Joined July 2019
1,194 Photos and videos
Chris Mangle retweeted
Throw the little coke addled treasonous terrorist rat bastard in prison.
The UK’s leading far-right figure was on Saturday detained by police under terrorism legislation at London’s Heathrow airport, after a week in which he played a key role in encouraging protests that later turned violent in Northern Ireland ft.trib.al/WIv2Xkk
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Replying to @RobbyBrookside
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Chris Mangle retweeted
😂😭😂
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Rupert Lowe was born in Kenya. Send him back
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Neo-Nazi Ryan Ferguson has been arrested in Liverpool. This is the guy who his dad left his at the age of 2 and married a Black woman. That's why he became a racist. He has a mixed-race step sister.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Replying to @RobbyBrookside
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Chris Mangle retweeted
🎯
Rupert Lowe’s rhetorical strategy, particularly his repeated use of terms such as “savages,” “third world savages,” “barbarians,” and “animals” to describe migrants from certain countries, alongside calls for the deportation of “millions and millions,” exemplifies a deeply flawed and politically counterproductive approach to discussing migration, crime, and social cohesion. While Lowe presents himself as a truth-teller confronting realities others are unwilling to acknowledge, his rhetoric frequently substitutes visceral outrage and civilization caricature for careful, evidence-based analysis. The result is a style of political communication that dehumanises broad categories of people, exploits strategic ambiguity, and weakens the intellectual and political foundations of the reforms it claims to advance. A defining feature of Lowe’s rhetoric is its calculated imprecision. References to “dangerous third world savages” being placed in British communities are rarely confined to clearly defined categories such as convicted violent offenders or failed asylum seekers. Instead, they are embedded within a broader discourse that encompasses those who allegedly fail to integrate, depend on welfare, occupy social housing, or originate from countries associated with large-scale migration. This rhetorical elasticity allows him to move seamlessly between specific criminal acts and much wider populations. By embracing accusations of racism with remarks such as “If that makes me a racist, so be it,” while avoiding precise definitions, he cultivates the appearance of fearless candour while preserving plausible deniability. The effect is to transfer the stigma attached to the most serious offenders onto far larger groups who share only nationality, ethnicity, religion, or migrant status. The significance of this ambiguity extends beyond questions of tone or precision. It reflects a broader process of essentialisation, whereby complex social phenomena are reduced to supposedly inherent characteristics of groups. Individual crimes, criminal networks, or integration failures become evidence not merely of specific social problems but of deeper national, religious, or civilizational deficiencies. Terms such as “invasion,” “savages,” and “barbarians” do more than express anger; they establish a moral framework in which Britain is cast as a civilised society under siege from alien and inferior forces. Such language erases individuality, flattens complexity, and encourages audiences to interpret social tensions through the lens of collective threat rather than institutional failure, policy design, socioeconomic conditions, or individual responsibility. The dehumanising character of this rhetoric is not incidental but central to its persuasive force. Labels such as “animals” and “savages” symbolically place their targets outside the boundaries of ordinary moral consideration. This is a well-established feature of dehumanising language in political communication, which frequently employs animalistic imagery to erode moral constraints and make exclusion or harsh treatment more publicly acceptable. History teaches us where it can lead. Lowe’s language implies that the pathologies associated with particular offenders are characteristic of the groups from which those offenders emerge. Even when Lowe invokes genuine horrors, for example the grooming gang scandals in Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford, and elsewhere, where men of predominantly Pakistani heritage perpetrated systematic abuse amid institutional failures and documented reluctance by some officials to act for fear of racism, the framing encourages audiences to treat these crimes as representative of broader populations rather than particular offenders in specific contexts. In doing so, it amplifies perceptions of collective danger and blurs crucial distinctions between perpetrators and the vastly larger groups with whom they are associated. This dynamic is reinforced by Lowe’s tendency to collapse a range of distinct issues into a single narrative of national decline and external threat. Grooming scandals, asylum policy, migration through irregular routes, violent crime, demographic change, welfare dependency, housing pressures, and integration failures are repeatedly woven into one simplistic overarching story of a country being overwhelmed by outsiders. The truth is that these phenomena have multiple different causes and require different responses. The language of “millions” who must leave Britain discourages differentiation and promotes sweeping attributions to broadly defined out-groups. This tendency functions as a form of moral amplification. Highly salient crimes become symbolic representations of entire populations, while exceptional cases are elevated into evidence of broader civilization dysfunction. The emotional power of such rhetoric comes from compressing complexity into a simple story of civilisation vs barbarism, “us” vs “them.” However, the same simplification that makes it potent also makes it analytically weak and, at best, liable to generate policy responses that are poorly aligned with the complexity of the underlying problems. Politically, Lowe’s rhetorical style is as self-defeating as it is inflammatory. His dismissive attitude towards labels such as racist, xenophobe, or Islamophobe may energise a committed base, but it ensures that debate centres on his language rather than the substantive issues. Many voters who support tighter controls still recoil from rhetoric that evokes collective guilt or civilizational hierarchy, which some audiences associate with narratives of white supremacy. As a result, language designed to demonstrate uncompromising conviction often narrows the coalition needed for real change. None of this requires denying cultural differences, integration challenges, or institutional failures. Serious discussion must confront uncomfortable realities, including patterns of offending in particular cohorts and institutional reluctance to address sensitive issues. But it depends on maintaining careful distinctions between individuals and groups, statistical patterns and moral judgements, and policy failures and personal responsibility. Lowe’s rhetoric repeatedly collapses those distinctions, sacrificing analytical precision for emotional force. Ultimately, a significant problem with Lowe’s approach is not that it addresses difficult subjects but that it does so through dehumanisation, essentialisation, and deliberate overbreadth, when Britain needs a debate grounded in specificity, proportionality, and human dignity. Rhetoric that relies on caricature, ambiguity, and collective stigma may generate outrage effectively, but it obscures the problems it claims to illuminate, makes constructive solutions harder to achieve, and distorts rather than illuminates public understanding.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Uh huh
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Chris Mangle retweeted
What's this? It's only Fatboy Slim joining the anti-fascists against the far right in Brighton 💚
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Chris Mangle retweeted
So, it turns out that the violent protestors, who Farage & Reform would have us believe were regular members of the public showing justifiable rage, had numerous previous criminal convictions bbc.com/news/articles/c70y84…
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Just a little something to think about in relation to the riots Protect our women and kids they scream..........
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Chris Mangle retweeted
The 17-year-old girl who was stabbed in Brierfield has been released from the hospital, and I hope she makes a full recovery soon. Unfortunately, some far-right activists are spreading misinformation and trying to portray the incident as a racially motivated attack. Both the victim and the suspect are British Pakistanis. A 30-year-old British Pakistani man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Notice how Tommy Robinson stopped tweeting about it once it was announced that the 17-year-old girl is British Pakistani.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Happy birthday to GB News and congratulations on losing over £130 million and counting! Still, that's good value for providing a propaganda channel for Reform UK and a platform for every right wing gobshite and conspiracy nut in the country.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Replying to @RobbyBrookside
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Chris Mangle retweeted
And what about the things he lacks: Integrity Honesty Compassion Wisdom Humility Respect What about those things?
Jun 12
"Right now, I'm the only person." Nigel Farage believes he's got sufficient 'rapport' and 'courage' to become Prime Minister.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Are you proud of yourself @Nigel_Farage ?
Nurse chased by four masked men in racist attack during riots rcni.com/nursing-standard/ne…
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Self-professed sexist calls man who assaulted female police officer his ‘hero’. Reform UK has a serious problem with women.
Great to have the endorsement of one of my heroes @antmiddleton
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Replying to @RobbyBrookside
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Chris Mangle retweeted
For the MAGA in the backrow. I circled Donald Trump's name where it appears on Epstein's flight list.
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Chris Mangle retweeted
Jun 11
Tommy Robinson was friends with 20 EDL members who have been convicted of child sexual offences. His best friend is convicted kidnapper Danny Tommo and their murderer mate Billy Allison. Chats with Russell Brand, promotes Connor McGregor and has lunch with nonce Errol Musk.
I would like my children and grandchildren to grow up in the world Sir Tommy Robinson wants them to have. May God bless and protect you Tommy.🙏🇬🇧
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