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Dads Go Where Police Simply Won’t

When the state can’t – or won’t – protect children, citizens are stepping up.

Ben Moss and Tom Doolan: dads doing what the police won't. The Good Oil. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.

In what will no doubt be swiftly condemned as ‘right-wing extremism’, UK dads are stepping up to do what the state is clearly incapable and apparently unwilling to do: protect their kids.

At every level, the British state knowingly refused to protect the thousands of girls raped by Muslim gangs for years in towns like Rotherham and Telford. The scumbag jihadi who murdered and mutilated hundreds of little girls at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester was well known to authorities who, belatedly, admitted “more should have been done” by British police to stop the attack, and that MI5 acted “too slowly”.

In the wake of the horrific mass-stabbing of little girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance party, it seemed as if police’s first priority was concealing the identity of the attacker and arresting people for social media posts.

Ordinary Britons are, more and more, realising that the police are worse than useless when it comes to protecting citizens (unless they’re members of a specially protected minority). So, they’re stepping up and doing it for themselves.

Napier bosses, Ben Moss, and Thomas Doolan decided to step up after the Southport stabbing of 11 girls, three of whom died. Two adults were also stabbed in the attack […]

Posting on Napier’s Facebook page one day after the attempted massacre, Moss and Doolan, both fathers of young kids, offered to mitigate the concerns of mums and dads.

“After yesterday’s horrendous events in Southport, if any local summer holiday clubs are thinking of not opening due to security risks, we will happily put staff on there for free where we can.

“Kids,” they said, “should be enjoying their summer!!”

Well, that’s just asking to get their door kicked in by the rozzers chasing down ‘non-crime hate incidents’. Did they even think before they posted?

Explaining the decision, Moss told the BBC, “I know my daughter is going to some clubs and stuff like that over the summer and I thought it would give them more peace of mind if they knew somebody was there.”

Moss added, he didn’t want to see any events cancelled.

Inundated with support, an August 4 update on the Napier FB page, the dads reasserted that the security services were being offered free of charge.

Instead of taking a wage for securing kids’ events, Napier told supporters to donate to one of GoFundMe pages set up to assist the victims.

Dads are stepping up to do what dads should – protect their children.

Doolan told ITV the response has been “unbelievable.”

“We’ve had one gentleman who’s taken time off work to come and work across the summer, so the outreach has been ridiculous.”

Moss, posting online about the large number of men in the security business offering to help out, remarked, “This has taken off bigger than we ever imagined. The support is ‘much appreciated.’

“Let’s let these kids have a good summer.”

More and more hero security firms are stepping up to do the job the police won’t.

Inspired by the daring dad duo’s initiative, other security firms either borrowed the idea or quickly lined up to offer Southport support.

Napier Security Services was joined by Alpha One HQ, who freely committed K9s, and medic resources to the Southport cause.

This was further bolstered by Warrior Security NW, also pledging to lend a hand free of charge.

The Napier FB page suggests the two dads and their security teams have been booked solid since July 30.

Not only this, dads defending dance classes, and kids’ summer events in Southport – as an idea – is being replicated across the region, at least as far south as Liverpool.

The unspoken story here, though, is that this should even happen at all.

In an apparent conversation with ITV, the two men, said, the aim of the pro-active response to the Southport stabbings, “is to provide ‘peace of mind’ and ‘reassurance’ to parents who have ‘no choice’ but to send their children to clubs during the summer holidays.”

“They have got to go to work all day – so they need some sort of reassurance that someone is going to be looking after their kids,” Moss explained.

Why, what are they? Islamophobes or something?


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