‘He kept saying: what wrong have I done? Why me?’ An Indian man is left stripped and bloodied on an Irish street

by JackmanH420

11 comments
  1. The feral youth know there will be no consequences for this and the people who could change the laws have turned a blind eye.

  2. This is not the first time this type of atrocities is seen in Dublin. The reaction from the government is pretty much non existent.

    Any arrests have been made?
    Where is the justice?

    I remember a few years ago there were riots and burning cars in the city centre because presumably an immigrant attacked a local. But when immigrants get butchered in plain sight, nothing happens.

  3. You see a lot of hate for Indians online, usual stuff about them ‘coming here and taking our jobs, taking our houses’. It’s going to keep spilling over into attacks like this.

  4. It says a lot about the “protect our women and children” crowd that innocent Indian lads are attacked on the streets while there’s radio silence about an Irish woman who got full on tortured by Irish lads in Dublin.

  5. Our courts service and policing is geared towards tackling drug use and blaming drugs for everything. We’ve always been way too soft on violence and unprovoked assaults. I notice nobody is talking about the African who got a beating in Bray last week, that’s on video too and it was another bunch of feral wasters who done it with the usual claims that the man was a peado. 

  6. Good on them for protesting.

    Can we, people who actually abide by the law, come together and collectively protest against this stuff and seriously demand action? Because it’s getting to boiling point and vigilantism is starting to look like a viable option in the face of a complete failure of gardaí and the courts to do anything about it.

    The social contract is broken.

  7. The first day I arrived in Ireland from India, I was walking to my home stay with two others in the darkness of an October evening when a car pulled up beside us. A man, probably in his mid thirties asked us where we were headed. We showed him the little slip of paper on which we had written down our address. It had started to drizzle, and he very sternly asked us to get in his car, rang the lady who was hosting us, got directions and dropped us at her front door. I have carried that selfless spirit of charity and good will for the past 25 years. Ireland is very different now. 

  8. As usual most Irish will just brush it under the rug, deny anything happens and blame the English for it and claim ‘Ireland and Irish people are the best this never happens!’ And ignore the problem.

  9. With the casual racism against Indian people that is being normalised online, it was only a matter of time before it created something like this in real life.

  10. Racism is back in style again thanks to social media brain rot.

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