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The ‘anti-racist’ rot at the heart of Britain’s police - spiked 17%
By Owen Shapell0%
7/10/2026, 11:55:23 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 1 faulty reasoning type, including Attempt to Sell a Product or Service, with Attempt to Sell a Product or Service as the most egregious example at 1.2% saturation with 34 hits. Analysis detected 34 faulty-reasoning hits from 2,917 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 34% and a BS Rank of 17% (11,453 of 13,766 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 83.20% of the article peer group.
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At 9.31 on the morning of Yom Kippur last year, a man named Jihad Al-Shamie drove his Kia Picanto into the security gates of the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in Crumpsall, Manchester.
He then got out and resumed the attack with a knife.
He was wearing what looked to everyone present like a suicide belt.
The first 999 call came from witnesses at the scene; it was only after firearms officers were already making their way to the synagogue that Al-Shamie himself rang emergency services to claim responsibility and pledge allegiance to Islamic State – a gesture that resolved any ambiguity about his motivation with an efficiency the subsequent police communications would struggle to match.
Armed officers shot him dead within seven minutes.
Melvin Cravitz, aged 66, and Adrian Daulby, 53, were killed; Daulby, it later emerged, by a round from one of the responding officers, a tragedy Greater Manchester Police handled with considerably more transparency than they managed with their characterisation of the attack itself.
Al-Shamie, we were subsequently told, was not known to Counter Terrorism Policing.
He had never been referred to Prevent, the government’s counter-radicalisation programme.
He was, in the preferred official formulation, ‘not on our radar’.
He was, it later transpired, on bail for rape.
The name Jihad, meaning ‘holy war’, had not apparently exercised the relevant agencies, and one accepts that the bar for a counter-terrorism referral cannot rest on nominative determinism alone.
Still, here was a man on bail for rape, living two miles from a synagogue, with a forename whose sole denotative content is religiously motivated violence.
And?
Nothing.
The radar, it seems, is calibrated for certain frequencies and not for others.
Assistant chief constable Rob Potts told a press conference his force was ‘more confident’ that Al-Shamie had been influenced by ‘extreme Islamist ideology’, and added that ‘there may be further drivers and motivations identified’.
One wonders what further drivers might complicate the picture of a man who rammed a car into a synagogue on the holiest day of the Jewish year, wearing a fake bomb, while telephoning police to pledge allegiance to a terrorist organisation.
Now enter, stage left, the Bradford Hate Crime Scrutiny Panel.
The panel had been convened, in the aftermath of Al-Shamie’s attack, for West Yorkshire Police to discuss their response.
A neighbouring force, sharing geography, personnel pipelines and, as it turns out, certain institutional reflexes.
Among those attending via Teams was a retired academic in her sixties named Elaine.
She had served on the panel since 2022 and had, the previous December, finally been confirmed as its chair.
Yet, having won the vote, Elaine spent months in administrative purgatory while the incumbent, a Muslim man, remained in post and nobody thought to mention that the vote had happened.
Her understanding was that Bradford’s was the only hate-crime scrutiny panel in West Yorkshire not chaired by a Muslim man.
This was not the first time Elaine had given the force cause to resent her.
Six months before the Manchester attack, the panel had reviewed the case of a man charged with a hate crime after ringing a police helpline and telling the Muslim call handler that the Prophet Muhammad was a paedophile.
Citing the historical accounts, disputed but ancient and widely recorded, of Muhammad’s marriage to Aisha and its consummation when she was nine.
Elaine argued that however disagreeable the caller’s manner, the statement did not constitute a criminal offence – one does not commit a crime by making a historical claim about a religious figure, however crudely expressed.
A panel of lawyers agreed.
The case was downgraded to a non-crime hate incident.
West Yorkshire Police, upon receiving this news, began calling for her removal.
She had won.
The lawyers had sided with her.
The law was on her side.
And the consequence was a campaign for her dismissal.
Which tells you rather more about the force’s governing priorities, than any official statement could.
What she had demonstrated was not merely that one man had not committed a crime.
She had also revealed that the force’s instinct, to treat criticism of Islamic doctrine as functionally equivalent to incitement against Muslims, had no legal foundation.
Blasphemy law was abolished as a criminal offence in England and Wales in 2008.
Its ghost, it turned out, had taken up quiet residence in the hate-crime framework, sustained by institutional habit rather than legal warrant.
The ghost’s custodians did not forgive her.
The Teams meeting, she later told the Telegraph , was chaired by a white female inspector who ran it fairly and with some firmness, and who was under what Elaine describes as constant pressure from the Muslim men participating.
The meeting’s governing concern, within hours of two Jews being murdered at their synagogue by an Islamist, was the potential threat to mosques.
The inspector repeated, several times, that there was no intelligence of danger to any Islamic place of worship.
One is not sure quite what to say about the decision to frame an emergency meeting about an attempted Yom Kippur massacre around the anxieties of the community whose ideology had produced it.
Except that, when Elaine finally said something, the response was instructive.
She told the meeting they had to address the elephant in the room:
‘We know who the attacker is and what community he comes from.
We’ve got to be able to address this openly, and if we can’t do it here, there’s no hope.’
The chair immediately talked over her.
The following morning the meeting reconvened, the female inspector replaced, without explanation, by a Muslim male inspector.
Shortly after, Bradford District Commander Richard Padwell wrote to inform Elaine of her removal .
Her comments had been ‘divisive and inflammatory’; legal advice supported the view that she had failed to demonstrate the impartiality required of a chair.
The letter also noted, and this is the detail that repays the most careful attention, that her comments were not being recorded as a hate crime, and that he would not be providing her personal details to the community members who had expressed concerns about what she had said.
She described the letter as sounding like a threat.
She does not, she noted, frighten easily, having spent a career navigating the biosecurity structures of the UN, the Ministry of Defence and the US State Department, in rooms where the consequences of error were considerably graver than a Bradford advisory meeting.
But she was frightened by Padwell’s letter.
It would seem the letter was designed to frighten her.
Not legally.
No charge was ever brought, nor could have been.
But through the inquisitor’s technique, ensuring the accused understands that the machinery of accusation has been set in motion.
You have not committed a hate crime.
Your personal details have been sought by your accusers.
The apparatus of hate-crime law, created to protect the vulnerable from persecution, had been deployed to persecute the person charged with scrutinising the police.
West Yorkshire Police did not produce this situation in isolation.
They are the concentrated expression of a doctrine that has spread through British policing like damp through plaster over the course of three decades: not dramatic, not conspiratorial, but pervasive and progressive.
What has been absorbed is not quite an ideology and not quite a religion, though it has the fervour of both.
The institutional belief is that an allegation of racial animus, once made, supersedes all competing evidence and all other moral claims, and that the primary function of police in a culturally complex situation is to ensure that no accusation of Islamophobia or racism attaches to the force.
Everything else: truth, safety, justice, the obligations of a constabulary to the public it polices, is secondary to the management of that risk.
The record in West Yorkshire alone is long enough to constitute a pattern.
The systematic sexual exploitation of predominantly white working-class girls, by networks of men predominantly of Pakistani heritage, has unfolded for decades across Bradford, Keighley, Huddersfield and Dewsbury, while the force collected intelligence it did not act on and recorded data it was careful not to examine too closely.
Baroness Casey’s 2025 national audit found that ethnicity data was not recorded for two-thirds of grooming-gang perpetrators across the relevant force areas.
She described this as the product of organisations ‘avoiding the topic altogether for fear’ of its racial dimension.
She confirmed on Sky News that she had personally seen the word ‘Pakistani’ Tippexed out of one child’s case file.
In West Yorkshire specifically, a quarter of suspects had no ethnicity recorded at all.
A former detective, John Piekos, who worked for an anti-trafficking charity in 2010, surveilled a Bradford children’s home for three months, watching the exploitation take place.
He took his evidence to a West Yorkshire officer he had previously dealt with, and was told : ‘Don’t you see how much effort we’ve put in to build racial harmony in this city and the problems we’ve gone through?
Your actions are likely to cause it all to burn to the ground.’
He was told to go away and leave them alone.
It was the shadow home secretary, Chris Philp, who eventually reported the officer to the National Crime Agency, armed with Piekos’s evidence and the officer’s name.
A Conservative MP’s dossier claims at least 7,975 children in the Bradford district alone were at risk between 1996 and 2025.
Bradford has largely escaped the scrutiny that fell on Rotherham, whose inquiry found officers had arrested the fathers of abused girls trying to remove their daughters from the houses where they were being raped, and had attended a derelict property, found an intoxicated child surrounded by her abusers, and arrested the child.
Bradford, some investigators believe, may yet prove to have been worse.
The governing principle, in the case of the Manchester synagogue attack and the grooming-gangs scandal, is identical: the comfort of one community constitutes a policing problem; the rights and safety of everyone else constitute someone else’s.
And it operates with equal consistency at the level of the catastrophic, in this instance thousands of children, and at the level of the mundane.
In 2021, a teacher at Batley Grammar School showed a class a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad during a lesson on blasphemy and free expression.
He received threats.
West Yorkshire Police provided protection, and when the protection ended the teacher simply disappeared into hiding, where he remains today: his career destroyed, his name unusable, his liberty permanently curtailed for the commission of an entirely legal act.
The force protected his body and surrendered the principle.
Every teacher in the country read the message.
The police will not protect your basic freedoms.
Nor is the pathology confined to policing.
Valdo Calocane, who murdered three people in Nottingham in 2023, was free to do so in part because psychiatric professionals had been reluctant to detain him, conscious of the ‘over-representation of young black males in detention’.
Axel Rudakubana, who in 2024 stabbed three young girls to death at a Taylor Swift dance class in Southport, had been reported by his headteacher to mental-health services for his sinister behaviour with knives.
She was subsequently accused of racial profiling.
‘I was told my attitude towards risk was because I perceived him to be a black boy with a knife’, she told the subsequent inquiry.
The machinery doesn’t only fail the victim of the racism accusation.
It fails everyone, including, ultimately, the communities it claims to protect, too.
The doctrine’s most recent product can be stated in a sentence.
On the third of December 2025, an 18-year-old Southampton student named Henry Nowak bled to death in handcuffs on a pavement, having told the attending officers he had been stabbed.
They told him that he had not been stabbed, while the man who had in fact stabbed him, and who, through his brother, had telephoned in a false accusation of racism before the police arrived, stood unrestrained nearby.
For the present purpose it is enough to note that the officers who handcuffed the dying boy were not rogues.
They were trained, in a force that had spent close to a million pounds ensuring they would respond to a racism accusation exactly as they did.
The doctrine that produced all of this is not anti-racism.
To call it anti-racism is to misidentify it.
Anti-racism, properly understood, is the application of consistent standards.
The same evidentiary threshold, the same presumption of innocence, the same obligation to see what is in front of one’s nose.
This is to be applied without discrimination to all parties regardless of their community of origin.
What has been installed in British institutional life over the past 30 years, is something categorically different.
Call it, if you want a precise name, a theocracy of grievance: a system in which the claim of victimhood by a designated community functions as revelation.
Self-authenticating, requiring no verification, and overriding all competing moral claims, including the testimony of a dying boy about the state of his own body.
Every theocracy requires its clergy, the class of interpreters authorised to explain doctrine to the laity, to identify heresy and to redirect the faithful when they risk asking the wrong questions.
British policing has produced some of its own.
Dal Babu is a former chief superintendent of the Metropolitan Police, one of the most senior Muslim officers the force has ever produced, and the former chairman of the National Association of Muslim Police.
A regular presence on Sky News, he told Talk TV in August 2024, while grooming-gang inquiries were still active and the Batley teacher remained in hiding, that two-tier policing was ‘a phrase that’s become very common but I’ve not seen any evidence of it’.
After Nowak’s murderer was sentenced, he appeared again to offer his analysis.
What we are seeing, he explained, is ‘some people trying to cause division and hatred from this incident.
It’s the exact opposite of what Henry’s family have said.’
There it is.
A human statement of grief, made in the aftermath of a conviction, and saying nothing whatever about whether the institutional failures that produced that death should be examined.
And yet in Dal Babu’s hands, and in the hands of a Labour MP deploying identical words on the floor of the Commons, the statement became an instrument of foreclosure.
Disagree with me about the institutional culture, and you are doing the exact opposite of what Henry’s family asked.
You are causing division.
You should stop.
Christopher Hitchens identified this technique.
The deployment of sacred authority to shut down secular inquiry is the defining characteristic of clerical thinking in all its forms, religious and secular alike.
In Letters to a Young Contrarian he described it as the wish to have a last word – the desire not to win an argument but to end it.
By establishing a category of statement so morally charged that its introduction silences rather than persuades.
The racism accusation, in the culture this doctrine has built, is exactly that category.
It does not need to be true.
It does not need to be investigated.
It needs only to be made.
Not everyone who operates the instrument is a villain.
Speaking in late May, Martin Gallagher, a former police superintendent, said what the institutions will not:
‘We’ve conditioned our officers not to be wise and not to be circumspect.
They prioritise certain behaviours above others, probably to the detriment of the public.
Decision-making has been grossly affected by the constant messaging of the police being racist.’
This is not a right-wing formulation.
It is the description of a conditioning process by a man who watched it happen from inside.
Who guards the guards has a long history in liberal political philosophy, from Juvenal’s original complaint onward.
The answer is supposed to be: accountability, transparency, independent scrutiny, the press, bodies like the Bradford Hate Crime Scrutiny Panel.
Elaine was the Bradford Hate Crime Scrutiny Panel.
She was sacked, by letter, for asking a question.
Orwell observed that one does not need to be a genius to see what is directly in front of one’s nose, but that there are powerful social pressures against seeing it and saying so.
What is in front of every nose in this country, arranged in a sequence of cases spanning 30 years, is a system that has learned to treat the accusation of racism as a fact requiring no verification, and whose victims are the collateral of that learning: the raped girls, the vanished teacher, the sacked panel chair, the boy dying on a Southampton pavement.
The system has its theologians, its clergy, its instruments of foreclosure.
It also has a roadside sign in Shipley, of the kind usually reserved for speed limits and accident warnings, which asks the commuters of West Yorkshire whether they have been the victim of a hate crime.
The answer, across 30 years and several thousand cases, is yes.
The institution that poses the question knows this, and has known it for a very long time.
Owen Shapell is a PhD researcher in social sciences.
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