White People Risk Their Lives Trying to Save Animals from Dogs Home Fire Started by Dog-Hating 15-Year-Old

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
September 14, 2014

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White people turned up in their hundreds to offer help and rushed to the scene of the fire armed with blankets for the animals.

White people from all over the world have donated £1Million to help the survivors of the Manchester Dogs Home Inferno.

As the pictures clearly show, it is only White people that have shown any concern for these poor animals, risking their lives to try to rescue them and donating blankets and dog food for the survivors.

A 15-year-old boy is the prime suspect responsible for killing 53 pets and terrifying another 150, which were thankfully saved.

His ethnicity has not yet been mentioned, which implies that he is Non-White.

No motive for the arson attack has been mentioned so far, but we do know that Muslims hate dogs and consider them unclean, in fact, they have even been known to try to prevent dog walkers from walking their pets in areas which they have colonised.

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Misty the Jack Russell is fussed over by local White resident outside the home, after a deliberate blaze killed more than 40 dogs.

Daily Mail:

Pet lovers from around the world have donated more than £1million to Manchester Dogs Home after a horrific blaze killed 53 animals on Thursday night.

It emerged yesterday that the dogs which died had been ready to be rehomed with families after being rehabilitated at the centre.

Police spent the day questioning a  15-year-old arrested on suspicion of arson.

Wellwishers took food, bedding and toys to the home’s sister branch in Warrington which was caring for 150 dogs saved from the blaze by staff, neighbours and firemen.

Money poured in to the home’s JustGiving page from as far afield as Australia, the US and Canada, as thousands of social media users posted ‘dog selfies’ to promote the cause.

Police confirmed that 53 dogs had died in the blaze, which home manager Lisa Graham said was concentrated in kennels dedicated to dogs which were ready for adoption. All but two of those dogs died. She said: ‘The dogs in there were dogs that were relying on us to find them homes.’

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Jason Dyer and his nephew Dean Rostock kicked apart dogs’ cages to save 20 of the animals. A petition has begun online calling for the two men to receive an award for their bravery.

All the staff were upset, she added, particularly those who worked in the kennels.

‘It has been hard for everyone but the kennel staff are suffering the most,’ she said. ‘They have been caring for them, and feeding them and rehabilitating them.’

It took 30 firemen just over an hour to bring the blaze under control.

Colin Ballance, who has worked at the centre for 25 years, risked his life to save a crossbreed dog and a Staffordshire cross from the burning adoption kennel.

He said: ‘I just ran straight towards where the fire was, pulled the doors open, and all the roof and timbers and everything else was burning away.

‘I couldn’t let them all out, that was a risk to them and a risk to everybody, so I grabbed the first two. By the time I got them out and took them to an outside pen further away, I turned back to go back and you couldn’t even see in front of you – the smoke was horrendous, it was just choking.

‘I didn’t sleep last night because I was just thinking about all the dogs. It was the fact that when we ran in they were all there but there was nothing we could do. There were bits falling from the ceiling. All you could hear was dogs barking. It was just a nightmare.’