Just think of how many people have lost their lives as a result of mass immigration in Britain.
Wayne Broadhurst, Lee Rigby, Emily Jones, Rhiannon Whyte, Lorraine Cox, and the list goes on and on, and the bitter truth is that it will continue to do so.
And that is to only speak of raw murder, and not the industrial scale rape of England's children at the hands of the most depraved foreign men on Earth. Nor to touch upon the rest of the vast iceberg of troubles that multiculturalism has brought to our home, from a two-tier society, to the more trivial inconveniences of locking cheese in plastic cases in shops found near the urban youth.
But the establishment is unwavering in its contempt for the public. They tell you that any of their migrant murderers are not part of a wider issue, but isolated incidents that don't reflect a real danger to the safety of Britain. And that any attempt to analyse how a malign state was responsible for bringing these scum to our shores is to politicise their murders.
Meanwhile, Jo Cox's murder has been used for a decade by the establishment to persecute ordinary British people who live with a mounting sense of unease as they are forced to endure the danger. The entire terrible ordeal of Jo Cox's murder was used to justify more diversity, more control, and more oppression.
When David Amess was murdered by Ali Harbi Ali, his death was memory-holed as swiftly as possible because he was the wrong kind of murderer for their narrative. And again, they used it to crack down on online speech, as if Sir David had been stabbed by a tweet. But no matter how incongruous the lie, even after the murder of one of their own, still they pressed on with their dystopian schemes.
The establishment fights every day to protect the diverse Britain that Jo Cox was an implacable defender of. Even as every attempt to reinforce it and ensure its permanence creates horrors that that same establishment will never address.
It has been ten years since our friend and colleague Jo Cox was murdered by a far-right terrorist.
She was a dedicated mother, a fierce campaigner and a deeply committed Member of Parliament. Her conviction that we have more in common than that which divides us lives on beyond her death.
We all wish Jo was still here with us today, and we will continue to honour her legacy by standing by her message of hope and unity in the face of hatred and division.