David Vance SubstackRead More
First cousin marriages are common place in the British muslim community. This is despite the dangers that this practice constitutes. But in a jaw-dropping twist, the NHS is championing these first-cousin marriages as a cultural gem, even as they spike the odds of devastating genetic disorders in children.
The scandal has erupted over NHS Genomics Education Programme materials, quietly distributed in muslim hotspots like Bradford, preaching the upside of these family ties. Children of first cousins face double the genetic risk for horrors like cystic fibrosis and sickle cell anaemia.
In cities such as Sheffield, Glasgow, and Birmingham, up to 20% of children battling congenital nightmares hail from Pakistani backgrounds, where these marriages run rampant – versus 4% elsewhere. That’s billions £££ haemorrhaging from NHS coffers, propping up a practice that’s as outdated as it is dangerous.
Dr. Patrick Nash, an expert on religious law, doesn’t mince his words:
“It’s incest, plain and simple – laced with honour violence, gender oppression, and eye-watering taxpayer tabs.”
He demands that the NHS scrap its grotesque guidance and recommend a nationwide ban. A YouGov poll suggests that we want a ban: 75% of Brits want it outlawed, with a worrying 9% content with the status quo.
These sort of inbreeding has no place in the UK and if Muslims insist on it, then that is another reason to deport them.
