On this date two years ago, at this very time, 2:20 in the afternoon, an event occurred that started the process of changing Britain forever. It was the time, as many will no doubt recall, when Fusilleer Lee Rigby was cruelly and wantonly killed by Muslim terrorists for no other reason than Mr Rigby was a British serviceman. This country changed because we saw at last the true face of Islam, in the hate filled words and actions of the killers of Lee Rigby.
Never again would we look on the ideology of Islam the same way. Mr Rigby’s murder should never have happened and could and should have been prevented, but his death changed things. No more would many of us be anaesthetised by bland dishonest phrases like ‘Islam is a religion of peace’ or listen to the Islamic liars and taqiyya merchants telling us that the real victims were not the victims of Muslims but the Muslims themselves. After the murder of Mr Rigby, many British hearts hardened towards Islam and those who appease them so readily. We saw no peace or justice in the murder of Mr Rigby, we saw only Islamic savagery and many more people felt that they should, indeed must, say what we saw even if it was ‘politically incorrect’.
Of course as could be expected, Taqiyya, or lying to protect or promote Islam, abounded in our media following Mr Rigby’s murder. Various Muslim personages were wheeled out to say ‘Islam is a religion of peace’ despite ample and recent evidence to the contrary. Islamic spokespersons made a desperate effort to say in effect ‘don’t look at the bleeding body in a Woolwich street, look at the poor oppressed Muslims elsewhere’, but we saw their claims that there was a ‘root cause’ for the murder outside of Islam as being nothing but lies. After the murder of Lee Rigby, we became less willing to believe the sort of dishonest trash that comes out of the mouths of Islamic ‘community leaders’. The weeks after the murder of Lee Rigby saw various mendacious grievance-mongering taqiyya artists such as Fiyaz Mughal of the Tell Mama group claim that there had been an ‘unprecedented rise in Islamophobia’, an assertion that was rapidly discredited by, among others, Andrew Gilligan of the Daily Telegraph.
The murder of Mr Rigby had profound effects, far beyond the killing of an individual. It was an act that shocked a lot of Britons out of the complacency which came from the constant and enforced chanting of the phrase ‘strength through diversity’ and the effects of BBC pro-Islam propaganda. This crime started to make them question whether the sort of multiculturalism that has helped to create not only the murderers of Mr Rigby, but also a hostile Islamic fifth column, was really what the country needed.
The death of Lee Rigby opened the eyes of many and although we should collectively grieve for a man who lost his life in terrible circumstances, we should not forget that Britain is not the same place as it was on the 21st May 2013, before his murder. Because we have seen the true face of Islam in the faces of the murderers of Lee Rigby, we are less likely to believe the untruths about it which are peddled widely. Now we know conclusively that Islam is violent, that it is oppressive, that it is misogynistic and that it is really not compatible with civilised societies.
Britain changed on that 22nd May, it was the day when Islam’s excuses started to run out.
RIP Lee Rigby, we shall remember him, but we will also remember who and what killed him.