Nigel Farage’s demand for a cross-party inquiry into Britain’s grooming-gang scandal is more than a call for belated justice; it is an indictment of an entire governing class that chose political correctness over the safety of working-class girls. For years, police and councils in towns like Rotherham and Rochdale looked the other way while predominantly Pakistani-heritage networks systematically raped thousands of children, terrified that labeling the perpetrators would brand them “racist.” Farage’s blunt language—“unique evil”—cuts through the euphemisms that let the abuse metastasize, and it exposes how elite institutions will sacrifice the vulnerable to protect their own reputations.
The same mindset that suppressed discussion of cultural incompatibility in the UK now fuels parallel efforts in the United States to disarm law-abiding citizens while ignoring the demographic patterns behind urban violence. When authorities refuse to name the problem—whether imported clan networks or home-grown street gangs—they inevitably turn to blunt instruments like “common-sense” gun control that punish the innocent rather than confront root causes. The 2A community recognizes this pattern: every time government fails at basic public safety, the proposed remedy is to restrict the right of the people to defend themselves, not to fix the institutions that failed.
Farage’s proposed parliamentary committee could set a precedent that travels across the Atlantic. If elected officials finally admit that cultural denialism enabled mass predation, the next logical step is to reject the parallel denialism that treats armed self-defense as the problem rather than the symptom of state collapse. For American gun owners, the lesson is clear: the right to keep and bear arms exists precisely because governments and their bureaucracies cannot be trusted to name evil, let alone stop it.