Jan 16, 2026 02:25 AM
(This post was last modified: Jan 16, 2026 03:19 AM by C C.)
An irony here is that a Middle Eastern country like the UAE has cut funds for citizens keen to study in the UK, due to its view that the British state is lax in allowing Muslim Brotherhood to indoctrinate and recruit on UK campuses (excerpt): "The exclusion of British universities is linked to anxiety in the UAE over what it sees as the risk of Islamist radicalisation on UK campuses, according to three people familiar with the matter."
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The video game that treats every British teen like a far-Right extremist
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/01...extremist/
INTRO: A state-funded computer game is warning teenagers that they risk being referred to a counter-terrorism programme if they question mass migration. Pathways is an interactive game designed for 11- to 18-year-old pupils and funded by Prevent, a Home Office programme for tackling extremism.
Young players are directed to help their in-game characters – a white teenage boy and girl – to avoid being reported for “extreme Right-wing ideology” after discussing migration online. Characters can face extremism referrals if they choose to engage with groups that spread “harmful ideological messages”, or join protests against the “erosion of British values”. Even researching online immigration statistics is portrayed negatively.
Other in-game pitfalls include sharing a video that claims Muslim men, rather than homeless veterans, are being given emergency accommodation. An in-game meter monitors how extreme the character’s behaviour is. Those who “lose” may be given counselling to deal with “ideological thoughts” or referred to an anti-terrorism expert.
The game was developed with government backing by councils in East Yorkshire over growing concerns about immigration and tensions about migrant accommodation in their communities.
How the game works.
The Pathways game was designed for use in schools. It was originally developed in 2023 for East Riding of Yorkshire and Hull city councils to tackle any risk of “extreme Right-wing narratives”.
A year earlier, in 2022, Hull councillors had raised concerns that the Home Office was sending “excessive” numbers of migrants to local hotels. That same year, East Riding council attempted a legal challenge to block Home Office plans for migrant accommodation.
In 2024, Hull became the scene of protests centred on a migrant hotel in the city. It was part of widespread unrest after Axel Rudakubana, the son of Rwandan refugees, murdered three young girls in Southport. It later emerged that the killer had been referred to Prevent three times.
Pathways comes with material for teachers, who are urged to use the resource to “demonstrate the local threat picture of extreme Right-wing activities specifically”. The project was funded by the Home Office’s Preventing Radicalisation Fund, which supports the Prevent anti-extremism programme.
According to 2024 Home Office figures, Prevent received more referrals for Right-wing radicalisation (19 per cent) than Islamist (13 per cent). MI5 stated in 2024 that the threat of Islamist attacks accounted for 75 per cent of its counter-terror workload.
The game, designed by Shout Out UK (SOUK), as a “media literacy” organisation, has been shared beyond Yorkshire to help other local authorities try to tackle extremism... (MORE - details)
RELATED (scivillage): Online Safety Act allows Ofcom to monitor smartphone messages for speech violations?
- - - - - - - - - - - -
The video game that treats every British teen like a far-Right extremist
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/01...extremist/
INTRO: A state-funded computer game is warning teenagers that they risk being referred to a counter-terrorism programme if they question mass migration. Pathways is an interactive game designed for 11- to 18-year-old pupils and funded by Prevent, a Home Office programme for tackling extremism.
Young players are directed to help their in-game characters – a white teenage boy and girl – to avoid being reported for “extreme Right-wing ideology” after discussing migration online. Characters can face extremism referrals if they choose to engage with groups that spread “harmful ideological messages”, or join protests against the “erosion of British values”. Even researching online immigration statistics is portrayed negatively.
Other in-game pitfalls include sharing a video that claims Muslim men, rather than homeless veterans, are being given emergency accommodation. An in-game meter monitors how extreme the character’s behaviour is. Those who “lose” may be given counselling to deal with “ideological thoughts” or referred to an anti-terrorism expert.
The game was developed with government backing by councils in East Yorkshire over growing concerns about immigration and tensions about migrant accommodation in their communities.
How the game works.
A year earlier, in 2022, Hull councillors had raised concerns that the Home Office was sending “excessive” numbers of migrants to local hotels. That same year, East Riding council attempted a legal challenge to block Home Office plans for migrant accommodation.
In 2024, Hull became the scene of protests centred on a migrant hotel in the city. It was part of widespread unrest after Axel Rudakubana, the son of Rwandan refugees, murdered three young girls in Southport. It later emerged that the killer had been referred to Prevent three times.
Pathways comes with material for teachers, who are urged to use the resource to “demonstrate the local threat picture of extreme Right-wing activities specifically”. The project was funded by the Home Office’s Preventing Radicalisation Fund, which supports the Prevent anti-extremism programme.
According to 2024 Home Office figures, Prevent received more referrals for Right-wing radicalisation (19 per cent) than Islamist (13 per cent). MI5 stated in 2024 that the threat of Islamist attacks accounted for 75 per cent of its counter-terror workload.
The game, designed by Shout Out UK (SOUK), as a “media literacy” organisation, has been shared beyond Yorkshire to help other local authorities try to tackle extremism... (MORE - details)
RELATED (scivillage): Online Safety Act allows Ofcom to monitor smartphone messages for speech violations?
