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The text presents a conspiracy theory surrounding the disappearance and death of Sarah Everard, framing it as a staged event designed to promote anti-male sentiment and erode rights. The author, with commentary from “Miles,” questions the official narrative, citing inconsistencies in the investigation, including the cause of death determination, identification of the body, and the speed of the suspect’s arrest. The author suggests Sarah Everard may have been involved in activist groups and worked in media and PR for Flipside, a company linked to the Gates Foundation and GlaxoSmithKline, and connected to the World Economic Forum and its agenda on “global pandemic of femicide.” The narrative is criticized for portraying women as being in greater danger than men, with statistics presented to contradict this claim.

The suspect, Wayne Couzens, a Metropolitan Police officer with military ties, is depicted as a convenient pawn in this manufactured event. The text also heavily scrutinizes the arrest of Patsy Stevenson at a vigil for Sarah Everard, labelling her a “crisis actor” and an actress from the Sandra Singer Stage School. Miles speculates about Patsy Stevenson’s potential peerage connections and links to prominent families like the Rothschilds and Grafton dukes, suggesting she might be distantly related to Sarah Everard and Wayne Couzens.

The author argues that the entire event, including the vigil arrest and the subsequent media coverage, was designed to create a spectacle and propagate a narrative of male violence and female victimhood. The underlying aims, according to the text, are the emasculation of males, the discrediting of feminism, and ultimately, the gradual erosion of rights under the guise of protests for those very rights. The text references various outlets like BBC News, Vogue, The Mirror, The Sun, and Counterfire, as well as entities like the US Embassy, HM Court, and MI6. It also mentions Charles Bronson and Richard Tomlinson as inmates of Belmarsh Prison, and John Worboys as the “Black Cab Rapist.” The author expresses skepticism about the Metropolitan Police’s handling of other cases, like that of a recruit with Neo-Nazi ties.

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