I'd take issue with one thing in that piece.
The extreme Right Wing scum are of course always waiting in the wings for an opportunity to pop up. It wasn't the death of Floyd, it'll be the ugly and wordlwide furore which came out of it which has rattled their cage.
But sadly I think the backlash will be more widespread than that. There'll be a whole lot more outside of organised RW organisations who will be pissed off because of the overreaction to Floyd's death, and having it rammed down their throats every day, seeing tens of thousands of people breaking the Lockdown they've been personally careful to observe, for example. There'll be a backlash of attitudes unfortunately, more polarisation.
Yes, many people will be sympathetic to the BLM cause, but I think many more than that will be hardened. It'll be on Twitter, it'll be on the street, it won't always be violent nutters.
The fault for this lays on both sides, we are scared to talk openly about the elephant in the room. This stuff should have been dealt with 40yrs ago. Of course it will never be 'dealt with' in the sense that there'll always be people who are unhappy with things, but there's a very big groundswell which I think could have been averted by having a proper national debate, all the way up to govt level, and seen to include everyone's voice. Everything from the Golliwog on the marmalade jar, right up to whether there should be reparations, and everything inbetween.
Your argument assumes that weight of opinion, volume of support, and electoral significance is broadly equal in Right and Left. It isn't.
The so-called Right wing is no more than a rump of hooligans. BNP/EDL etc have no electoral presence whatsoever, and apart from a spate of local council seats in east London in the 1990s, never have had.
Meanwhile, the Left has been slowly turning the centre ground into its own territory. Correctness, banning of certain TV programmes, and a million things I could list.
In the middle, we've got Mr and Mrs Joe Public. They don't want a 'debate'. They don't have an 'agenda'. They work. They have kids to bring up, jobs to do, businesses to run, old folks to look after. They're not interested in BLM. They probably haven't heard of Antifa. Maybe they think it's something you rub on your knee for rheumatism. Or to reduce flatulence.
They may have voted Remain or they may have voted Leave. They like the nice Ghanaian family next door, and their kids play together. They don't understand why we've got bogged down in wars in the Middle East. They don't care who the US president is. They truly don't understand why the death of a career criminal 4,000 miles away, horrible though his murder was, means that statues are being torn down and they can't watch Fawlty Towers any more.
No, the fault does not lay on both sides. The Left, backed up by the BBC and a good chunk of the MSM has slowly been alienating the centre. 'You're with us or you're against us. And if you're not with us, you're scum. You're fascists and racists' etc. This has been the message.
I don't care what anyone says, but this country is probably the easiest and safest in the world to live in if you're black, Asian, gay, LGBT, got one leg or whatever.
The issue is this. How far can you push the centre before the Joe Publics of the country bite back. I suspect quite a long way. These people don't want any trouble, and they're too busy getting on with their lives.
But if they keep being pissed off, we will ultimately see some true disorder.