EQUAL TREATMENT FOR ALL
For centuries, laws were used to divide people, restricting access to services, education, and basic rights based on race, gender, or religion. Those were dark times. After civil wars, protests, and bloodshed, we rightfully concluded that dividing people by identity leads only to injustice, resentment, and unfair outcomes.
So, we eliminated those laws—or at least, we thought we did.
However, our government has found new ways to enforce division. Hiring quotas ensure jobs are awarded based on identity, not merit. Sentencing guidelines set to take effect on April 1st—funny choice of date, as only a fool would accept this being codified into law—will punish people differently for the same crime, depending on their background. The Equality Act, once designed to ensure fairness, has been twisted beyond recognition—what was meant to protect those who had undergone gender reassignment surgery now grants legal privileges based on nothing more than self-declaration. This has led to policies where male criminals are placed in female prisons, undermining the very idea of safety and fairness.
Consider the case of Karen White, a convicted sex offender who self-identified as female and was placed in a women's prison. While incarcerated, White sexually assaulted four female inmates within three months, highlighting the dangers of such policies.
But let’s be clear—there is nothing to fear in true equality. Not being treated differently because of your skin colour, religious views, gender, or sexual identity is something we have all fought for, for a very long time. The number of lives given to this cause is uncountable. People have died for this. Yet they have convinced some of you to abandon that fight by selling division as progress, by offering privileges instead of justice. But this is a false victory.
The real win is not in special laws that grant privileges to some - it is in living under a government that refuses to create policies that separate us in these ways at all. That is how we truly move forward.
To be clear: removing these laws will not strip away anyone’s right to safety or dignity. It will not mean that people can be beaten, harassed, or denied justice. What it will mean is that everyone will be treated the same - under the same laws, with the same protections, and without special rules that divide us.
Because that’s what we all wanted, isn’t it?
Together, we can stop government-enforced division. This is our chance to finally restore true equality.
Problems
Laws That Were Supposed to End Discrimination Have Only Reinvented It
Instead of ensuring fairness, government policies like hiring quotas and identity-based sentencing have recreated discrimination in a new form. The same crime now carries different punishments depending on the offender’s identity. Hiring decisions are made based on identity, not qualifications. The legal system is no longer blind - it now sees race, gender, and identity before justice.
Poverty Affects Everyone, Yet It’s Ignored in Favor of Identity Politics
Poverty has no race, no religion, no gender, and no political allegiance. Yet, instead of tackling it, the government chooses identity-based policies that help some while leaving others behind. The poor are the only group who can never be represented in Parliament— the moment an MP takes office, they earn £90,000 a year and are no longer poor. By focusing on identity instead of economic reality, the government has abandoned the only real struggle that affects us all.
These Laws Have Created Legal Chaos and Social Division
Laws that were meant to bring fairness have fueled resentment, distrust, and backlash. Identity-based policies have led to legal inconsistencies, where some are given special privileges while others are punished more harshly. The public is fighting back—from legal challenges to protests, people are rejecting identity-based governance.
Solutions
End Legal Double Standards—One Law for All
Justice must be blind, not selective. There should be one law for all, no exceptions, no privileges. No more identity-based sentencing—punishment should fit the crime, not the identity of the offender. No more hiring quotas—since this policy has been applied, standards of service have declined. This raises the question of whether it is the cause. Let’s remove the need for that question by eliminating the policy and returning to hiring based solely on individual merit and ability. No more double standards in courtrooms—the law should never see race, gender, or faith—only the facts.
Replace Identity Politics with Policies That Address Poverty
We must stop playing favourites with identity and start fighting for those who need help the most - regardless of ethnicity. Help should go to the struggling, not the selected. Right now, poverty is the real barrier to opportunity, not identity. A wealthy person of colour has far more access to opportunities than a poor person whose skin is white. If you don’t believe that, ask Rishi, ask Kemi, ask Hamza what they think on the subject. Actually, don’t ask Hamza, we already know his views on the white people of this land.
Restore Social Cohesion—Protect Women, Spaces, and Trust in the Law
A divided nation cannot stand up to a corrupted government. If we want true fairness, we need to fix the damage these laws have done. Repeal self-ID policies that put ideology over reality. A person’s feelings cannot override biological fact and public safety. Women’s spaces must be safe again. No rapists in women’s prisons. No men in domestic violence shelters. No forced silence when women speak out. Fairness must be restored in all aspects of law and public policy. No special exemptions, no different rules—just equal treatment for all.
This isn’t a radical thought or a new idea. People, even before Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, were fighting for a society where we are not judged or favoured by the colour of our skin. We have known since Mary Queen of Scots, and more recently, what we down playingly refer to as The Troubles, about the consequences of dividing by religion. Stonewall was just people fighting for their right to not be treated differently because of who they love. These battles have been fought. These lessons have already been learned. So why are we allowing them to continue enforcing division? Every time we do, it is a slap in the face to those who fought and sacrificed before us.
This isn’t about left or right. Everybody knows the pendulum of politics always swings, given enough time. Some swings are more severe than others, but it does swing. We want to ensure that no matter which way it swings, none of us will ever again have to face policies or laws that punish or favour us based on race, gender, religion, or who we love.