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Did you know that Britain has a huge government bureaucracy to take people under its wing and keep them from being “radicalized”? It has a website that invites everyone to “Prevent Radicalisation and Extremism by Acting Early.” That means ratting out anyone with ideas the government doesn’t like.

You can finger your family, co-workers, anyone — anonymously.
Here is “Spotting the signs of radicalization.” It says, “More important than any one sign is the feeling that something is not right.”

Just trust your feelings, but look for such things as “Need for identity meaning and belonging.” Britain is such a happy, united place that anyone who thinks things aren’t right is suspect.

Another tell-tale sign is “Spending an increasing amount of time online.” There are bad people out there “who are intent on recruiting susceptible people.”
You can watch videos of “real stories” of people who were snatched back from the brink. They all begin with this dark warning: “Every year, extremists target and exploit vulnerable people all over the country.”

The message is consistent: Losers fall prey to evil people — like me — who suck them into cults.
This also claims to be a true story. You decide. Does the British government think this multi-culti rubbish will make you want to turn in an “extremist”? You can call a hotline, 24 hours a day, and smear someone anonymously.

Or fill out an 11-page National Prevent referral form.
The Action Counters Terrorism site is supposed to catch Muslim fanatics and other crazies, but white people who want their country back are the top menace.

When the government asks for informers, it gets them: In 2024, there were 22,000 — from the general public, teachers, and employers.

Anyone could be watching you.
The denunciations get sorted, and if things look really bad, you could be arrested, but many accusations are just filed away. If you look dodgy, though, what’s called the Prevent program takes a hard look at you.
In fiscal 2025, 8,778 people were passed on to Prevent, which was a new record. Ninety percent were men.
Here are the stated reasons for why they were fingered. The top two categories, or about 5,000 people, had “no ideology.”

But once you get into ideology, Extreme Right Wing — that’s whites who want their country back — are the largest group, followed by Islamist Extremism, and then other oddities, such as InCel and Left Wing Extremism.
The hate gurus at Prevent decide whether you are a “Channel” case, which means a team of specialists spends up to two years weaning you away from dangerous thoughts. No crime has been charged. The gurus want to cure you before you go berserk.
And here’s where national priorities become clear: Of the 1,464 people who got channeled, the top category, at 42 percent, was Extreme Right Wing, with Islamic Extremist far behind at 15 percent, with assorted weirdos making up the rest.

People who are channeled can refuse treatment, but 56 percent of the white-nationalist types agreed to it. It looks very bad if you don’t. The hate specialists can tell the police to keep an eye on you, and it goes on your record. This stuff is not supposed to be public, but if you apply for a government job, it comes right up. At any given time, there are up to 2,000 people being channeled.
This bureaucracy is supposed to prevent terrorism, but at the end of 2024, there were 257 Brits in prison for terrorism: 61 percent were Islamic extremists, and just 30 percent were said to be “right-wing extremists.”

So white nationalists are the main Prevent targets, but there are twice as many Muslim terrorists.
You can’t find out what those “right-wing terrorists” did, but you can go to the slammer for being a member or appearing to support black-listed groups, such as the Maniacs Murder Cult, the Terrorgram Collective, or the Atomwaffen Division.

Or, for saying the wrong thing. After the Southport murders of three young white girls by a British-born Rwandan, Lucy Connolly mistakenly thought the killer was an asylum seeker.


She was sentenced to 31 months in the big house for the following X post.

In Britain, words alone can get you a prison term.
The killer, by the way, had a violent criminal record and had been referred to Prevent three times, but the gurus couldn’t pin an “ideology” on him. Anti-white hatred isn’t one of their categories. They probably think it’s a sign of being well adjusted.
[link] Another notorious failure by Prevent is its “public service” video game called “Pathways,” which is supposed to guide young people safely through choices that could lead to “extremism.”

The bait is this purple-haired girl, Amelia, who invites you to help stop immigration.

You spend some time with Amelia, but manage to shake her off, and your college teacher makes a friendly Prevent referral.

It’s so bone-headed it wouldn’t convince a four-year-old, and it backfired. Purple-haired Amelia is now a nationalist sweetheart.
But this is Britain today: treating nationalists like potential terrorists, and trying to turn everyone else into censorship commissars. It’s a disgusting betrayal of everything Britain once stood for. However, its incredibly clumsy video game gave us Amelia, a new symbol of patriotism who can even do a snappy Immelmann turn and shoot down the enemy.

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