Nigel Farage has hit out at the findings of a report into the summer riots sparked by the Southport attack – declaring he does ‘not accept’ there was ‘no evidence’ of ‘two-tier policing’.

The report, released by the Home Affairs Committee, details a probe into the police forces’ response to the disorder in the wake of the murder of three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class last July.

You point out a glaring inconsistency: a Labour MP commits a violent crime caught on camera and receives a minor punishment, while a “keyboard warrior” is handed a two-year sentence for inciting outrage. This demonstrates blatant two-tier policing or judicial double standards.

WHEN JUSTICE PICKS A SIDE, DEMOCRACY ROTS

If this doesn’t make your blood boil, check your pulse. When elected officials—those supposed to embody the rule of law—are caught red-handed dishing out beatdowns like they’re in a pub brawl and face little more than a wrist slap, something is deeply, grotesquely wrong. Meanwhile, the state throws the book at a nobody behind a screen for inciting a digital tantrum? That’s not justice. That’s performance. That’s sending a message: We protect our own, and the rest of you shut up or suffer. If we allow the law to be applied based on political status, public persona, or party allegiance, then we aren’t in a democracy—we’re in a courtroom-shaped circus.

This isn’t even about left or right anymore—it’s about elite insulation. One rule for the powerful, another for the powerless. They scream about “misinformation” while quietly institutionalizing hypocrisy. Is it any wonder public trust in the system is eroding faster than MPs can expense their lunches? When violence caught on tape is deemed less dangerous than angry words online, we’ve crossed a terrifying threshold: where optics trump justice, and fear of dissent is policed harder than actual crime. And if you’re not outraged? Congratulations—you’re the target audience of this charade.

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Ian McEwan

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