David Shipley has a useful Critic piece on organised crime operating from dodgy small businesses on the high street. Useful because it is yet another of those familiar issues the Establishment has chosen to ignore for years. Apparently even the BBC has condescended to notice now though.
The underworld on the high street
Beneath the façade of everyday commerce, organised crime has quietly captured British high streets
Something may be stirring in Britain. After decades in which our institutions turned a blind eye to the reality of mass migration and multiculturalism, it seems reality is dawning on them.
Earlier this month the BBC ran a series of exposes titled “The Immigration Fraudsters”, reporting on what they called a “shadow industry of law firms and advisers” helping people to cheat the asylum system (although Suella Braveman raised the issue three years ago). Now the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) has published a detailed report which reveals the extent to which whole sectors of the economy have become dominated by organised crime. This has also been an open secret for many years — as far back as 2001, the UK’s “Drugs Czar” described how money laundering was taking place in London, often via “legitimate businesses” operated by Turks and Eastern Europeans. Indeed only last May Robert Jenrick made a video in which he spoke about “weird Turkish barber shops”.
Familiar but the whole piece is worth reading if even politicians are required to notice. This is the hot-spot map produced in the Chartered Trading Standards Institute report. No surprises there either.

