Deborah McQueen should not be allowed to keep her job, but at the same time, this is not really her fault. We know that it was fear of “racism” accusations that led to police shelving Muslim rape gang investigations in Rochdale and elsewhere in shattered, staggering, dhimmi Britain. Deborah McQueen is not the originator of such fears; she is just a minor functionary, doing what she had to do in order to protect her job in accordance with the zeitgeist.

The people who ought to be removed from their positions, if they’re in the British government, and prosecuted for the large-scale coverup and failure to prosecute these Muslim rape gangs are those who are responsible for making people such as Deborah McQueen fear that they would be accused of “racism” and “Islamophobia” for acting properly against the Muslim rape gangs: Nick Lowles of Hope Not Hate, Fiyaz Mughal of TellMamaUK, and the like, as well as Prime Minister Theresa May and her cohorts.

They have created a culture in which people were so afraid of being called “Islamophobic,” a charge that could mean the loss of their jobs and possibly even prison, that they turned a blind eye while the lives of tens of thousands of British girls were ruined. That culture is still in place. Until the criminal gang that rules Britain and controls its public discourse is removed and decisively repudiated, Britain has no hope of surviving as a free society.

“Social worker accused of failing to protect Rochdale grooming gang victims is allowed to keep her job,” by Damon Wilkinson, Manchester Evening News, November 6, 2017: