English Rights Campaign

to defend the rights and interests of the English nation

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

THE BRITISH INQUISITION

11 January 2005

When Rebecca Miles, a care worker for battered Asian women, was unable to remember an interpreter’s name and said ‘it was Pamala, Popalam or Popadom - something like that’ the full force of the race war industry descended upon her. The fact that she had only been in the job for less than a month counted for nothing.

She was summonsed to a disciplinary hearing where she was told that unless she attended anti-racism classes and wrote an essay on the Stephen Lawrence case, then she could not keep her job. In the event, Rebecca Miles resigned.

However the race war zealots did not find much favour from the Muslim community. Anas Altikriti of the Muslim Association of Britain said ‘it is immensely important that we demonstrate a high level of common sense and tolerance towards one another, otherwise we will turn into a society where every utterance is skewed to fit a political agenda’.

Mrs Miles said: ‘During the (disciplinary) meeting I was reminded about the Macpherson report into the Stephen Lawrence case. I was appalled they could make a parallel with the handling of the investigation into the murder of a child’. She said that her remark had been ‘flippant, not racist’. She also said: ‘I was told it was a credit to my colleagues that they were prepared to carry on working with me. When I got home I was in floods of tears’.

Mrs Miles had been employed by Victim Support, a government funded charity, and had been seconded to Alert which specialised in victims of race crimes and domestic violence.

What Mr Altikriti has failed to understand, is that the whole purpose of the race war industry is to skew ‘every utterance’ to fit the Marxist agenda. That is what so-called political correctness is all about. To control the way people think and talk.