all the emotion, drama and nuance of the incident would be reduced to relentless paperwork. The weight of being “in the system” is hard to bear. Technically, under the law, you’re innocent… but it doesn’t feel that way when you’re spending every fourth Sunday reporting to a police station, and I admire those youth who went through that without spiralling into more trouble. And so, we should celebrate Positive Guidance and support all parties in achieving something we might have though impossible back in 2019. [James Ockenden is a Hong Kong based journalist.] [Friday news project]

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designguyBro
designguyBro@JerEngineer9·
@welshpaddy92 Agree w/ spirit of these ideas but may need to be considered within grand context of World we live in.. what are goals of ISL & IND & MENAPI cultures? collaboration -or- predatory/parasitic behaviour What does UN/ECHR/WEF want? rich supporting poor -or- redistribute w/o goals?
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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️
I’ve been thinking for some time about where I stand on the politics of British culture, ethnicity and immigration into our country and I think I’ve managed to write it out coherently and consistently. Essentially this is my personal manifesto:
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Harbi
Harbi@Harbi607·
@welshpaddy92 I'm in the middle too, ethnonats serve a good purpose of protecting ethnicity with civnats moreso an inclusive culture, both angles are important. Agree with your points, only I'd maybe be harsher towards Islam with a full blanket ban & remigration for all Muslims that resist.
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Patrick 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇭🇰☦️
@Red_Squirrel_UK I agree and on the whole those tribes belong in their own lands but at the same time I think that it’s acceptable to permit a small number of certain individuals from tribes outside of our own provided that they know their place in our land and play along with us
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