Stabbed in Golders Green, Explained Away in Westminster

Peloni:  Another must read article by Victor Satya, in which he describes the institutionalization which exists in England to strip antisemitic attacks of their violent nature and relegate it towards something altogether normative.  The outlook for England Jewish minority is disturbingly grim just in regards to the exponentially dominating numbers of Jihadists which have been imported to England.  Layering on top of this is the disquieting attitude of the English media and authorities which requires terrorists while caught in the midst of their terrorism be subdued with care and consideration for the would be butcher being apprehended.  This presents a reality which is more than dystopian, as it is simply cognitive dissonance on a generalized authoritative level.

Victor Satya | Satya | May 4, 2026

Terror attack in Golders Green, London. April 29, 2026Terror attack in Golders Green, London. April 29, 2026.  Screengrab via X

On Wednesday, 29 April 2026, in that otherwise unremarkable patch of north London known as Golders Green, two Jewish men were stabbed in what the authorities swiftly identified as a terror attack.

Zack Polanski, the current deputy leader—and for all practical purposes, the loudest moral compass—of the Green Party, who surveyed the aftermath of the attack decided that the true outrage lay not in the stabbing of Jews, but in the alleged mistreatment of the attacker. The man who had just carried out a violent antisemitic assault was swiftly rebranded as a “mentally ill” individual subjected to excessive force. One could almost admire the efficiency. Within hours, the moral lens had been flipped: perpetrator recast as patient, victims reduced to inconvenient background detail.

Of course, one must concede that anyone who stabs strangers in the street for being Jewish is not operating at peak psychological health. But the instinct to reach for “mental illness” as the explanatory master key is not so much diagnosis as it is absolution. It is a way of scrubbing ideology from the crime scene, of ensuring that no unpleasant questions about belief, motivation, or culture are allowed to linger. Antisemitism, we are invited to believe, is no longer an ancient hatred. It is a sort of neurological glitch. A software error in the human brain. Reboot the individual, and all will be well.

This would be merely absurd if it were not so useful.

Because while fringe figures perform these rhetorical gymnastics, the adults in the room—led by Keir Starmer—deliver solemn speeches about the enduring danger of antisemitism. Starmer, in the wake of the attack, spoke gravely about hatred that “if you turn away, it grows back.” Quite right. History does show that. What history also shows, though rather less conveniently, is that such hatred tends to flourish when it is indulged, excused, or carefully re-described until it becomes something else entirely.

Listening to Starmer warn about the dangers of antisemitism has the faintly surreal quality of being lectured on fire safety by a man idly pouring petrol over the furniture. For this is a government that has spent much of the post–October 7 Hamas attack period performing a delicate balancing act: condemning antisemitism in principle while cultivating a political and rhetorical climate in which hostility toward the Jewish state—and, inevitably, toward Jews themselves—has been granted a kind of moral permission slip.

And if Golders Green were an isolated eruption, one might be tempted to indulge the fiction. Unfortunately, it is merely the latest entry in what is becoming a rather crowded catalogue. Arson attempts, attacks on synagogues, assaults on visibly Jewish individuals—each greeted with the same ritual choreography of shock, condemnation, and rapid forgetting. Britain now experiences antisemitic incidents with the regularity of seasonal weather, and with roughly the same level of sustained attention. One is always surprised. One is never, in any meaningful sense, surprised.

The government prefers to label these as “terror incidents,” which is accurate as far as it goes. But the fixation on classification conveniently avoids the more awkward question: what, precisely, is generating this pattern? What ideological currents are being tolerated, encouraged, or simply ignored?

Here, the international context becomes inconvenient. In the aftermath of October 7—the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust—one might have expected the UK government to respond with unambiguous solidarity toward the Jewish state. Instead, Britain distinguished itself by its eagerness to criticise Israel, to “balance” outrage with caution, and ultimately to take the curious step of recognising a Palestinian state in the middle of an ongoing conflict.

This decision was denounced by Israel’s PM Benjamin Netanyahu as an absurd reward for terrorism. One might have dismissed that as a predictable diplomatic protest were it not for the rather more revealing response from Hamas, which warmly welcomed the move as “an important step.” When a group designated as a terrorist organisation by the very same British government pauses its activities long enough to applaud your policy, it may be worth asking whether you have taken a wrong turn somewhere. Or, at the very least, whether you have wandered into the sort of moral territory where applause is not necessarily a compliment.

Domestically, this confusion is mirrored in policy. Britain has, in recent years, pursued immigration policies that are generous in ambition and selective in their curiosity. Large numbers have been admitted with remarkably little appetite for asking difficult questions about integration, values, or the importation of ideological conflicts. To suggest that such policies might have consequences is, of course, considered frightfully impolite. And yet, one is left with the uncomfortable observation that a country cannot import the world’s tensions and then act surprised when they begin to play out on its own streets.

The appointment of Hamid Patel to a senior leadership role within Ofsted in late 2024 was, in this regard, a quietly revealing moment. Patel, a practising mufti and long-time headteacher, had previously overseen a school environment in which pupils were encouraged to adopt overtly religious practices—among them, expectations around modest dress beyond school grounds, regular Qur’anic recitation, and restrictions on items deemed inconsistent with Islamic norms. Reports from his tenure also drew attention to invited speakers whose views on Jews were, to put it delicately, unlikely to feature in an interfaith brochure.

And yet, far from prompting a national conversation about the direction of British education, Patel’s elevation was framed as a milestone—Ofsted’s “first religious leader” at the helm of influence. One might have expected at least a moment’s pause to consider what it means for a state education regulator to be shaped by such a background. Instead, the reaction was largely a shrug. Progress, after all, must look like something.

It is here that satire begins to feel redundant. When reality starts producing headlines that read like rejected drafts from a particularly cynical columnist, one is left with little choice but to quote them straight and hope the reader notices.

Broader concerns about the influence of political Islam are routinely dismissed as alarmist, the preserve of those who see conspiracies in every minaret. And yet, the cumulative effect of these decisions—the rhetorical indulgence, the policy hesitations, the institutional appointments—suggests not a grand conspiracy, but something perhaps more troubling: a persistent unwillingness to confront uncomfortable truths. Even J. D. Vance, hardly a neutral observer, managed to capture this unease with his characteristically understated suggestion that Britain might one day become the first Islamist country with nuclear weapons. One need not accept the prophecy in full to recognise the anxiety that produced it.

Meanwhile, Starmer continues his programme of outreach, visiting mosques, announcing funding packages, and demonstrating a commendable sensitivity to the concerns of Muslim communities. All of which would be entirely unremarkable—admirable, even—were it not for the growing sense that this sensitivity is not evenly distributed. Britain’s Jewish community, watching the steady rise in antisemitic incidents, might reasonably wonder where the equivalent urgency has gone.

And so we arrive at the peculiar spectacle of a prime minister who can eloquently describe the dangers of antisemitism while presiding over a climate in which those dangers appear to be materialising with increasing frequency. A leader who can warn against turning away, even as his government seems determined to look everywhere else.

One imagines Keir Starmer, shoes off and head bowed in yet another mosque, offering words about unity, coexistence, and the virtues of a tolerant Britain. All perfectly admirable sentiments—until one remembers that tolerance, when applied selectively, begins to look suspiciously like neglect. And as he rises from prayer, one cannot help but wonder whether he will reflect not only on the harmony he seeks, but on the disorder his government seems increasingly unable—or unwilling—to confront.

May 7, 2026 | Comments »

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