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We’re Going Stark Raving Mad!’ – Stephen Pound’s Furious Outburst Shakes the Nation!

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Britain has reached a breaking point where common sense has been replaced by judicial lunacy. The case of Klevis Disha – a convicted criminal allowed to remain because his child supposedly dislikes Albanian chicken nuggets – exposes everything wrong with our immigration system. This isn’t about human rights; it’s about a legal establishment that has completely lost touch with reality.

The facts speak for themselves. Here we have a man who entered Britain under false pretenses, committed serious crimes, was caught with £300,000 of criminal proceeds, and yet our courts bend over backwards to keep him here. The justification? Not family ties or genuine welfare concerns, but a ten-year-old’s alleged dislike of foreign fast food. This would be comical if it weren’t so dangerous.

What’s most alarming is how routine these absurd decisions have become. Our courts now accept the flimsiest excuses to block deportations – from last-minute religious conversions to imaginary language barriers. I’ve seen it firsthand: the fake documents, the manufactured sob stories, the blatant gaming of the system. And time after time, the Home Office fails to act.

This isn’t about abandoning our principles. The European Convention on Human Rights was designed to prevent atrocities, not to protect criminals from facing consequences. Yet our judges have twisted it into a charter for keeping dangerous individuals on our streets. While Russia and Belarus stand alone in rejecting the Convention, Britain finds itself in the perverse position of upholding it in ways that defy all logic.

The solution isn’t complicated. We need judges who understand that rights come with responsibilities. We need a Home Office that actually enforces its decisions. And we need politicians with the courage to say enough is enough. Yvette Cooper’s appeal in this case is a start, but it’s just one battle in a much bigger war for sanity.

Future generations will judge us harshly if we don’t act now. They’ll wonder how we allowed our country to become a laughing stock, where criminals stay because of chicken nuggets while law-abiding citizens pay the price. The time for excuses is over. Britain must reclaim its common sense before it’s too late.