A British Woman’s Lament as the UK Surrenders Its Identity

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Inn sign of Abandoned Bear and Bell pub

A woman in the United Kingdom has been posting the truth about what is happening to her country despite the risk in telling the truth. Anyone in the West or the United States should be able to relate.

In a series of posts, she lamented the forced changes no one voted for in the UK.

The New United Kingdom

One of the reasons why my thread has gone viral, is because my experience resonates and chimes with so many. Nobody voted for what’s happened to the UK over the last 20-30 years. It was not on a single manifesto.

I walked through central London last night and realised something that made me genuinely sad: The city I once loved—vibrant, safe, recognisably English—is gone. Here’s what I saw
I’ve lived and worked in London. It used to feel alive. But as I walked from Oxford Street to Bond Street, I didn’t feel excitement. I felt unsafe. And worse—like a stranger in my own country.

Groups of non-English speaking men filled the pavements. They shouted comments at me. They stared. It wasn’t just uncomfortable—it was intimidating.

It might sound extreme, but I’ve felt safer walking through Patpong Market at night in Bangkok. That’s the honest truth.

The Tube was filthy. Graffiti everywhere. This used to be one of the most iconic transport systems in the world.

When I was a child, coming to London was magic. Oxford Street. Topshop. HMV in Piccadilly. It felt cool, glamorous, British.

As a teen: Camden Market. As a young professional: after-work strolls in Bloomsbury. London was diverse, yes—but it was still London. It felt cohesive. Friendly. Fun. Now? The energy is different. Before anyone calls this “racist”: It’s not. I’m a Christian. I believe we are all made in God’s image. We are all equal in Christ. But I will not ignore reality just to appease ideology.

Outside Bond Street station, an Islamic stall blared what sounded like a call to prayer. Most of the women were veiled. I wasn’t. Even dressed modestly, I felt like I was the one being judged.

This isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about alienation. It’s about watching your culture slowly dissolve—and being gaslit for noticing.

I miss the London that felt English. That was proud, open, fun, and safe. Now it feels like a place that doesn’t belong to its own people. That’s lost its identity. And no one is allowed to say it.


The globalists are winning, selling out the West.


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Canadian Friend
Canadian Friend
13 hours ago

Almost every white nation ( USA, Canada, Germany, France, England etc etc ) is forced to go trough that horror.
And ONLY white nations are going trough that.

The few that are resisting, such as Poland are being harshly punished,
and the few leaders brave enough to try to , if not stop, if not reverse, at least slow the replacement, such as Trump, are intensely demonized by the media and are savagely attacked by the left.

White leftists are in a hurry to be replaced, their white guilt is so intense they want their own race destroyed.

They are working very hard to try and make it illegal for us to post comments like this one.

They want us to welcome and celebrate our demise.

Peter B. Prange,
Peter B. Prange,
16 hours ago

What she laments about formerly great London, can be said about most USA big cities.

Matthew
Matthew
14 hours ago

I sometimes think we need to revert to a hybrid version of Greek city-states. Instead of having States alone, cites that exceed a certain population become city-states where their Mayor would become their Governor; and where the rest of the state would still exist with its Governor. So there would be city-states inside states. This would solve the problem of big cities having stranglehold control over the rest of the state and solve the problem of the country electing leaders solely over the needs of the masses in the cities alone.