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It’s easy to blame viral videos – and far harder to change the culture in which
they thrive
Among those swiftly convicted and sentenced last week for their part in the
racist rioting was Bobby Shirbon, who had left his 18th birthday party at a
bingo hall in Hartlepool to join the mob roaming the town’s streets, targeting
houses thought to be occupied by asylum seekers. Shirbon was arrested for
smashing windows and throwing bottles at police. He was sentenced to 20 months
in prison.
In custody, Shirbon had claimed that his actions had been justified by their
ubiquity: “It’s OK,” he told officers, “everyone else is doing it.” That has, of
course, been a consistent claim from those caught up in mass thuggery down the
years, but for many of the hundreds of people now facing significant prison
sentences, the “defence” has a sharper resonance.
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