Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
Looks Like They Have Some Problems Brewing In Wales.
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -wales- 4245013 1
All in mikey's back yard too boyo!
All in mikey's back yard too boyo!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.From the article:
"Just over 7,600 people in England and Wales were referred to the UK government's Prevent programme in 2015-16 - about 5,000 them over concerns about Islamist extremism. According to the Home Office figures - Wales accounted or just 2% of those referrals - 148 cases. But of those Welsh cases - 22% were for concerns about far-right extremism."
(NB: the misleading term "far-right" refers, of course, not to all far-right fascists, only to that section of them which is not Islamist.)
This for Mikey: let's try to get a handle on the scale of the threat posed by far-right extremism. Using the 2011 census figures we see that just 1.5% (OK, probably higher now) of the population, of Wales accounts for more than three quarters of the "referrals".
"Just over 7,600 people in England and Wales were referred to the UK government's Prevent programme in 2015-16 - about 5,000 them over concerns about Islamist extremism. According to the Home Office figures - Wales accounted or just 2% of those referrals - 148 cases. But of those Welsh cases - 22% were for concerns about far-right extremism."
(NB: the misleading term "far-right" refers, of course, not to all far-right fascists, only to that section of them which is not Islamist.)
This for Mikey: let's try to get a handle on the scale of the threat posed by far-right extremism. Using the 2011 census figures we see that just 1.5% (OK, probably higher now) of the population, of Wales accounts for more than three quarters of the "referrals".
Griffin is ‘charming’ in the way an unwashed face flannel is.
Curious article really: on the one hand Wales has the right ‘landscape’ for right wing extremism (that’ll be all those Nazi mountains and valleys in the shape of swastikas!)
and yet on the other hand the violent side to fascism has to be covered up as Welsh people would not stand for it, which would seem to be a bit of a problem for your would-be Neil Nazi hoping to have them goose stepping round Cardiff castle
Curious article really: on the one hand Wales has the right ‘landscape’ for right wing extremism (that’ll be all those Nazi mountains and valleys in the shape of swastikas!)
and yet on the other hand the violent side to fascism has to be covered up as Welsh people would not stand for it, which would seem to be a bit of a problem for your would-be Neil Nazi hoping to have them goose stepping round Cardiff castle
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