Report: Repairing Britain's Reputation Takes Years - Islamic Invitation Turkey
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Report: Repairing Britain’s Reputation Takes Years

As Britain continues suppressive policies and British police clamp down on protesters and kill people, the country’s papers said repairing London’s international reputation will take years.
“It was, quite simply, one of the most disturbing and shaming weeks in Britain’s post-war history – a week in which it took the almost saintly compassion of a Muslim father, whose son died in the violence, to remind us of the true meaning of decency,” the Daily Mail said in a report today.

“But we should be under no misapprehension: these scenes of wanton anarchy have damaged the reputation of this country in a way that will take years to repair,” the report added.

As regards the root causes of recent unrests in Britain, the report said, “We have, for more years than we care to remember, argued that the liberal policies which have held sway for 30 years have undermined the core social and moral values that define civilized behavior.”

By failing to support the traditional family and its values, politicians have created an environment in which huge numbers of children have grown up without a male role model to instil discipline or respect for the law, the report added.

Married couples, where the wife stays at home, are penalized by the tax system while single mothers are financially incentivized to have more children, it said.

“Teachers have permitted appalling behavior to take root in schools for fear of seeming judgmental. Self-reliance-sapping drugs are glamorized by second-rate celebrities,” Daily Mail wrote.

“Mass immigration, imposed on Britain against the wishes of the majority of the public, has fractured our national identity and cohesion and stretched social structures to breaking point,” the report noted.

With jobs filled by work-hungry and skilled foreigners, too many of our own barely-educated young are allowed to fester in sullen despair.

The unrest in Britain began on August 6 in the North London suburb of Tottenham after a few hundred people gathered outside a police station to protest the fatal police shooting of a black man, Mark Duggan.

The country’s worst unrests since the 1980s has spilled over into major cities like Birmingham, Liverpool, and Bristol.

Five people have reportedly died and hundreds of others have been arrested so far.

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