Kier Starmer's comment - that there's "lots of housing" available across the UK - is more than just tone-deaf. It's an insult to every British family trapped in the rental crisis, every young person shut out of home ownership, and every veteran sleeping on the streets of the very country they once served.
It's hard not to see this as one of two things: outright ignorance or deception. Keir Starmer knows full well there is no surplus of housing. He knows councils are scrambling to find beds for the British homeless. Yet he stands before a Commons committee and tries to convince the British people that there are homes aplenty - as though we're all fools to be pacified.
The reality is this, housing is scarce. Rents have soared by nearly 30% in just three years. First-time buyers have been priced out. Social housing is overwhelmed. And while British families are forced to compete for every square foot, this Government is busy buying up homes - not for the people of this nation - but for asylum seekers, many of whom have arrived here illegally.
And the consequences of that are being felt. In towns like Epping, local communities are pushed to the edge. The Bell Hotel, a stone's throw from a secondary school, has become a flashpoint - housing adult male migrants, one of whom now stands accused of multiple sexual offences, including against a young girl.
These are not isolated incidents; they are part of a pattern. A pattern of neglect, of prioritising ideology over responsibility, and of betraying the very people our Government is supposed to serve.
When you import cultures entirely alien to our way of life - in large numbers and with little to no integration - you don't build a stronger society. You fracture it. You create silos, not communities.
We now have areas across Britain that are unrecognisable from what they were a generation ago - not because of natural change or progress, but because of forced demographic engineering designed to dilute British identity.
Keir Starmer and his ilk see the world through a globalist lens. They do not believe in national borders. They do not believe in cultural preservation. And they certainly do not believe that British citizens should come first in their own country. Their answer to every crisis - be it housing, crime, or integration - is to pretend there isn't one. To lie. To gaslight.
The Home Office is not only warehousing migrants in hotels - it's actively buying properties to rehome them. At the very same time that councils are outbid and families are told there's nothing available. And then Starmer dares to lecture us with his fantasy of "lots of housing"?
If the Government had a shred of integrity, its priorities would be crystal clear: house the homeless who are already here. Help the young onto the property ladder. Get our veterans off the streets.
Secure our borders. Deport those who break our laws - not offer them free housing. But this Labour Government is more concerned with appeasing international bodies and globalist ideals than protecting the people who put them in office.
And while they gaslight the public, real communities suffer. Real families are pushed aside. Real safety is compromised. The people of the UK didn't ask for migrant hotels. They didn't vote to have their daughters put at risk. They didn't agree to live in fear while being told that their concerns make them "racist" or "intolerant."
The truth is, we are being conditioned to accept second-class citizenship in our own land. Conditioned to keep our heads down while our services, housing, and safety are handed over to others.
Conditioned to feel shame for simply expecting our Government to put its own first. Well, I refuse to be conditioned. And you should too.
The United Kingdom is not a dumping ground. It is not a global charity. It is our home - and it is time our leaders started treating it as such. Enough is enough.
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