Britain’s Migrant Hotel Scandal

36,000 Illegal Arrivals in Taxpayer-Funded Rooms While Private Firm Rakes in Millions As we head into the festive season in December 2025, ordinary British taxpayers are footing a massive bill for a migrant crisis that’s showing no signs of slowing. The latest Home Office figures from September reveal a staggering 36,273 asylum seekers – many arriving illegally via small boats – housed in hotels across the UK. That’s a whopping 13% increase in just three months, hitting the highest level in almost two years. These migrants occupy rooms in around 200 hotels nationwide, turning once-thriving tourist spots and local businesses into no-go zones for holidaymakers. Coaches pull up regularly, dropping off groups of young men into four-star accommodations, all paid for by you and me. The company at the heart of much of this is Clearsprings Ready Homes , one of three private firms handed lucrative 10-year contracts worth billions back in 2019 to manage asylum housing. Clearsprings covers London, the South of England, and Wales, sourcing and running many of these hotel setups. While migrants get free board and lodging, Clearsprings has pocketed eye-watering profits – nearly £180 million in recent years alone, with combined profits across the providers topping £380 million. Critics slam the poor conditions in some accommodations, but Clearsprings hasn’t issued any public defence or statement on the latest backlash; they just keep cashing the cheques from the Home Office. Overall, more than 108,000 asylum seekers receive government-funded housing, with hotels still a major chunk despite years of political promises to end the practice. Small boat crossings pushed asylum claims past 110,000 in the last year, fuelling the surge. So where do the migrants go when they’re shuffled out of hotels? Mostly into so-called dispersed accommodation – private rented houses and flats scattered across communities, often in working-class areas already stretched for housing. Some end up in former military bases like Wethersfield in Essex, warehouse-style sites criticised as dehumanising and costly. Plans for more big camps, like the scrapped RAF Scampton idea that wasted tens of millions, highlight the chaos. Meanwhile, on Britain’s streets, tent camps spring up in the most unlikely places. Take Park Lane in London’s Mayfair – right on Billionaires’ Row, next to Hyde Park and some of the priciest real estate in the world. Throughout 2025, dozens of tents turned roundabouts and pavements into shanty towns, blighting one of the capital’s poshest areas. Authorities cleared it multiple times at huge expense, only for the encampments to pop up nearby on Oxford Street or other central spots. These rough sleepers are mostly Eastern European – Romanians and Bulgarians – involved in begging or cash-in-hand work, not the boat arrivals claiming asylum. London’s rough sleeping numbers hit record highs this year, but the vast majority are British nationals struggling with addiction, mental health, or economic hardship. The stark reality? Tens of thousands of recent illegal migrants get hotel rooms and support on the public dime, while private companies like Clearsprings profit handsomely, and genuine British homeless battle for scraps. With arrivals still pouring in, patriots are right to demand: enough is enough. Stop the boats, speed up deportations, and put British people first.

Two-Tier Policing: Coddling the Left, Crushing the Rest?

Two-tier policing is clear as day in the UK today. Our police don’t seem to serve the British public but bend over backwards for left-wing groups like the Stand Up to Racism crowd. They handle their protests, crimes, and riots with kid gloves. Before Southport, Leeds Police bolted from an angry lefty mob, letting rioters run wild, while peaceful British demonstrators got the heavy hand—riot gear, batons, shields, even nicking pensioners out with their dogs in Westminster. At the peak of the summer riots, cops came down hard on British patriots, yet let left-wing gangs stir up violence in pubs without arrests. Daily stabbings still happen months after Southport, with suspects nabbed but not named—no racial profiling, while British patriots get slagged off in the media, arrested, and convicted just for being near a demo. Two-tier policing means a chant, tweet, or God bless you gets half a dozen coppers at your door, but lefty mobs or socialist councillors can scream death threats with no comeback. The police aren’t on our side, brushing it off with Nothing to see here when it’s plain as day. Two-tier policing, built to intimidate, coddles the left while crushing the rest—it’s the sad state of UK policing today.

How American Antifa Tactics Are Crossing the Atlantic to Britain

In recent years, a striking pattern has emerged in British street activism: tactics once synonymous with American Antifa groups are appearing with increasing regularity at UK protests. From clothing and anonymity techniques to online harassment strategies and disruption methods, British anti-fascist and far-left militants appear to be importing – and adapting – the US playbook. The Uniform That Travelled 3,000 Miles The black bloc – all-black clothing, masks, hoods, and sunglasses – was perfected by European autonomists decades ago, but the specific American version, complete with branded patches, bike helmets, and umbrellas as shields, has become the default look at many British counter-protests. Footage from anti-Tommy Robinson demonstrations in 2024 and 2025 shows lines of activists dressed almost identically to their counterparts at Portland or Minneapolis riots five years earlier. Doxxing Without Borders One of the most effective – and controversial – US Antifa tactics has been the systematic doxxing of perceived far-right figures. American networks built sophisticated databases of names, employers, and home addresses, often leading to sackings and relocations. British activists now run near-identical operations. Telegram channels and Twitter threads exposing fascists in the police, armed forces, or civil service follow the exact template pioneered in the United States, right down to the wording of the call-out posts. De-Arrest Techniques and Shield Walls Videos circulating among British militant left circles openly teach de-arrest manoeuvres – surrounding and pulling comrades away from police lines – copied directly from US training clips produced after the George Floyd uprising. And then there was the whistle-blowing: sharp bursts to signal incoming raids. It caught on over here, copied straight from the American scene when left-wingers there tried to spook ICE vans. For a short while UK protesters were at it too, before the novelty wore off—but the idea? Undeniably flew in from the States.Interrupted