News Link • United Kingdom
UK's Telegraph Claims Attractive Young Women Are Now The New Face Of The 'Far-Right'
• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Steve WatsonNo, it's now being led by "strikingly telegenic young women" who dare to look good on camera while warning about mass migration, grooming gangs, and cultural replacement.
Three foreign activists – Ada Lluch, Valentina Gomez, and Eva Vlaardingerbroek – were banned from entering Britain for a Tommy Robinson rally, and the Telegraph can't stop gushing over how "pretty" this makes the movement look.
The government has banned at least seven foreign voices from attending the rally, including the women highlighted by the Telegraph.
Critics point out the blatant double standard: pro-Palestine marches with openly extremist rhetoric are often tolerated, while a native-focused demonstration drawing tens or hundreds of thousands draws preemptive visa blocks on speakers.
Kier Starmer's government waves in unvetted migrants and certain extremists but draws the line at articulate critics of mass migration.
The Telegraph profiles the banned women in breathless detail. Catalan activist Ada Lluch has called out "complete invasion" of western democracies, American influencer Valentina Gomez warned about "rapist Muslims taking over," and Dutch commentator Eva Vlaardingerbroek spoke of "the rape, replacement and murder of our people."
All three were barred from the UK, along with several other activists. Meanwhile, the government continues to wave in the very people these women are warning about.
The Telegraph also warns about attractive home-grown women, including British influencer Saskia Teague. With over 100,000 Instagram followers, she mixes "happy happy happy" selfies with calls for "England for the English," mass deportations, and an end to shame-free multiculturalism.
The Telegraph acts shocked that she also praises her "Anglo-Saxon hair" and rejects the idea she's being "used" by men.
Of course the usual suspects are wheeled out to clutch pearls. Hope Not Hate researcher Alex MacKinnon calls it a "glamorisation" effort to shed the "violent thug image." Institute for Strategic Dialogue's Hannah Rose says looking desirable builds followers and fits the ideology that women should be "aesthetically pleasing."
The implication is that these women can't possibly believe what they're saying – they must be grifting or being manipulated. Because in the eyes of the legacy media, no normal young attractive woman could possibly notice what's happening to her country.
This is the same media that files stories on "far-right" threat while ignoring grooming gang scandals, no-go zones, and skyrocketing violence against women and girls. The Telegraph even admits the shift comes from young people "profoundly disaffected with mainstream parties" and disillusioned with modern life.




