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Britain's Deadly Open Door

  • Jim Chimirie
  • 7 hours ago
  • 3 min read
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Jim Chimirie

October 30, 2025



Britain's Open-Border Delusion Has Turned Deadly - The UK is being punished for its decency. We opened our doors to the desperate, and the ruthless walked through.


The BBC went to Buxton this week – a quiet Derbyshire town of little drama and few outsiders – to ask why so many locals plan to vote Reform. The reporters were baffled. Buxton has no migrant hotels, no small boats, no asylum camps. Why, then, are its people worried about immigration?


Why the fear? The question says more about the BBC than it does about Buxton. The people there can still see what is happening to their country. They read the news. They watch the trials. They see the funerals. They know what's coming their way because they've seen what's already happened elsewhere. They've seen the grooming gangs. The stabbings. The acid attacks.


The masked marches through London where men chant "Zionist scum off our streets." They've seen small towns change overnight, their high streets turned from safe to sinister. They've watched as police tape replaces order, and fear becomes routine. They don't need to wait for Buxton to burn before they reach for the fire extinguisher. And this week, they saw it again.


A man walking his dog in Uxbridge stabbed to death by an Afghan who entered Britain illegally in a lorry and was later granted asylum. Another asylum seeker in Walsall convicted of murdering a hotel worker. Another in Bournemouth jailed for chasing staff with a knife because he didn't like the free food. Another in Derby for stabbing a man to death in a bank.


All this in one week.


These are not accidents. They are policy.


Our leaders threw open the gates and called it compassion. They treated border control as bigotry, deportation as cruelty, and national safety as an afterthought. They confused mercy with madness. And now the people live with the consequences.


The same politicians who imported the problem now pretend to be shocked by its results. They speak of "balance" and "complexity" as the bodies pile up. When the BBC asks, "Why are you worried? You have no migrants," the answer is obvious: because we still have eyes. We can see the flames creeping closer. We understand that prudence is not prejudice.


The real moral failure is to not stop evil when you still can. A sensible nation acts before it bleeds. Britain is being punished for its decency. We opened our doors to the desperate, and the ruthless walked through.


The state tells us to stay calm. The media tells us to stay silent. But the public sees what they will not say: that the system protects everyone except those it was built to serve. This is not a "challenge." It is a national emergency.


A government that cannot defend its people has no moral right to rule. The response must be swift and unapologetic: suspend asylum for illegal entrants, detain until deportation, end the hotel racket, and cut off the NGOs that profit from chaos.


Compassion must begin at home – with the safety of British citizens.


We were told this was about kindness. It was never kindness. It was surrender dressed as virtue. The open-border experiment has failed, and its cost is now written in blood. The people of Buxton understand that truth better than the politicians who run the country – because they still live in the real world, and they can see what's coming.



© Jim Chimirie 2025


ree


Jim refers to a "national emergency" in his article. While he is correct, it is worth pointing out that if the PM declared one, he would also then be permitted to cancel all elections, including a General Election.

That the UK is - now - in some danger is beyond dispute but we must ask: what is Starmer's game? He has said he wants ten years as Prime Minister. He won't get that if there is a general election in 2029 or at any time before then.


Kevan James




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