Daily Stormer
July 7, 2014
The latest craze in the enrichment process for Britain is ‘Breast Ironing’. It involves young girls literally punching and pounding their chests with hot objects to make their breasts disappear, so that Black savages wont find them attractive and rape them.
Surely this has to be proof enough that it is impossible to curb these beasts urge to rape? Blacks have had hundreds of thousands of years to come up with ways to socially modify their males behavior and yet this is the best they have been able to come up with to prevent their children from getting raped.
IN April this year, two men appeared in court for the first female genital mutilation (FGM) prosecution in the UK. The charges – brought under the Female Genital Mutilation Act (2003) – had been hailed as a great leap forward in the fight against the ‘barbaric’ practice which has featured heavily in the media over the past year.
From one brutal procedure to another, it has now emerged a new practice from Africa – this time from the country of Cameroon – has infiltrated the UK and this one goes by the name of breast ironing. Breast ironing involves girls as young as eight having their chests punched and pounded with hot objects in order to make them disappear. In most parts of Cameroon, boys and men think that girls whose breasts have begun to grow are ready for sex so families move to delay the onset of breasts in order to ward off male attention, the chance of sexual harassment, and rape, but also to spare the family name by preventing the girl from becoming pregnant at a young age.
The UN last year identified breast ironing as one of five forgotten crimes against women and estimated that some 3.8 million Cameroonian teenagers were affected. As well as being extremely painful, it exposes girls to health problems including abscesses, cysts, infection, tissue damage, and even the disappearance of one or both breasts.
CAME Women and Girls Development Organisation (CAWOGIDO) – an equal rights charity for disadvantaged women – is continuing to work with London’s Metropolitan Police and social services departments to raise awareness of the problem. There has been a slight hindrance in monitoring the scale of the issue in the UK though. Margaret Nyuydzewira, co-founder and chair of CAWOGIDO, describes how it is difficult to see who is undertaking the practice of breast ironing as it is something that happens in the privacy of people’s homes. She adds: “I am sure it is happening here, but people are not willing to talk about it. It’s like female genital mutilation: you know it’s happening but you’re not going to see it.”