Because people from Eastern Europe or the Caribbean are not on a supposedly God given mission to convert us to their religions, laws, culture and customs. Because people from Eastern Europe or the Caribbean don’t use their religion as an excuse to attack random strangers on London pavements with machetes. Of course the majority of Muslims don’t do these things either, but unfortunately for them some of their more extreme brethren do, and this makes people wary and suspicious of the whole group. Now, I consider myself a reasonable, rational person who is not a terrible racist but when I was stood on a London tube train and a young Muslim man in religious garb and a rucksack boarded the train and then fished out the Koran to read whilst standing right next to me, guess what thoughts were running through my head? I didn’t move to the next carriage and I didn’t abuse him or give him filthy looks but I was apprehensive. Is this completely irrational of me?
It seems not. Look at what is coming out today re: the Manchester Arena bombing. Presumably some people om this forum would brand those who tried to warn thr authorities before the bomb went off as racists, for the same reason they branded me a racist for posting the above, yet imagine if those “racists” hadn’t been dismissed for their politically incorrect views, how many young people would probably still be alive today:
From the Times
“The inquiry heard that in two possible “missed opportunities”, witnesses had passed on concerns about a man matching the description of Salman Abedi that were not acted upon.
Mr Greaney said that experts had been asked to look into security at the arena that night.
He said they “consider on the basis of the information currently available to them, that, on May 22, there were missed opportunities to identify Salman Abedi as a threat and take mitigating action”.
If the “presence of a potential suicide bomber had been reported,” the experts found, “it is very likely that mitigating actions would’ve been taken that could have reduced the impact of the attack.”
This, Mr Greaney said, was because “there was sufficient time between Abedi first being spotted by, and also reported to staff and his attack to effectively react”.
The witnesses included two officials from a private firm working on an “anti-bootlegging operation”.
Julie Merchant and William Drysdale were employed by Reflex Security, and working for SMG, the arena operators. They saw Abedi with a large backpack sitting down on the mezzanine floor above the City Room foyer at about 9.41pm, less than an hour before the attack.
Mr Drysdale believed he was “praying”, Mr Greaney said.
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CCTV footage then shows Ms Merchant approaching a British Transport Police (BTP) constable, Jessica Bullough, 32 minutes before the bomb was detonated.
They are seen having a conversation in which she “appeared to be pointing in the direction of where Salman Abedi was sitting”.
Ms Merchant has a recollection of the conversation, but “not a perfect one”, Mr Greaney told the inquiry.
She believed it was “something to do with praying and political correctness” and had also remembered being told by her colleague about a man praying.
Meanwhile PC Bullough cannot remember the conversation taking place, the inquiry was told.
She was the first police officer to enter the City Rooms after the attack and was commended for her bravery.
The inquiry also heard that a member of the public was “fobbed off” when he reported a man matching the appearance of Abedi to security.
Described as witness A, the onlooker claimed the individual looked “out of place” with his large rucksack.
Mr Greaney explained how witness A went over to the man and asked: “What have you got in your rucksack? It doesn’t look very good, you know what you see with bombs and such, you with a rucksack in a place like this. What are you doing?”
The man told him: “I’m waiting for somebody mate” and asked “Have you got the time?”
Witness A said he did not know and then walked away.
He approached the member of the security team, Mohammed Agha, who “did not seem interested in what he had to say and he felt, in his words, fobbed off,” Mr Greaney said. “It does seem likely that the man witness A saw was Salman Abedi but that will have to be explored in evidence.”
Witness A had been at the concert with his wife, witness B, who had earlier suggested they move away from the man due to him looking suspicious. They had been at the concert to collect their daughter and her friend.
In response to the concerns raised by witness A, Mr Agha spoke to a colleague, Kyle Lawler, eight minutes before the bomb went off. Mr Lawler told police that a member of the public who he believed was ex-military alerted him and Mr Agha and they realised the man with the backpack “didn’t belong there”.