by Tobias Langdon, The Unz Review:
Here’s a fascinating new concept: the one-off rape. It’s a rape committed in a moment of aberration by a special kind of man who is otherwise entirely respectable and worthy. Obviously, then, the man doesn’t need to be seriously punished or censured for the rape, because he has never raped before and he’s never going to rape again. And how do we know that? Well, because it’s a one-off rape. One-off, see?
Trained in Nigeria
Now, you’ll no doubt be wondering what kind of man gets to commit a one-off rape. Not a man like me, that’s for sure. And not men like the vast majority of those who read the Occidental Observer and Unz Review. I’m not special and they’re not special. If I or one of them ever commit a single rape, it will merit harsh punishment and life-long labelling as “rapist.” No, the special kind of man who gets to commit a one-off rape is described here:
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
Doctor not struck off by panel over ‘one-off’ rape
A doctor found by a tribunal to have raped a young woman at his home avoided being struck off over what the panel described as a “one-off” attack. Dr Aloaye Foy-Yamah, then a consultant at Blackpool Victoria Hospital, instead had his medical licence suspended for 12 months for attacking the woman.
Police investigated but did not charge Dr Foy-Yamah, but the Medical Tribunal Practitioners Service (MPTS) concluded on the balance of probabilities that he had raped the woman — which he denies. The panel, which emphasised the incident had not taken place at work, has been accused of “victim-blaming” and failing to properly assess Dr Foy-Yamah’s risk given that it found he had raped someone. […] The General Medical Council (GMC), which regulates the register of doctors licensed to practice in the UK, had asked an independent panel run by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) to permanently erase Dr Foy-Yamah’s licence.
However the panel stopped short, stating that Dr Foy-Yamah had not “abused his position of trust as a doctor” because the victim was not a patient, and noted a series of glowing testimonials from colleagues. The legally qualified chair of the panel, Angus Macpherson, wrote: “The Tribunal considered that this was a one-off event in Dr Foy-Yamah’s personal life. It did not involve patient safety concerns. The Tribunal has found it will not be repeated.” (“Doctor not struck off by panel over ‘one-off’ rape,” BBC News, 29th March 2025)
You need to know only one thing to understand why the tribunal was so lenient with Dr Aloaye Foy-Yamah, despite finding that he had in fact committed rape. The tribunal was lenient because Dr Foy-Yamah is Black. The BBC doesn’t reveal that he “trained at the University of Benin in Nigeria in 1995 before moving to the UK.” This move means that he now benefits from Black privilege, the systemic bias in favor of Blacks that exists across the West.
Black privilege is a sub-set of non-White privilege, which has protected rapists in a much worse way for a much longer time in towns like Rotherham. Pakistani Muslim rape-gangs have been preying on White girls there for decades with the complicity — and sometimes active assistance — of the so-called Labour party, which was founded to champion the White working-class but now works tirelessly to harm the White working-class. However, here’s a curious fact about Labour. Although it loudly professes to be an anti-racist and anti-sexist party, its leaders have always, without exception, been stale pale males, from Keir Hardie in 1906 to Keir Starmer in 2025.
Gloriously non-White leaders
But Labour’s supposed political rivals, the Conservative party, have had four female leaders and two gloriously non-White leaders. But that isn’t six un-pale-stale-male leaders in total, because the current leader is both Black and female. She’s the Nigerian Kemi Badenoch and succeeded the Indian Rishi Sunak. When Sunak became prime minister in 2022, some leftists and cuckservatives celebrated the fact that four regions of the British Isles had had non-White leaders in the twenty-first century. There was the Indian Rishi Sunak in England, the Pakistani Humza Yousuf in Scotland, the Indian Leo Varadkar in Ireland, and the Black Vaughan Gething in Wales.