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   soc.culture.british      British culture (and odd mannerisms)      77,646 messages   

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   Message 77,263 of 77,646   
   D. Ray to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?Phone=20dropped=20by=20=E2=80=   
   12 Apr 24 00:29:19   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.misc, uk.politics.misc, alt.politics.uk   
   XPost: alt.politics   
   From: d@ray   
      
   Coolock, Dublin – A family-oriented anti-immigration protest came under   
   attack after a group of anti-White extremists launched a failed ambush,   
   sources say. But when a cell phone was dropped by one of the attackers,   
   Nationalists would later use it to uncover systemic collusion between local   
   “Antifa,” and Irish and UK journalists.   
      
   The incident began on Saturday during a protest outside the Crown Paints   
   Factory in Coolock, the future site of a migrant plantation capable of   
   housing up to 1,000 non-White “refugees.”   
      
   When members of the Antifa movement arrived and were subsequently asked to   
   leave due to the presence of women and children, the Antifa were said to   
   have attacked the group, according to reports. In the aftermath, one of the   
   retreating extremists dropped their unlocked phone.   
      
   Pro-Irish nationalists were then able to unearth a trove of personally   
   identifiable information on the attackers and their allies, including   
   names, text messages, and telephone numbers. The data would connect local   
   Antifa to Irish and English journalists, NGO activists, Muslim religious   
   leaders, and even political party reps.   
      
   Among those listed in the phone logs appear to be Aisling Moore, Ross   
   Leahy, and Lochlainn Harte, imaging manager of Newstalk, leftist extremist   
   Charlotte O’Sullivan, Darragh Adelaide of People Before Profit, and others.   
      
   The phone also appears to contain a video of mainstream media journalist   
   Paul Connolly, also of Newstalk, in an unidentified room alongside other   
   Antifa members. The group can be seen taking a marker to deface Irish flags   
   with anti-White slogans in preparation for a counter-demonstration.   
   Connolly would later be accused of assisting Antifa in Coolock with the   
   intent of filming an upcoming documentary about “far-right extremism” in   
   Ireland, with the help of local activists.   
      
   “Connolly had interviewed a number of Dublin locals, with some even   
   bringing him into their homes,” read a post on X, formerly Twitter. “Paul   
   Connolly, AntiFa, possibly the UK documentary maker, and other far-left   
   activists arrived in Coolock wearing masks in an attempt to agitate for   
   trouble, intimidate locals and set up the fictional “far-right” in front of   
   national media, Gardaí and politicians.”   
      
   “They had plans to use the footage, interviews, and media coverage for   
   their far-right documentary and also to discredit concerned citizens as   
   “far-right,” it continued.   
      
   Additionally, the name of Umar Al-Qadri, chairperson of the Irish Muslim   
   Council, was also present in the phone call history. It is currently   
   unknown what relationship Al-Qadri had with Antifa specifically, but   
   nationalists are still digging through the data at this time.   
      
   Meanwhile, the fight and subsequent capture of an antifascist cell phone   
   has since been labeled “the Battle of Coolock” by Irish nationalists, with   
   videos showcasing both the phone and the attack going viral on social   
   media. Michael Brazil, aka The Irish Git, hailed Antifa’s defeat in Coolock   
   an “important” victory and warned against further attacks against peaceful   
   protests.   
      
   “There was meant to be a protest in Dublin today because of the forecasted   
   bad weather. So the traitors were planning to agitate and cause havoc in   
   Dublin so they could get their stories and headlines for the Sunday papers   
   about the big bad far right,” said Brazil in a video posted to Telegram.   
   “Well, it backfired, and it always will.”   
      
   “The truth always comes out in the end, eh? It’s important to say bit by   
   bit, and one by one, you are all going to pay for your crimes against the   
   Irish people,” he continued.   
      
   The independent Irish media outlet, The Burkean—which was the first to   
   chronicle the affair—called Antifa’s defeat “embarrassing” and   
   believed it   
   was a sign that anti-White street militancy was quickly coming to an end in   
   Ireland.   
      
   “This embarrassing physical humiliation for the Left, along with the trove   
   of info revealed, is the final nail in the coffin of street-level leftist   
   organising in the 26 counties,” read the Burkean. “The time of “No   
   Pasaran”   
   has passed.”   
      
   The bombshell revelation—that antifascist street militants appeared to be   
   supported and even taking direction from mainstream journalists—appeared to   
   confirm what many had long suspected.   
      
   A groundbreaking article by Irish counter-extremism researcher Dr. Eoin   
   Lenihan in 2019 speculated that journalists across the Western world often   
   provide favorable coverage to on-the-ground Antifa cells and their antics.   
   Despite being engaged in abhorrent acts of crime, violence, and even   
   terror, Lenihan’s research deduced that many national-level journalists   
   would go on to use their platform to act as “cheerleaders” for the   
   far-left.   
      
   Dr. Lenihan mentions some as having curious and intimate links to the   
   anti-White extremism movement, including Guardian journalist Jason Wilson,   
   HuffPo writer Christopher Mattias, and Patrick Strickland, a “far-right   
   extremism expert” who focuses on Europe and Greece.   
      
   “Of all 15 verified national-level journalists in our subset, we couldn’t   
   find a single article, by any of them, that was markedly critical of Antifa   
   in any way,” said Dr. Lenihan in his findings, which studied data from   
   58,254 Antifa-associated Twitter accounts. “In all cases, their work in   
   this area consisted primarily of downplaying Antifa violence while   
   advancing Antifa talking points, and in some cases quoting Antifa   
   extremists as if they were impartial experts.”   
      
   In the past, Journalists of different levels have been found not only   
   supportive of the anti-White extremism movement, but also card-carrying   
   members themselves. In August, an independent Justice Report investigation   
   unmasked a series of five South Carolina-based journalists as having   
   intimate ties to the violent, anti-White Trans-liberation cell, “Organize   
   Against Transphobia.” The group was found to have ties to illicit homemade   
   drug use, weapons stockpiling, paramilitary drills, and Marxist-Leninist   
   book clubs whose leader admitted to targeting young children for leftist   
   indoctrination.   
      
   The incident at Coolock, however, comes amid a worsening national situation   
   for Ireland, whose government continues to willingly invite thousands of   
   third-world migrants inside its sovereign borders. According to the White   
   Papers Policy Institute, 141,600 immigrants arrived in Ireland between the   
   years 2022 and 2023, with net migration increasing by 50% in just one year.   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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