Hope Not Hate – the ‘charity’ built on deceit: Part Three

May 7, 2024 by

by Karen Harradine, TCW:

In the final part of her report on the activist charity Hope Not Hate Karen Harradine discusses its aggressive shaping of the political discourse, and how its false equation of anti-Semitism with Islamophobia and a mythical ‘far right threat’ with Islamist terrorism threatens the fabric of our society and democracy. You can read Part One here and Part Two here

JUST over a year ago, William Shawcross’s long-awaited report into the government’s Prevent programme, which aims to stop individuals becoming terrorists, was published. He concluded that the programme was not doing enough to understand or tackle anti-Semitism; in fact he was disturbed by its prevalence: ‘Prevent has a double standard when dealing with the extreme right wing and Islamism’. Part of the reason for this he said was that the Prevent programme had been advised by left-wing activist groups, including Hope Not Hate (HNH).  In turn HNH state on their website that the reporting rate of the ‘far right’ to Prevent is higher than that of suspected Islamists. 

Why would we be surprised? The left, and increasingly Islamists, are making their presence felt in all key institutions, while, at the same time, the creed of multiculturalism inhibits any expression of concern about or criticism of this. Increasingly, the intertwined ideologies of the Left and Islamism are afforded a public legitimacy that the ‘right’ (forget the ‘radical right’) can only dream of. It doesn’t take a deep thinker to see how politically correct teachers might be persuaded to report students who resist woke tyranny as potential ‘far right terrorists’, while ignoring the very real threat of radical Islamism. The traffic in intolerance is one way.

Read here

 

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