Britain's Descent Towards Civil War is No Accident

Article CAIRCO note: 
Engineered dirty war in Britain
Article author: 
Michael Rainsborough
Article publisher: 
The Daily Skeptic
Article date: 
5 September 2025
Article category: 
National News
Medium
Article Body: 

... As an observer no longer resident in Britain, I am reluctant to pontificate on the fate of my homeland.... an establishment seemingly bent on self-destruction, clinging to an incontinent immigration system and an almost devotional attachment to international and human rights laws that disadvantage its own citizens...

It should surprise no one that talk of civil strife and even civil war has been in the air for months...

... The British Road to Dirty War [by David Betz], explored the hollowing out of British democratic institutions — a long-running process that had by then left politics little more than a façade. The Brexit psychodrama exposed the extent of the rot. The political class, determined to thwart the referendum result, behaved with a deranged mixture of denial and contempt for the electorate...

Viewing Britain from afar is sobering: the decline of a nation under the stewardship of its self-anointed managerial and political elite...

... [David A.] Hughes’s contention that the road to conflict is intentional, a deliberate course imposed upon society...

David and I set out this argument in 2020 in a short article, ‘Empires of “Progress”‘, where we identified a clear elite strategy of re-importing techniques of imperial governance into the domestic realm. The aim was to rule by division: to fracture society into communities, reward loyal in-groups and discriminate against the majority through a two-tier system of justice, policing and social policy...

Who are these new imperialists? They appear under fresh guises - ‘diversity coordinators’, anti-racism activists, curriculum decolonisers, climate campaigners - but their mission is unchanged: to manage society by division...

The Shadow of Dirty War

Dirty war refers to a pattern of internal repression, most notoriously in Latin America during the 1970s: years of vicious but low-intensity strife in which regimes and insurgents alike turned their weapons on segments of their own people...

Almost inevitably, this is accompanied by crackdowns on free speech and civil liberties — the indispensable handmaidens of dirty war...

If Britain does not slide into a dirty war outright, a more plausible prospect is Balkanisation — or, in the local idiom, Ulsterisation...

Related

Mass Migration Driving Record Population Growth in Britain

At the End of the Road - Britain's End Game