We’re Not on the Same Side, Muslim Protester Tells Far-Left Protester

We’re Not on the Same Side, Muslim Protester Tells Far-Left Protester

A video from protests in East London shows a group of masked Muslim men and radical Woke Left protesters clashing.

When a Woke Left protester said to a masked Muslim, “There’s no need for that, we’re on the same side, brother!” the Muslim replied, “No, there’s no need for that.”

This incident shows that there are irreconcilable differences between radical Islamism and the radical woke left, despite their cooperation in several areas, Expose reports .

James Price warns that if Britain doesn’t change course, we will see more sectarian conflict and a fragmentation of politics along ethnic, religious or other lines, with radical groups increasingly taking to the streets.

East London offers a glimpse into Britain’s terrifying future

By James Price , published by Matt Goodwin on October 27, 2025

If there’s one video you need to watch now to understand where the UK is heading in the future, it ‘s THIS one [see below].

Please take a moment to watch this video before reading further.

What you see here is a group of masked Muslim men mobilizing in Whitechapel, East London. They have gathered to demonstrate forcefully in response to a reported demonstration by the anti-immigration party UK Independence Party (“UKIP”).

Next to them is another protest by the radical Woke Left , with the ubiquitous Socialist Worker banners.

The Muslim crowd shouts “Allahu Akbar” and pushes the left-wing activists out of the way. “That’s not necessary, we’re on the same side, brother!” yells one of the woke activists. And then comes the crucial phrase: “No, we are NOT,” comes the furious, masked response from an angry local Muslim.

Local shops even cheerfully sold balaclavas for the march, under the terrifying slogan “ no face; no case .”

Let’s be very clear about what’s going on here.

What we see here is the future of Britain , the future that awaits our country unless those who rule us change course quickly.

The “balkanization” of Britain, with various groups fighting each other in feverish, downright terrifying physical confrontations – scenes that wouldn’t be out of place in late Republican Rome or Northern Ireland during the Troubles.

And one of the most important aspects of this, as I’ve written before , is the interplay between radical Islamism and the radical woke left .

Perfectly timed for this weekend’s terrifying demonstrations in east London, this was reported last week in The Spectator , highlighting the uneasy alliance between Gaza’s independent MPs and the magical grandpa himself, Jeremy Corbyn.

What is not yet clear, but what the video above shows so clearly, are the irreconcilable differences between these groups.

At first glance, they have a lot in common.

Radical Islamism and the radical woke left both harbor a deeply illiberal, antidemocratic, even totalitarian impulse. They also both subordinate individual rights to fixed group identities and thus have little regard for individual freedom. And they both share a general disdain for the Enlightenment, Christian charity, and science.

But when they met in east London, the Islamists told the woke left movement in no uncertain terms : “We are not like you.”

The left made this possible.

To win votes, Labour and the woke left promised definitions of “ Islamophobia ,” recognition of Palestine , and endlessly insisted there was no incompatibility between modern Britain and the particularly strict, outdated interpretations of faith so prevalent in our country today.

As Winston Churchill said, “A conciliator is a man who feeds a crocodile in the hope that it will eat him last.” Those who think there are 87 sexes realize too late that those who don’t even think there are two equal sexes are not their friends.

We saw this very thing in Iran when the Ayatollah came to power. Left-wing Persian women in Western clothing cheered, unaware that they would soon be stripped of more rights than they could ever have imagined.

And therein lies a clear message for Britain, for our country, namely: unless we fundamentally and urgently change course, Britain will soon look like the scenes unfolding in East London, with a shrinking majority in retreat while radical groups increasingly assert themselves and make themselves felt physically on the streets.

This fragmentation of British politics, from the old way, where parties united around ideas, to the new way, where different sectarian groups organise themselves based on ethnic, religious or other characteristics, will come as no surprise to anyone who reads [Matt Goodwin’s] Substack .

Time and again we have done what few people in Westminster are prepared to do: expose the growing sectarianism in British politics (see HERE , HERE and HERE ).

We are already facing the next general election and many more elections, where voting based on tribal, religious or clannish considerations will play a much greater role.

The “ Muslim Vote ,” the “Hindu Manifesto,” the “Yoruba Manifesto,” and many more are all campaign groups or pledge organizations that will further fragment traditional voter groups in this country , pushing us more toward the kind of politics we have seen in Northern Ireland and Lebanon than what we are traditionally accustomed to.

But the demonstration we saw this weekend also shows what sectarianism looks like in everyday public life, long before the next general election. And it’s not the only one. Far from it.

https://www.frontnieuws.com/we-staan-niet-aan-dezelfde-kant-zegt-moslimdemonstrant-tegen-extreemlinkse-demonstrant