WE ARE seeing a worrying trend of a political correctness duality in Britain. It seems that only poor white people are capable and punishable for racism.

What has become apparent in recent news is worryingly close to ‘punishment for thought crime’. We should all be concerned about Big Brother’s unbalanced, heavy hand. The punishment should fit the crime. If it is a drunken rant on a train or a ‘tweet’ to friends, then they deserve the harsh criticism of their peers. In both of these cases, community service and the public exposure would have brought enough self-reflection and personal loss to the offenders. Should we jail everyone for name-calling, being abrasive or unpleasant when drunk? It seems that this life-destroying punishment does not apply in the case of rich celebrities; or indeed in a recent case, a racially motivated and prolonged violent beating of one girl administered by four Somali girls, who were exonerated on account that they are Muslim and not used to drinking alcohol.

Our judicial systems are the only ones refusing to admit that the exclusive targeting of white girls by Asian paedophile gangs is a racially motivated and cultural problem.

P C Neilson, Dorset Crescent, Newport