By Lyndesy Symonds
The ‘juvenile crime crisis’ is merely part of the larger Black Entitlement to Crime Crisis. I confidently predict it will enlarge to a Brown migrant entitlement to crime crisis. This is about race and ethnic entitlement. Put it another way: why is Stephen Wells in a South Australian jail for celebrating ANZAC Day?
The entire crisis is the result of a central order to stand down, an order that applies to police, courts, social and health services, government authorities at all levels, media and public fora.
This is a xerox copy of the operations of Muslim Pakistani Rape, Grooming and Trafficking gangs that have operated for decades across the UK – especially in England. They are operating under the protection of the highest authority.
Under UK law, who is guilty of the heinous crimes that have been brought against the White English, British population? Well the target population is guilty of course. It is fathers attempting to defend daughters and family members who are hauled in for psychiatric evaluations or police interrogation. It is young women who have been raped and abducted attempting to speak out who are shut down on social media and arrested and their families harrassed with lawfare from the government.
It is no different here.
These types of crises are socially engineered from the top and a key element of the success of this engineering is that the population targeted for crime is itself criminalised and permitted neither recourse nor self defense. In fact the target population is further criminalised by the Marxist regime if it even attempts to defend itself in terms of family or community.
Penny finally drops for Qld LNP
Today in the Queensland Parliament LNP Premier David Crisafulli slammed the United Nations for controlling Labor politicians ensuring they ignored rampant indigenous crime while introducing tough new amendments to juvenile crime legislation.
Crisafulli said the UN (UNDRIP) would not control his ability to eradicate juvenile crime. Good luck there Premier.
Human rights lawyers and Aboriginal leaders have lodged a complaint urging the United Nations to address Australia’s “discriminatory” and “punitive” youth justice policies.
Hannah McGlade and Megan Davis, with the support of the Human Rights Law Centre, submitted the complaint to the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination on Tuesday.
It argued federal, state and territory governments’ “tough-on-crime” policies had led to “persistent and escalating racial discrimination and human rights violations against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children”.
“It’s very clear that overwhelmingly the majority of children being impacted by these draconian and punitive laws increasingly being passed across Australia are Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children,” Dr McGlade told the ABC.


