Justifiably called rape gangs in the UK and Dominic is involved in a project that has contributed to spreading the word about it but also helping people recognize just how horrific it was and it's precisely those details that I just I would refer you to Dominick's project for the full details.
What's the time frame when all this occurred and what are the circumstances?
03:29. Here's what I learned since doing this project it has been going on Tom since the 1950s. The first wave of immigrants came to the UK after the 2nd world war, . . . mostly peculiar to Pakistani Muslims. And there was a large influx of these people in the 1950s and it involves the grooming and raping of young white girls, and in some cases these girls whereas young as 11, and it was common for them to be aged 12 and 13. The age of consent in the UK is 16 and I think it is in the states as well. For so many reasons, the authorities turned a blind eye to it in the fifties, and it was just here and there; it wasn't eveslightlyRotherin the 50s, it was just here and there. Because they turned a blind eye to it, it was able to grow and grow. And by the 90s and the noughties and the tweenies, it reached industrial scale. These men would groom young girls and they would do some of the most graphic and horrible things to them. It's only the result of this project that I have learned just how awful some of the stuff is and it's so awful you cannot repeat it on air it's that bad.
05:50. The project that I was involved in was organized by an Irish filmmaker, named Phelim McAleer. I should say what he does is he creates podcasts of film but only uses the actual words as they were and so in this case I had to read out a judge's sentencing and these were the actual words of the judge and it's a 45 minute film and I'm just sitting there playing the judge reading out this sentencing. But in reading out the sentencing, you discover some of the most graphic and horrific stories you will ever hear in your life. And I sat there playing this judge and reading it out and going, "this is not possible that one human being could do this to another." But here's the terrifying thing is the authorities turned a blind eye to it and we know that in the 90s and the noughties, when I say the authorities, I mean the police, the politicians, the media, social workers, you know, the authorities. The reason they turned a blind eye to it is, broadly speaking, they were all terrified of being called racist. And this whole thing went against the pro-multicultural narrative that pervaded at the time, rather than saying, "Look at this industrial scale rate of young working class white girls," rather than admit to it and confront it and put the perpetrators in prison, the authorities chose to ignore the girls they throw our own children under the bus. And one of the crimes committed are, on a scale of 1 to 10, somewhere near 15. But the next level of crime is the failure of the authorities to address it, deal with it, and protect their own people. And it's terrible but I worked out that, we did a broad calculation, I haven't got the figures just before the court so I'm going to get it slightly wrong, but in one town Rotherham, they worked out that in a 12-year period there were 1,600 victims. Now we know that this took place in more than 50 towns across the country. And even though it goes back to the 1950s, because it was ignored and grew to an industrial scale, it only reached industrial scale in the late 90s, noughties, and tweenies, say 1995 and 2020. It's still going on now. In that 12-year period there were 1600 victims in that one town if you say okay that's a 12 year period over a 24-year period it was 3,000 victims in one town. But then you realize this is happening in as many as 50 to 100 towns across the UK. Do the math. Multiply 50 or 100 x 3,000, and you're looking at numbers in the hundreds of thousands
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