Across the UK, from Epping to Manchester, protests outside hotels housing asylum seekers have erupted, with citizens chanting "save our kids" and demanding "remigration." The media, from Sky News to the BBC, paints these as the work of far-Right extremists, spotlighting groups like the English Defence League or Britain First. But this narrative obscures a deeper truth: many protesters, like the mothers of Epping, are ordinary people driven by fear for their children's safety and their country's future, not extremist ideology. By framing these uprisings as far-Right tantrums, the media dismisses legitimate concerns, fuelling division and ignoring the rot of unchecked immigration policies.
The spark in Epping, a quiet UK town, was a chilling incident. Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, a 38-year-old Ethiopian asylum seeker who arrived by boat, was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl and harassing two others just days after being housed at the Bell Hotel. The Free Press reports that over a thousand locals, led by mothers, protested on July 17, 2025, chanting "save our kids" outside the hotel, which the government filled with male asylum seekers against local wishes. The girl's father wrote to the council, pleading for the hotel's relocation to protect "our children and grandchildren." These aren't swastika-waving radicals, they're parents terrified by a tangible threat, validated by a real crime.
This isn't isolated. The Gateway Pundit notes protests in cities like London, Manchester, and Rotherham, with 15 arrests reported by Sky News on July 27, 2025. X posts echo this, with users like @TheBritLad describing "thousands of parents" united by safety concerns, not hate, in "peaceful, non-violent demonstrations." Yet, the media fixates on far-Right fringes, ignoring the broader, non-ideological anger, which is not surprising given the globalist control of the narrative.
The media's rush to label these protests as far-Right is a lazy trope. The Guardian and BBC highlight groups like the Freedom Party in Austria or Poland's Law and Justice, framing Europe's anti-immigration sentiment as a populist, xenophobic surge. NBC News ties it to "authoritarianism" and "extreme hostility to immigration." In the UK, Sky News reports clashes between protesters and far-Left counter-groups like Stand Up to Racism, implying a binary of racists versus anti-racists. This glosses over the Epping mothers, who aren't chanting for white supremacy but for their daughters' safety after a specific assault.
Media narratives downplay such incidents or frame criticism as bigotry, as seen in Sky News quoting migration expert Zoe Jardiniere dismissing protests as feeding a "racist narrative." This gaslighting, calling parents' fears xenophobic, alienates communities, much like the urban decay you've noted in cities like San Francisco or the divisive feminist theories like heterofatalism. It's a pattern: elites sanitise systemic issues to protect their agenda, with an open-borders policy that ignores local fallout.
The Epping protests, and others across the UK, stem from real grievances. The Free Press details how the Bell Hotel's use for asylum seekers defied local council objections, reflecting a broader disconnect between government policy and community needs. X posts, like one from @darrengrimes_ on July 26, 2025, praise the mothers for standing up "peacefully but firmly" when MPs won't, echoing the point that most protesters aren't far-Right but concerned citizens. Crime stats back this up: the UK's Home Office reported a 19% rise in sexual offenses from 2023 to 2024, with asylum seeker hubs often linked to local tensions, as seen in Rotherham's 2024 hotel riots.
These fears aren't abstract. Parents see incidents like Epping's assault or Nuneaton's alleged rape by asylum seekers and connect them to unchecked immigration. The Gateway Pundit calls it a "fraying of the social fabric," akin to the urban decay we have described in the U.S. When governments prioritise asylum seekers over locals, housing them in hotels while communities feel unsafe, it breeds resentment, not racism. The media's far-Right label dismisses this, much like universities push divisive ideologies or surveillance laws erode freedom.
The Epping mothers could signal a tipping point. The Free Press suggests their anger is "spreading like wildfire," with protests in seven major cities by late July 2025. This aligns with Politico's report on Europe's rising anti-immigration sentiment, where mainstream parties face pressure to tighten borders. But labelling it all far-Right, as The Guardian does, risks radicalising moderates. When parents like those in Epping are ignored or vilified, they may turn to figures like Geert Wilders, whose Dutch victory The Free Press called a "deep centre" revolt, not fringe extremism.
The fix isn't censorship or name-calling but addressing root causes: vet asylum seekers rigorously, prioritise local safety, and listen to communities. Like the urban rot discussed in other blog pieces at Alor.org, this is a symptom of governance failure. If the media keeps painting mothers as bigots, they'll only fuel the fire they claim to fear, pushing the UK toward a fractured future where trust in institutions collapses entirely.
https://www.thefp.com/p/are-these-mothers-starting-a-revolt-politics-international-europe
"EPPING, United Kingdom — The mothers of Epping file into the fenced enclosure across the road from the Bell Hotel. Since early 2024, the government has filled the 79-room hotel with male asylum seekers against the wishes of the local people and the local council—and these women believe that their children are at risk.
The protests' proximate cause is the case of Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu. He is a 38-year-old Ethiopian who, his lawyer says, arrived "informally on a boat" and claimed asylum in Britain on June 29. He was sent to the Bell Hotel soon afterward. On his seventh and eighth days in Britain, Kebatu propositioned and forcibly attempted to kiss a 14-year-old local girl in a nearby restaurant and made similar advances to two other young girls.
On July 17, the day Kebatu was charged with "three counts of sexual assault, one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity, and one count of harassment without violence," more than a thousand locals protested at the hotel, chanting "save our kids."
"I just want the hotel to be moved, not only off our streets, but away from making any other family feel how we're feeling right now," the 14-year-old's father said in a letter to the town council. "It's not fair that the Government are putting our children and grandchildren at risk, even their own."
In the days since that first spontaneous protest, hundreds of far-Left activists—habitual agitators such as Stand Up to Racism and the Socialist Workers Party—came to Epping to defend the asylum seekers."
As they always do, rain or shine. The migrants are their last hope for a communist revolution, having lost faith in the revolutionary potential of the white working class, who now need replacement the socialist believes.
Citizens' mass protests in the UK express the majority's feelings.
Under the rule of leftist Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the invasion of the British islands continues unabated – but now, the pushback from the citizenry has seemingly escalated beyond the point of no return.
This weekend, UK has grinded to a halt wile 'asylum hotel' protests demanding 'remigration' take over major cities
A cursory look shows that at least London, Manchester, Newcastle, Southampton, Rotherham, Tamworth and Middlesbrough saw big demonstrations.
British patriots fight back against the fraying of their social fabric due to the mass immigration catastrophe.
Sky News reported:
"The protests were held outside hotels used to house asylum seekers who entered the UK, with the demonstrations leading to 15 arrests.
The protest in Manchester's city center saw a clash between counter-protesters, and the two groups briefly scuffled before police arrived on the scene."
https://www.amren.com/news/2025/08/why-white-working-class-rage-is-surging-in-britain/