
Residents of a market town in Suffolk have demanded urgent answers after a queue at Greggs reached what one witness described as “the sort of length usually reserved for Glastonbury loos or the tills at Aldi on pension day”. By mid-morning, the cause had already been identified by several men in high-visibility jackets standing outside a bookmaker: immigrants.
By Our Consumer Correspondent: Colin Allcabs
No official evidence has yet been produced to support the claim, but that has not stopped local campaigners, amateur Facebook criminologists, and one retired assistant deputy parish newsletter editor from insisting that “you only have to use your eyes”. Their concerns reportedly began when the bakery ran out of sausage rolls at 10:12am, prompting immediate speculation that Britain, and more specifically Suffolk, had finally been stretched beyond breaking point by people who had the audacity to arrive and then purchase lunch.
Immigrants linked to pastry pressures
The first public statement came from Clive Peverel, 68, who was wearing shorts despite the weather and claimed to speak for “ordinary local people, by which I mean me and Keith”. Mr Peverel told reporters the issue was obvious.
“Years ago, you could go into Greggs, get a steak bake, and be out in under three minutes,” he said, with the haunted expression of a man recalling a vanished empire. “Now you’ve got immigrants in there ordering things with confidence, asking for vegan options, and paying contactless like they own the place. It’s not right.”
Pressed on whether he had seen any immigrants causing disorder, stockpiling Yum Yums, or attempting to annex the heated cabinet, Mr Peverel admitted he had not. He added, however, that the general atmosphere felt “different”, which in modern British public life is widely considered enough to launch a consultation, a petition, and at least two opinion columns.
The row escalated after a photo of the queue was posted online with the caption: “Suffolk under pressure.” Within minutes, the image had been shared across local groups alongside increasingly inventive theories. Some claimed immigrants had developed a highly coordinated breakfast strategy. Others suggested that foreign nationals were exploiting legal loopholes in the meal deal framework. One woman from just outside Stowmarket said she was “not racist, but” and then delivered a 17-part thread that removed any suspense from the opening clause.
Experts confirm queue may also be caused by lunchtime
To restore calm, this publication contacted several authorities, including a retail analyst, a sociology lecturer, and a man called Darren who once managed a Spar near Diss. All agreed there were a number of possible explanations for the queue. These included the obvious lunchtime rush, the closure of a nearby cafe, a two-for-one doughnut promotion, and the general British preference for standing in line while quietly pretending not to resent everyone else in it.
Dr Helen Marsh, a lecturer in social behaviour, said immigrants are often blamed for problems that are in fact caused by underinvestment, poor planning, demographic change, and the national habit of confusing inconvenience with collapse.
“A queue outside Greggs is not, in itself, proof of a civilisation under siege,” she said. “Sometimes it simply means there is a queue outside Greggs. But people like a story that flatters them. It is emotionally easier to blame immigrants than it is to discuss wages, housing, public services, labour shortages, or why every town centre now appears to consist of vape shops, charity shops, and one brave bakery holding the social fabric together.”
Her comments were immediately dismissed by online critics as “what academics would say”, which remains one of the more compelling arguments in modern debate.
Meanwhile, Greggs staff have continued operating under intense conditions. One employee, speaking on condition of anonymity because she could not be bothered with the hassle, said the branch had simply been busy.
“We had a coach come through, the app was offering free coffee if you’d downloaded something no one understood, and Barry called in sick,” she said. “But yes, apparently it’s now an international incident because people had to wait four extra minutes for a festive slice in March.”
Local politicians sense opportunity
No British non-crisis is complete without elected representatives wandering in for a quote, and this one proved no exception. A district councillor described the situation as “deeply concerning” before calling for a cross-party review into bakery resilience. Another urged common sense while standing in front of a wall of St George’s flags for reasons he insisted were “purely decorative”.
One aspiring parliamentary candidate went further, promising a “fair but firm” pastry policy. Under his proposals, local people would receive priority access to hot savouries, while anyone deemed suspiciously enthusiastic about baked goods would be directed to a separate queue for “administrative reasons”. He did not explain how this would work, though supporters said details were less important than having a strong stance on something warm and wrapped in greaseproof paper.
Several business owners were less convinced. A restaurant manager in Ipswich pointed out that immigrants are not only customers but workers, neighbours, taxpayers, and in many cases the people keeping half the high street open while everyone else is posting angry comments about decline.
“If the people moaning online had their way,” he said, “they’d ban immigrants, then complain no one wants to do the jobs, the hospital’s short-staffed, the care home can’t recruit, and the kebab shop shuts at nine. There’s a lot of nostalgia in this country for a past that mostly seems to involve somebody else doing the work while you mutter into a Chronicle and Echo.”
That view has found some support among younger residents, many of whom appear baffled that adults with mortgages can still become emotionally unglued by seeing someone with a different accent buying a chicken bake.
The great British talent for blaming immigrants
There is, of course, a larger pattern here. Immigrants have spent decades being accused of causing traffic, rent rises, packed schools, low wages, high wages, NHS waiting times, changing menus, not assimilating, assimilating too quickly, speaking their own language, speaking English too well, and winning The Great British Bake Off with flavours that frightened a man from Kent.
The beauty of blaming immigrants is that it saves time. You do not need to examine systems, budgets, ownership models, local planning failures, labour markets, or the fact that nearly every public service has been expected to do more with less since the millennium. You can simply point at a stranger and carry on as if you’ve cracked the case.
It also offers a marvellous emotional return. The person doing the blaming gets to feel observant, patriotic, and hard done by all at once, which is three feelings for the price of one. Better still, no practical solution is required. If the queue remains, there is always the option of blaming immigrants harder.
That said, the issue is not entirely simple. Migration does place pressure on housing, schools, transport, and health services when planning is weak or cynical. Communities can change quickly, and not everyone experiences that at the same pace. Pretending all concern is wicked is as lazy as pretending every problem begins with a border. The difference lies in whether people want honest answers or just a pantomime villain in trainers.
For now, the Greggs queue has subsided, although tensions remain high. By Thursday afternoon, residents had moved on to a fresh emergency after discovering that the town’s new barber charges £17 for a dry cut and offers card payments, which some described as “another sign of how much this country has changed”.
A spokesperson for Suffolk Gazette declined to intervene directly, but did observe that if Britain ever finally solves its national habit of blaming immigrants for everything from missing pastries to autumn weather, it may be forced to confront a more unsettling possibility: that some of our chaos is homemade.
Until then, if the line at Greggs looks a bit long, there are two options. You can invent a theory about civilisational decline, or you can wait your turn like everyone else and use the time to consider whether the real queue is for lunch, or for a simpler story than the truth usually allows.






