Tommy Robinson’s story is familiar to many of our readers. His fight against the grooming gangs and the islamization of English cities has made him a celebrity far beyond the borders of Great Britain.

As a working-class lad from Luton, he never reached the elite with his message about the mass abuses that took place in the old English northern industrial cities.

In Norway, people have heard about Rotherham and 1,400 girls who were subjected to systematic rapes by mainly Pakistani men. But that is only the tip of the iceberg. Because this has happened in every city and is still happening. And it is also happening in other European countries.

Many years passed before any interest was in the problem was shown and took a journalist from The Times before some responsible people began to wake up. And that did not happen until 2011, after decades of abuse.

Andrew Norfolk in The Times made the problem known to the rest of the British population:

It is always the working class who have to bear the brunt of the negative consequences of immigration. And they are never heard when they protest. Movements like the BNP and the EDL cannot simply be dismissed as racist and hateful hooligans. Among them were many family members who had just experienced the physical domination of Islam in their own locality. According to the public Jay Report, there are at least 1,400 grooming victims – in the small town of Rotherham alone. It is believed that this figure is conservative and that the real number is 2,000. The number for the whole country is something no one dares to guess.

“What else can we do but take to the streets and protest?”, asked Tommy.

Over time, the grooming and rapes have become a known fact and the court cases have been queuing up. It was a long time coming, and the police finally had to admit that they had deliberately allowed the abuses to go on unhindered. The culture of silence among politicians, social workers and police alike contributed to tens of thousands of victims having their lives ruined by gangs like this:

The former Labour MP for Rotherham, Denis MacShane, said he had been “too much of a liberal leftie” and should have done more to investigate the sex-grooming cases. He told the BBC:

“I think there was a culture of not wanting to rock the multicultural community boat if I may put it like that.”

In 2017, the BBC aired a three-part series based on the stories of three of the girls who were abused in Rochdale. It was shocking to watch. We described it at the time as follows:

The eerily realistic portrayal in this BBC series gripped the nation. You simply didn’t feel like you were watching actors, but rather a kind of disturbed reality TV. Several people also wrote on social media that they couldn’t bear to watch. Those of us who survived were left with indelible impressions.

From a rape scene from the film:

The girls were subjected to violence, threats, torture and several were even killed. Several places had their own “rape houses”.

Tommy Robinson says he is a messenger. While many in the working class no longer trust the police, politicians or the media, they are happy to tell their stories to Tommy.

Time has moved on from a twisted leftist ideology that we are all equal and that all cultures are equally good. Britain is far ahead of Norway but still struggles with a class divide and a contempt for the working class that Labour in particular seems to cultivate. The party that was supposed to represent the working class now consists of academics who have never been on a “council estate” (social housing area). Champagne socialists, as they are called.

This is the same development that we have also seen in other countries where the distance between politicians and the population is constantly increasing. And now the politicians have elevated themselves to a point where they have become afraid of their own people. To keep the people under control, they introduce “hate laws” where only the ethnic population is to be subdued. Anyone who rises up against this is dealt with new laws in hand. Social media helps to create a cancel culture where everything just disappears, such as previous videos on Youtube by Tommy Robinson.

Tommy Robinson’s protests against a government that no longer takes its own people into account are being severely suppressed. He is being persecuted with “lawfare”. But the British middle class has also had its eyes opened after ordinary people are imprisoned for writing something nasty on social media. The Labour government has even gone so far as to release prisoners to create space in already overcrowded prisons!

Tommy’s personal story is a parallel to the development of society and the disappearing freedom of expression. His popularity has grown in step with people’s anger at the political overreach of the people. He has, in the eyes of those in power, become an enemy of the people who must be neutralized.

We invited Tommy Robinson to Oslo in September. He had a lot on his mind. First we had an interview in the studio and the next day he gave a lecture for Document’s subscribers.

Tommy has been arrested several times and has had to deal with muslims who want to kill him.

On October 28th he was be back in court with a potential sentence of four years.

Now you can hear his story as only Tommy can tell it:

YouTube:

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