08/05/2026
Join our new group please 👉 Rupert lowe 2026
ONE COUNTRY. ONE LAW. ONE STANDARD.
Let’s stop pretending this is a fringe debate.
It is not.
It is the conversation millions of people across Britain are already having quietly in their homes, at work, and in their communities.
The poster you’ve shared doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It reflects a growing frustration that our leaders have spent years avoiding difficult conversations, hiding behind labels, and hoping the public would simply stop noticing.
They haven’t.
THE CORE ISSUE: WHOSE COUNTRY IS THIS?
Britain is a nation with a long established identity, shaped by its history, its institutions, and its values.
We have:
• A legal system built on parliamentary sovereignty
• A culture rooted in fairness, tolerance, and accountability
• A society where rights come with responsibilities
And yes, whether people like it or not, Britain is historically and constitutionally a Christian country, with the Church of England woven into the fabric of the state.
That does not mean exclusion.
It does not mean intolerance.
But it does mean we have every right to protect what we are.
ONE LAW FOR ALL – NOT PARALLEL SYSTEMS
Let’s deal with this head on.
There is one legal system in Britain.
Not two. Not three. Not negotiable.
Sharia councils:
• Have no legal authority in UK law
• Cannot override British courts
• Should not be treated as alternative justice systems
Yet concerns persist because people see:
• Informal influence
• Community pressure
• Parallel expectations developing in practice
That is where trust begins to break down.
The public are not wrong to say:
If you live in Britain, you live under British law. Full stop.
THE QUESTIONS POLITICIANS AVOID
This is where the debate gets uncomfortable… and honest.
Cousin Marriage
Still legal in the UK.
Yet widely debated due to:
• Public health concerns
• Increased risk of genetic disorders
• Ongoing parliamentary discussion
Why has this