The power of comedy is well-known. Such is its power that the Left keep a beady eye fixed on dissent from their politically correct line. Triggering is the reaction the megalomanical Left has whenever it perceives a potential loss of power. This is why politically incorrect jokes trigger Leftists. Bernard Manning was and Chubby Brown has been pilloried for years because of their refusal to toe the PC line. Jim Davidson has made the mistake of apologising for his previously "racist", "homophobic" and "sexist" act. It has not stopped the Left from hounding him and it has not got him back on television, apart from sporadic appearances on reality TV shows. All the mainstream television channels are now rigorously policed in case a rogue straight white male comedian should step out of line and offend a protected minority group. One way of policing TV comedy is to simply bar straight white males from the airwaves, which the BBC in particular is currently in the process of achieving.
So Atifa Shah, the Labour Party's latest in a long line of Muslim high-fliers, has defected to the Conservative Party in time for the general election next month. As well she might; after all, she wants to be on the winning side. And of course she stands for true conservative values; after all, she wants to conserve Muslim traditions and never misses an opportunity to push the Muslim agenda. Just as she stood for Labour's socialist values of looking after minority groups, particularly ones from backgrounds that are ethnically other; after all, she wants to look after her own community and this is all very noble. We ought to do likewise. She has been at the forefront of the promotion of women, yet has had little to say on the subject matter of Muslim Asian gangs raping and prostituting young white girls in her constituency of Rochdale, as might be expected, although all this seems to be in line with the policies of both parties she has represented.
I wasn't going to bother writing about the Rugby World Cup, but as someone over at Counter Currents has covered it without addressing the real issue, I thought I'd chip in with a short article. As someone who actually played the sport back in the 1990s, I feel I'm a little more qualified than many to comment on how the game has been transformed. When I first started playing at adult level, the whole of rugby union was amateur, ruthlessly so. Anyone who had been paid to play professional rugby league was not permitted to play union and a declaration had to be signed. Most at the rugby club I played for openly displayed their disdain for homosexuals and persons of colour. This was the norm and rightly so. Fast forward a mere twenty years and these normal and natural attitudes have been stamped out - at least superficially. But Nature will always seek to reassert herself and such attitudes will become the norm again as soon as the establishment propaganda machine and means of legal coercion are removed. Equally, national attitudes have also changed, which brings me back to the World Cup.