Ethnic group in the United Kingdom
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The boys drink and review a light dopplebock from Schlaffly then discuss the cultural relevance of cousin marriage. The England parliament has recently started debating whether to prohibit cousin marriage, which P&C thought was already against the law. Apparently not -- not in England, and not in all the states. The increase in Muslims in England has made this a big issue. In Pakistan, up to 60 percent of marriages are to first cousins. In England, while British Pakistanis accounted for 3.4 percent of all births, they had 30 percent of all children with recessive disorders. It's become a public health issue, but it's also a "sensitive issue." The larger issue with cousin marriages is the difference between clan-based societies -- where affiliations are based on family relations -- and western societies -- where affiliations are based on other factors. Banning cousin marriages in the west created high-trust societies that were not based on family relationships. By contrast, many dysfunctional countries are dysfunctional precisely because they only trust people in their families. Having said all that, there's been a lot of cousin (and even sibling) marriage among the political elite. What's up with that? The boys discuss the implications of these connections and how they affect societal customs.
Joe Rogan Has His Mind Blown by Muslim Inbreeding Statistics, Mark Dice and 4 X Clips Mark Dice- Can We Finally Talk About This Now? It's a New Year, and We're Not Going To Tolerate This Anymore Are Americans FINALLY Fed Up Enough To Stop It? Joe Rogan has his mind blown by Muslim inbreeding statistics X Clip- “I began to question why do only White countries have the moral obligation to live in this experimental diversity” Can We Finally Talk About This Now? https://youtu.be/IR3UCAFMCE0?si=KW3H9YxPsY4ocB5f Mark Dice 1.91M subscribers 173,531 views Jan 3, 2025
Drink water, but not too much! Tommy Robinson, Ella Hill, libs, and British Pakistanis. Wash Redskins logo history. Pelosi on J6 pardons?The Hake Report, Monday, January 6, 2025 ADTIMESTAMPS* (0:00:00) Start* (0:00:35) Topics* (0:06:18) Hey, guys!* (0:07:47) Hake News… Kamala lost!* (0:12:34) Drinking water, per CNN* (0:18:51) Exercising story* (0:21:25) "Coequal"?! Jesus said, "My Father is greater than I."* (0:24:29) Tommy Robinson, JBP, Kyle Kulinski, Muslim perps, "genocide"?* (0:32:12) "Grooming gangs," per Wikipedia: Fear of "racism" accusation* (0:38:38) Ella Hill, "survivor" on hate of not Muslim enough* (0:50:27) DEBORAH, CA: Water drinking… betas* (1:00:08) DEBORAH: Lead conspiracy; Gen X, helmets* (1:04:25) Supers from Friday!* (1:09:00) Coffee: Carver now a Balltard* (1:12:55) Coffees: Popcorn for Bigg Bump: MLK Day …* (1:17:40) HADEN, TX: End birthright citizenship? Waking up to race issue?* (1:29:04) No, NO, no! Man scared of cows in the forest* (1:36:47) Conservatives not liking Trump? Massie? Roy? Good?* (1:39:29) Washington Redskins logo, designed by a Blackfeet! …* (1:46:00) Nancy Pelosi on Trump pardoning peaceful, nonviolent J6ers* (1:49:05) Trudeau resigning?!* (1:49:45) Muñeca Esquiva - Napelao con Los Rivales - 1983LINKSBLOG https://www.thehakereport.com/blog/2025/1/6/the-hake-report-mon-1-6-25PODCAST / Substack HAKE NEWS from JLP https://www.thehakereport.com/jlp-news/2025/1/6/hake-news-mon-1-6-25Hake is live M-F 9-11a PT (11-1CT/12-2ET) Call-in 1-888-775-3773 https://www.thehakereport.com/showVIDEO YouTube - Rumble* - Facebook - X - BitChute - Odysee*PODCAST Substack - Apple - Spotify - Castbox - Podcast Addict*SUPER CHAT on platforms* above or BuyMeACoffee, etc.SHOP - Printify (new!) - Spring (old!) - Cameo | All My LinksJLP Network: JLP - Church - TFS - Nick - Joel - Punchie Get full access to HAKE at thehakereport.substack.com/subscribe
In the first episode of Season 2, Shabnum sits down with Faiza Gul and Jibran Ahmed to talk about the factors that contributed to Pakistani migration to the UK, a demographic that is much more sizable in comparison to Pakistani immigrants to the US. We talk about how and why so many Pakistanis moved to the UK in the 60s - 80s, the racism they faced, and a deeper look into some of the nuanced issues that British Pakistanis face in their own community. We will talk about the relationship of different South Asian groups to each other in the UK, and look to sort some of the myth from fact we hear in the media about the British Pakistani experience.Host: Shabnum Gulati Guests: Faiza Gul, Jibran Ahmed Illustration: Hanifa Abdul HameedMusic: AnAkkiN on SoundCloud
In Maidan Circle's latest instalment, the lads - Babar (@TheBabstien), Saf (@MaidanCircle) and Sohail (@Sohaileus) - take on mainstream representation of British Pakistanis. This episode runs through the idea of most mainstream representatives as "sell-outs", obstacles faced by apneh trying to break certain glass ceilings, how these are reflected in workplace settings and the idea of actively support up-and-comers.
In early June 2018, we appeared on BBC Asian Network’s radio station on the segment called "Big Debate's Little Debate" presented by Qasa Alom. We wanted to discuss the demonisation of the British Mirpuri community by other Asians, particularly British-Pakistanis. In this episode, we will be discussing our experience on the radio show; how the media has been demonising the Mirpuri community for, at least, two decades, unwittingly through the anecdotes and factoids of our gatekeepers from the wider British-Pakistani community. In recent years TV programme-makers producing media content about Britain’s Asian communities have taken a keen interest in the Mirpuri community. Their footage is almost entirely drawn from Mirpuri communities, whilst they appropriate the members as British-Pakistanis, any mention of a self-sustaining Mirpuri community is excluded from the ensuing portrayal. Whenever the explicit mention of Mirpuris is made, it is always done negatively. The production companies also rely on popular tropes that have wide circulation within the British Pakistani community as “facts", despite never having scrutinised such “facts", or allowing members of the Mirpuri community to explain their own social issues. We will be talking about the upcoming British Asian Summer programmes on BBC in the month of August. Our next episode will be about BBC's "Lost Boys? what’s gone wrong with Asian men?” documentary aired on the 12th of August 2018.
This is our first episode. We will be talking about how Portmir Foundation came about and the meaning of the name. What are some of the objectives of Portmir Foundation? Who is it aimed at and the kind of participants we are looking for, to contribute to the Portmir Website? Who are Mirpuris and what is their documented history in the UK? Our second important subject is discussing the obsession with pointing out that "Mirpuris are not Kashmiris” - this is the first phrase that pops up in the automatic google search box when the keyword "Mirpuris" is typed in.
The scale of the street grooming crisis in the UK almost defies belief. Hundreds of girls and young women were raped in the city of Rotherham, and hundreds by similar exploitation rings in Rochdale, Peterborough, Newcastle, Oxford, and Bristol. Now, up to a thousand girls are thought to have been drugged, raped, and beaten in Telford between the 1980s and the 2010s. This is, of course, a highly emotive subject. How could it not be? Yet if the phenomenon is to be understood it is important to evaluate the data objectively. Otherwise we have a lot of heat and little light. Responses to the crisis are contentious because most of the perpetrators are British Asians; specifically British Pakistanis and Bangladeshis. Child abuse is not uniquely or largely a problem of particular demographics but grooming gangs – that is, multiple offenders exploiting women they have met, manipulated, and abused outside their homes – are 84 percent Asian, and this does not mean Chinese, Korean, Japanese, or Indonesian (other perpetrators have been Somali, Romani, Kosovan, Kurdish, and … The post Britain’s Grooming Gang Crisis appeared first on Quillette.
A trendy haircut in Maipur, baby-blue painted nails in Athens and the authentic taste of a South Pacific superfood. Kate Adie introduces correspondents' stories. Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs has sparked repeated international criticism, but Colin Freeman finds support in surprising places: drug users, or ex-drug users, for Duterte. Secunder Kermani gets a haircut in Mirpur, and a lesson in relations between British Pakistanis and their cousins back home. While Louise Cooper gets her nails done in Athens and finds the ugly face of recession, in a Greek beauty parlour. In Moscow, Steve Rosenberg watches as thousands of Russians queue for a chance to glimpse a golden ark. Inside it are fragments of St Nicholas’ rib, on loan from Italy. And Simon Parker swims in the clean seas around French Polynesia and samples the silky, mustard-coloured gonads of a sea urchin.
Now a Russian plane has been shot down by Turkish fighters and Russia accuses Russia of slander for saying they buy oil from Iis and Erdogan refuses to apologise for downing the plane. According to El Pais PM Rajoy appears to be isolating himeself from his allies and turning a blind eye to the jihadist threat as King Felipe asks for EU members to stand united against those who would take away our freedom. ......There's fury in Spain over tributes to Franco on the anniversary of his death................... 48 Women were killed in Spain in 2015 in another catalogue of domestic violence............. A British father has been convicted of manslaughter after killing a German 'paedophile' in a fight in a restaurant in Sotogrande. In the UK David Cameron is asking parliament to support further action in Syria and Iraq. Prince Charles blames the Syrian Crisis on Global Warming. The Health Minister Jane Ellison, has spoken out against first-cousin couples among British Pakistanis.............A Pakistani man has been jailed form 40 years over failed Manchester bomb plot.......Researchers say UK soaring immigration is caused by surge in Romanians and Bulgarians.....and a 32 year old drunk driver whose irresponsible actions left two female passengers with horrific injuries, has had his curfew lifted so he can go on a stag do.
Now a Russian plane has been shot down by Turkish fighters and Russia accuses Russia of slander for saying they buy oil from Iis and Erdogan refuses to apologise for downing the plane. According to El Pais PM Rajoy appears to be isolating himeself from his allies and turning a blind eye to the jihadist threat as King Felipe asks for EU members to stand united against those who would take away our freedom. ......There's fury in Spain over tributes to Franco on the anniversary of his death................... 48 Women were killed in Spain in 2015 in another catalogue of domestic violence............. A British father has been convicted of manslaughter after killing a German 'paedophile' in a fight in a restaurant in Sotogrande. In the UK David Cameron is asking parliament to support further action in Syria and Iraq. Prince Charles blames the Syrian Crisis on Global Warming. The Health Minister Jane Ellison, has spoken out against first-cousin couples among British Pakistanis.............A Pakistani man has been jailed form 40 years over failed Manchester bomb plot.......Researchers say UK soaring immigration is caused by surge in Romanians and Bulgarians.....and a 32 year old drunk driver whose irresponsible actions left two female passengers with horrific injuries, has had his curfew lifted so he can go on a stag do.
Anwar Akhtar, Director of The Samosa, argues that Pakistan should think of itself as an Asian nation, not as an Arab one. And after years of working between Britain and Pakistan, he says British Pakistanis are uniquely placed to help Pakistan embrace its multicultural history - and to create a prosperous and peaceful future with India. Four Thought is a series of talks which combine thought provoking ideas and engaging storytelling. Recorded live in front of an audience, speakers air their latest thinking on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect our culture and society. Producer: Giles Edwards.
The number of British Pakistanis kidnapped while visiting relatives in Pakistani has nearly trebled over the last four years. The official figures are small - going from 8 to 22 cases - but the police believe they represent only a partial picture. In many cases, families pay ransom demands to get loved ones released. One MEP says criminals are abducting people in the knowledge they are unlikely to be brought to justice. Also - drugged up drivers. We ask why has the Home Office failed to hit its own deadline for introducing drug testing machines in police stations. With officials dragging their feet, camapigners say more people are likely to die at the hands of drivers who've got behind the wheel of a vehicle high on drugs.
It is 10 years since riots engulfed the city of Bradford in the North of England. There were running battles between police and young British Pakistanis. Mohammed Amran was on the streets throughout. Photo: Press Association