Which particular Badenough lie was that?tou’ve single handedly made the case that kemi is on about.

Which particular Badenough lie was that?tou’ve single handedly made the case that kemi is on about.
What about it?Didn’t read section 3.3.3. Obviously.
Yes gangs/groups.. And clearly you have no clue that this article has nothing to do with child rape gangs “grooming gangs” which is the whole topic of investigation and comment in the last thread and this thread.

That’s not what the evidence says.Yes gangs/groups.
A majority of all CSE/CSA group or gang offences in England and Wales are committed by (a large majority) white British males. This is undisputed. You were wrong then (other thread) and still are now.
What is your point?
Yes gangs/groups.
A majority of all CSE/CSA group or gang offences in England and Wales are committed by (a large majority) white British males. This is undisputed. You were wrong then (other thread) and still are now.
What is your point?
Ben Habib said as much, that Reform are veering more to the left.Far rage was arguing the woman made stateless should be allowed to return. If his intention was to wind up kemi and create clear blue water between re form and the toreys he’s achieved it by moving to the left of the toreys. The games politicians play.
Nonsense.That’s not what the evidence says.
Zero evidence, fact free biking from the boatyard you mean.If we look at the subject of the thread, biker is surely attempting to suggest that the things Badenoch said, are actually true.
I don't think he's making a very good job of it.
And yet it isn't as far as I can see.Are you unaware that the text with an underline links to the reports. They’ve been posted before.

What about it?Didn’t read section 3.3.3. Obviously.
I understand that a large majority of group based CSA and CSE offending in this country is carried out by white British men. Correct.understand statistics
From the 2020 paper on Group based CSE. It does however go into great lengths about how poor quality the data available is.17. A number of high-profile cases - including the offending in Rotherham investigated
by Professor Alexis Jay,3
the Rochdale group convicted as a result of Operation
Span, and convictions in Telford – have mainly involved men of Pakistani ethnicity.
Beyond specific high-profile cases, the academic literature highlights significant
limitations to what can be said about links between ethnicity and this form of
offending. Research has found that group-based CSE offenders are most
commonly White.4 Some studies suggest an over-representation of Black and Asian
offenders relative to the demographics of national populations.5 However, it is not
possible to conclude that this is representative of all group-based CSE offending.
This is due to issues such as data quality problems, the way the samples were
selected in studies, and the potential for bias and inaccuracies in the way that
ethnicity data is collected.6 During our conversations with police forces, we have
found that in the operations reflected, offender groups come from diverse
backgrounds, with each group being broadly ethnically homogenous. However,
there are cases where offenders within groups come from different backgrounds.7