Alex Barnes-Ross—a London-based stalker who spends his days conspiring with criminals and has made bigotry what he calls a “full-time job”—has now openly confessed that the goal of his anti-religious harassment campaign is to undermine religious freedom for all faiths in the United Kingdom.
“Government agencies and politicians aren’t going to step in and start meddling with religious freedom and beliefs,” he said, “unless there’s a clear demand among the electorate.” In short, he intends to narcissistically use force to impose his will on everyone he can.
Barnes-Ross has failed at every job he ever tried, begs online for money to pay his rent and openly complains he has to “fight ‘really hard’ to be taken seriously.”
Barnes-Ross’ ambition to push officials into “meddling with religious freedom and beliefs” exposes his direct attack on personal liberties, as well as his promotion of coercive control that violates human rights—making him an enemy of every religious person in the United Kingdom.
But the futility of his anti-religious crusade was already laid bare in March, when the unemployed Barnes-Ross weaselled his way onto TalkTV under false pretences to try to promote his hate campaign. There, he thoroughly antagonised the hosts, who were appalled to discover that the true motive of this self-styled “activist” is to strip Britons of freedom of faith.
“I’ve got to be honest with you, Alex,” the host said. “You and I have departed.”
“Those people who wish to practise their religious beliefs … have a right to practise their religion in a free country.”
“It wasn’t fun,” Barnes-Ross said, reflecting on the interview. “I hope I didn’t come across as a fool.”
His ineptitude stretches well beyond his TalkTV debacle: Barnes-Ross has failed at every job he ever tried, begs online for money to pay his rent and openly complains he has to “fight ‘really hard’ to be taken seriously.” (Hardly a revelation.)
He nevertheless clings to the delusion that he is capable of igniting a national movement to trample on religious liberty—a grotesque fantasy made all the more absurd by a man whose life is defined by defeats, rejection and public ridicule. Alex Barnes-Ross treads the well-worn path of a long litany of sociopaths who have come before him with grandiose visions of authoritarian control—and failed to do anything but destroy themselves.