A Look Inside Britain's
Muslim Sex Grooming Gang Scandal By Janet Levy, 4/8/16
For the past few decades, British
authorities have been caught up in the pervasive meme of multiculturalism --
the falsehood that all cultures are equal and that to believe otherwise is to
commit the worst modern day offense -- to be “racist.”
Under this fallacy, the British
government in 2001 introduced a series of restrictive
speech codes that
criminalized criticism of Islam, followed by a Racial and
Religious Hatred Bill imposing
fines and even imprisonment for speech that “incited hatred against a person
for their religious or racial background.”
These laws have victimized a number of
Britons. Hoteliers Ben and Sharon Vogelenzang were
prosecuted for
“insulting” a Muslim guest. Liberty Great Britain party chairman Paul Weston
was arrested on
suspicion of racial harassment after publicly reading a passage critical of
Muslims from Winston Churchill’s The River War. Dr. Vladislav Rogozov, a Czech-born,
UK cardiac anesthesiologist, is being
investigated by
Sheffield's Royal Hallamshire Hospital for giving an online interview about his
2013 confrontation with a Muslim surgeon who refused to replace her
blood-specked hijab with the proscribed, operating-theater headgear.
In this context and political climate,
with racism conflated with religion – one specific religion – it is easy to see
how government and public service employees would fear professional and legal
repercussions (up to seven years in prison) merely for speaking up about criminal
behavior by Muslims who justify their actions citing the Koran. In this way,
teachers, police, child care workers, government officials and others have been
silent about the growing menace of Muslim gangs who sexually groom and exploit
children in the UK.
In his riveting book, Easy Meat: Inside Britain’s
Grooming Gang Scandal (World
Encounter Institute/New English Review Press, 2016. 328 pp., $17.20)
author Peter McLoughlin explains how multiculturalism-inspired political
correctness along with
its companion, willful blindness concerning Islamic doctrine, has jeopardized
the safety and well-being of children. McLoughlin posits that, since 1988, this
nationwide sexploitation has resulted in the shattering of lives of between
100,000 to 1 million girls. The author documents how the fear of being deemed
racist and facing criminal charges, dismissal or even threats of violence, has
led to suppression of information and a stunning lack of intervention on behalf
of young victims. In essence, an extensive, insidious operation that targets
children for sexual grooming and enslavement has been covered up because of
political correctness and fear of Muslim retribution.
The book’s title comes from former UK
Home Secretary, Jack Straw, who saw Muslim perpetrators viewing non-Muslim
British victims as “easy meat.” Indeed, some Muslim sex-gang groomers actually
blame the girls, some as young as 11 years old, for being purposely alluring
and sexually advanced to corrupt Muslims.
In his research on Muslim groomers, McLoughlin
uncovered an unusual distinction between them and non-Muslim pedophiles.
Non-Muslim pedophiles are typically lone adults who groom children for sex in
reclusive secrecy, worry about being prosecuted by law enforcement, meet
accusations with defensive denial and worry about being discovered, shamed, and
criticized by friends or relatives. Muslim perpetrators, however, work in
gangs, see nothing wrong with their shariah-sanctioned activities, receive
collusive support from their communities and feel they are above the law.
During his investigations, McLoughlin found not one case of non-Muslim men
grooming Muslim girls, although 95% of men in Britain are non-Muslims.
News coverage of the crimes has been
mostly obfuscated by a complicit media that characterizes the overwhelmingly
Muslim perpetrators as generic “Asians.” According to McLoughlin’s research,
limited press coverage by mainly self-censoring journalists and lenient,
if any, criminal charges have enabled the gangs to act with relative impunity since
1988.
The author describes how Muslim
flesh-peddlers operate as part of a well-organized extensive network of taxi
drivers, shop and restaurant owners, and security guards. Girls, mainly between
the ages of 11 and 14, the majority from state-run children’s homes, are
ensnared while traveling from school to home, at shopping malls, restaurants,
bus stations and similar public venues. They are enticed with flattery, feigned
friendship, gifts, alcohol and drugs.
Alarmingly, a footnote in the book references
a quotation from a city outreach worker with the Children’s Society who states,
“every girl living in a children’s home in the city of Birmingham is being
sexually exploited.”
McLoughlin makes reference to the
staggering profitability of the sex grooming enterprise for the Muslim
community. He cites a 2007 expose, Mothers of
Prevention by Julie
Bindel, a feminist writer and founder of the legal reform group, Justice for
Women.
Bindel estimated that a pimp can make
$325,000 to $550,000 annually with one 16-year-old girl. From that, Bindel
extrapolated that over the average 15-year-per-girl pimping period, the annual
value of this criminal activity could amount to approximately £300 million or
$425 million.
McLoughlin does a good job of portraying
the frustration and desperation of victim’s families who have sought help to no
avail for well over a decade from local councils, law enforcement, child care
professionals and journalists.
Remarkably, for the most part, UK
authorities have failed to warn parents that young girls are at risk or to
recommend extra supervision and vigilance. No organized programs to educate
girls and parents exist and authorities have largely refused interviews with
the media on the topic. Teachers and school administrators have failed to
secure the school perimeter to stop sex grooming gangs from lying in wait for girls
outside of school premises.
The author reports that police routinely
dismiss parents’ concerns and have failed to set up surveillance operations at
strategically significant locations. Police have even arrested parents for
trying to save their children. In one such case, fathers, who were able to
track down their daughters and tried to rescue them were arrested by police. In
fact, McLoughlin discloses that law enforcement officers have actually returned
wayward girls to their pimps.
McLoughlin reveals that local
authorities – social workers, teachers’ unions, educational organizations and
childcare agencies – have made no effort to intervene or draw public attention
to the pervasive threat. He submits that feared charges of racism preclude
their mandated responsibility for the protection of children. In fact, the
author reports how major teachers' unions are behind an organization – Unite
Against Fascism – that blocks the publicizing of the sex grooming gang
phenomenon and its Muslim community participation.
In 2008, a taxpayer-funded national
education film, My
Dangerous Loverboy, commissioned by the United Kingdom Human
Trafficking Centre, was produced ostensibly to warn and educate girls about
generic sex grooming gangs. But no mention was made of Muslim involvement or
the victims’ young ages. According to McLoughlin, the film has been difficult
to obtain and has not been shown to the intended audience: girls, parents,
social workers, police officers, school nurses, doctors, teachers, youth
workers, sexual health practitioners. My own extensive, month-long efforts to
locate a copy were unproductive and met with denials of the crimes’ Muslim
connection.
In Easy Meat, McLoughlin laments the very limited
prosecution of Muslim sex grooming and pimping crimes. In the rare instances of
successful criminal litigation, typical sentences are minimal and usually
partially served, if at all, despite existing sentencing guidelines. Gang
members have been known to assert Muslim supremacy, make accusations of Muslim
victimhood and racism, and threaten retaliation against the girls and their families.
Some have clearly cited religious motivations for their crimes in court.
Astonishingly, few victims receive any
special protection during the trials. Protection of defendants’ rights
supersedes that of victims, even with child victims. The 1989 Children’s Act, a
statute requiring the child’s welfare be the court’s paramount consideration,
doesn’t seem to make the slightest difference in the proceedings and outcome.
More distressing is the fact that the greater the Muslim population density in
an area, the lower the conviction rate.
The backdrop for sexual grooming and
enslavement of children lies in Islamic doctrines outlined by McLoughlin. He
reviews the pervasive slave-taking history of Islam from the 7th century,
as well as Islamic
doctrine from the Koran citing Islam's view of non-Muslims, its
treatment of women and sexual slaves, and the permissibility of sex with
children by Mohammed’s example with his nine-year-old third wife, Aisha.
McLoughlin explains how sex as rape has historically been used as a weapon of
war to assert Islamic supremacy. Islamic doctrine encourages the rape and
enslavement of non-Muslims, even with married infidel women as a legal and
moral enterprise.
Further, the required first and foremost
allegiance to the Umma, or Muslim community, and the inbred obligation of
enmity toward non-Muslims facilitates the pimping of non-Muslim girls and
hinders any attempts at exposing its criminality and eventual prosecution.
Sexual slavery has historically been used as a religious weapon to advance the
domination of Islam.
In Easy Meat, McLoughlin details how the
sexploitation and enslavement of girls, once viewed as a great evil in Western
society, has become a pervasive, routine, and almost pedestrian part of
everyday life in the UK. On this issue, the courageous author effectively deals
with the contention that Western civilization is fighting for its very
existence in a clash between civilization and barbarism. His book serves as a
grave warning for other countries as they consider increased levels of Muslim
immigration.
http://freedomoutpost.com/a-look-inside-britains-muslim-sex-grooming-gang-scandal/
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