Scotland the Stunning and Brave

 

And so this week it came to pass that Humza Yousaf became the first, and hopefully the last First Minister of Scotland.

Humza, a Muslim of Pakistani extraction famous for a speech in which he venomously complained that most of the top jobs in Scotland, which is despite the efforts of leftists still ninety-six per cent white, are occupied by white people. This, he thinks is unacceptable. Could a man openly and proudly insult the natives of any other nation, and then become their leader?

This comes just months after Rishi Sunak, a Hindu of Indian extraction became the Prime Minister of Great Britain. I must admit that I am much more worried by the latest development for a couple of reasons.

Whilst both are a knife in the heart of the native British people, Yousaf is openly anti-white in a way that Sunak simply isn't. But it's the cumulative effect that bothers me most. With the exception of Wales which will surely follow suit in time, the whole of the British Isles, when we add Leo Varadkar's premiership of Ireland, is now ruled over by Indians and Pakistanis. The symbolic importance of this can't be understated.

It's an obvious point, but one that begs to be made, that it is impossible to imagine this happening the other way around, it just wouldn't happen in a subcontinent not under occupation.

We find ourselves in a situation where at the next round of talks, a Pakistani Muslim and an Indian Hindu will be negotiating the partition of Great Britain. You have to wonder if the meet and greet ceremony will look something like this.

Neither the Prime Minister nor Scotland's First Minister was voted in by the public in a General Election. Both were appointed by their respective parties and have yet to be endorsed at the ballot box.

Yousaf won the contest against the socially conservative runner-up Kate Forbes by fifty-two to forty-eight per cent. So far the SNP have not called for another vote, which would have been consistent with their stance on the Brexit referendum.

His first act was to have himself photographed praying.

 

Only time will tell what message the public will send in response. After having been anointed by the outgoing First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, the question remains for now whether she has inadvertently sacrificed the chance of Scottish independence on the altar of diversity. What hope is there that the Scottish public is not suicidally woke?


But the Scottish public won't have much of a choice at the next election. The leader of the Scottish Labour party, likely the only other party with a chance of winning, is led by Anas Sarwar: another Pakistani Muslim who coincidentally made an almost identical anti-white speech as Humza Yousaf. 

https://twitter.com/AnasSarwar/status/1270795295606165507?s=20


 

So which woke, anti-white Pakistani Muslim will they choose? We wait with bated breath.



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