The people want the truth, in other words, they want justice for those girls —and they are not bothered about who gets insulted or offended along the way.

The ruling classes in Britain, within both the Conservative and Labour Parties, but also within the British Police forces across the country, and the local councils and various bureaucracies that supposedly exist to help poor young girls, have lost control of the narrative. Rarely have I seen a more comprehensive polling result on any issue across seemingly every voting demographic there is.

The public opinion on the punishments that should be dished out to these men is even more astounding given that this is Britain we’re talking about, where the death penalty was abolished more than sixty years ago.

As Matt Goodwin says of other results from the survey:

And there’s also a much deeper divide going on here between the elite class and the people who have to live with the consequences of the decisions made on their behalf.

In contrast to Keir Starmer, Labour MPs, and many other people in the corridors of power, most people in Britain reject outright the idea that covering the rape gangs scandal is damaging to ‘social cohesion’ and ‘race relations’, or is somehow ‘racist’.

Contrary to all those hapless officials in local councils, all those police officers, and all those social workers who for decades avoided the rape gang scandal due to fears it would ‘upset community relations’, most people reject the idea ‘it is damaging to social cohesion and race relations for media outlets to cover the grooming gangs scandal’.

The British government has finally yielded somewhat to the pressure by announcing that there will be some “audits” done in the worst-hit areas, but what that hell does that even mean?

We had hundreds of pages of reports from social workers, sexual health clinics, and care home staff. We had precise locations of abuse, car registration plates, names, addresses, and testimony from witnesses with corroborating accounts. And yet not one of the 97 suspects we had gathered evidence against was charged with rape, and not one of the 26 young victims would see justice. It was as if all my life’s work and all these children’s lives meant nothing at all. Meanwhile, the abusers were still roaming free, able to target more children.

A full blown Royal Commission type inquiry covering the entire country needs to be conducted and they could start by asking every single girl who was raped and enslaved by these gangs to testify – with identities hidden if necessary – and then move on from there to get testimony from every police officer, social worker and councillor involved.

Perhaps they can call it the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, like those in Canada, South Korea and of course South Africa?