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When Inclusion Means Surrender

  • Jim Chimirie
  • Sep 1
  • 3 min read

Updated: Sep 2

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Jim Chimirie

September 1, 2025


When Inclusion Means Surrender: The Attack on Rural England


The implication is clear: English villages, pubs, and parish traditions are exclusionary unless they are remade to suit newcomers.


The latest demand from our academic class is that rural England must "adapt."


A new report from the University of Leicester brands the countryside a "white monoculture" that needs "sustained inclusion efforts" - more halal food, prayer spaces, and "cultural sensitivity." The implication is clear: English villages, pubs, and parish traditions are exclusionary unless they are remade to suit newcomers.


We've seen this script before. In the cities, the same guilt-driven narrative was imposed: ordinary life painted as racist, traditions pathologised, and the call for "diversity" used to justify mass demographic change.


Look at Leicester itself - once a historic English city, now a case study in sectarian division, Islamist intimidation, and white Britons reduced to a minority in their own home. That didn't happen by chance. It was pushed - by Labour councils, NGOs, quangos, and academics who treat population replacement as 'progress.'


Now they want to repeat the experiment in the shires. The language is dressed up in the usual jargon - "inclusion," "regeneration," "cultural adaptation." But strip it back and it's blunt: dismantle rural life.


The pub is exclusionary. The church is colonial. The very sight of English hills is said to stir "nationalist feelings." Once again, the culture of the majority must yield, because the minority feels "discomfort."


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This is the Leftist–Islamist alliance in action. The Islamists demand space for their customs. The Left provides the ideological cover, denouncing resistance as "rural racism" and history as "colonial oppression." Together, they hollow out another piece of Britain's identity.


Cities first, now villages and fields. The countryside doesn't need "restructuring." It doesn't need halal abattoirs, prayer rooms, or lectures from academics who despise it. It needs defending.


Because in the countryside lies one of the last strongholds of continuity - a place where our nation's history, culture, and character still survive relatively intact. To yield that in the name of "inclusion" is not kindness. It is surrender.


And let's call it what it is: the Great Replacement, pushed into our cities, and now into our countryside - the dismantling of a nation in plain sight.



© Jim Chimirie 2025

Images via author


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The left have been playing the long game in the UK.


What we are now seeing, as Jim Chimirie rather accurately sums up, is the insidious culmination of the left's efforts, going back decades, to the early 1960s.


What was missing was a single element that could draw various threads together. Until and unless this single element could be found, various efforts by the left, although becoming deep-rooted, would always fail. Then in 1997, they got one - Blair.


Tony Blair was the one thing the left needed - an election winner. Riding on the back of a failing Conservative party, Blair kept Labour in power for thirteen years. That had never happened before. For the first time, Labour won three General Elections on the trot and had time to get to work.


Meanwhile, the only real opposition, the Conservative party, wanted their own Blair as leader. They got that when David Cameron became leader, a poor imitation of Blair. He turned the Tories into Labour - Lite and again carried on where Gordon Brown (successor to Blair as PM) had left off.


Then we had the weirdness of more Tory infighting as yet more imitators of Blair followed Cameron, all wanting to be 'popular' rather than grasping nettles.


Hence we are where we are.


Kevan James




Blair has a lot to answer for!


Robert




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