Showing posts with label BNP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BNP. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Pseudo Liberals Play Into BNP Hands

Equalities watchdogs are claiming victory over moves to end 'white only' membership of the BNP. But silly pseudo liberals have played right into their hands. The only people to benefit will be the BNP, with some voters more willing to join a bunch of racists who can now claim to have lost the 'racist' tag.

On the surface it's looking good. BNP leader, Nick Griffin, is set to put an amended constitution before his party that will abolish the 'indigenous caucasian' membership clause, after legal action by the equalities and human rights commission.

John Wadham, of the commission, seems well chuffed, telling the BBC: "We are pleased the party has conceded this case and agreed to all of the Commission requirements."

But when a bunch of pseudo-liberal do-gooders get their heads together, realism goes out of the window. They may well think they've pulled a fast one on the BNP but it's the thin end of a nasty little wedge.

The BNP is a legitimate political party with growing membership. The equalities commission has played right into its hands. Today's action has delivered to the BNP exactly what it wants.

Some punters are saying, albeit in whisper, they're thinking of joining the BNP. Probably not because they are racists but because they are thoroughly disillusioned with current policies over immigration.

New Labour is now facing a voter backlash after years of half-baked mish-mash over immigration with only brave souls like Field daring to speak out.

The BNP has a right to give its views as long as they are legal. Given its current elections voting record, the party has a right to appear on BBC Question Time.

That doesn't make hard line anti-immigration policies right in a so-called liberal democracy. But it does make for healthy debate, as long as views are robustly challenged by someone with a brain.

The danger comes when a far right political party is legitimised and can bring in 'racist' views by stealth. Giving Griffin the oxygen of publicity is not the way to defeat the BNP.

The Orange Party fully agrees with David Blackburn's refreshing dose of realism over at the Spectator:

"Losing the tag ‘racist party’ would be a triumph for the BNP, bringing it truly into the mainstream. It is one thing to be given a mainstream platform, but it is quite another to be recognised as a legitimate political force."

The 'no-platform' approach to the BNP has had its day. New tactics are needed after today's judgement. The BNP must now be defeated by reasoned, decent argument not a slagging match.

Just swapping from skinheads and sweatshirts to a neat haircut and sharp suit doesn't make the BNP 'acceptable'. Complying with equalities law doesn't turn a bunch of racists into a 'non-racist' political party.

Top picture: Private Eye cover


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Saturday, February 21, 2009

Looming Threat Of The English Mob

More than a fifth of the population of Dublin has taken to the streets in a huge protest against the government's handling of the recession. That should be a wake up call to ministers here.

The threat to stability may come from the traditional lurking menace - the English mob.

In Dublin officially 100,000 people protested in the city centre over the Irish government's handling of economy and pension cutbacks. Unofficially it's put at double that. But that belies the anger and frustration beneath. Ordinary workers did not cause the economic collapse but they were being forced to pay for it.

Protesters, reported by the BBC, were "sick and tired of the way this government conducts itself and what it's doing to this country ... I've worked all my life, never walked out on strike. Instead I've went to work and done my job ... I've a mortgage to pay, I've children to put through school, and now I'm being told I have to take cut back, after cut back, after cut back."

How those views chime with many here.

Here the first signs of a national protest became crystal clear during the construction workers BJ4BW protests which rapidly spread to sympathy walkouts before they fizzled out. That was a relief for a beleaguered government which could order back the riot police and plastic bullet rounds to the arsenal, ready for the next round of civil unrest.

It doesn't take much of a spark to ignite a fire. On the continent and the Irish Republic it's ordinary placid folk who'll take to the streets - farm workers, fishermen, teachers and public servants.

Continental Europe expects and accepts street demonstrations as a way of life. After the Paris riots and those in Germany, president Sarkozy and chancellor Merkel will listen - they do not have a choice.

Here some political commentators and politicians have been quick to seize on recent BNP victories in minor local government by-elections as an apparent rise in nationalism.

But raising the spectre of a nationalist upsurge whether it's from the fascist right or socialist left, however abhorrent that may seem, masks the true threat to stability which always rears its head at times of economic hardship.

An that's the traditional enemy of the State - the English mob - the one thing past governments have put in place overbearing measures to prevent and stamp on.

It's often called the English mob - but now more accurately it should be termed the P*ssed Off Party.

It takes a long while for the normally reserved English temperament to kick in but kick in it can and has done in the past.

During the refinery workers dispute the Orange Party could see these were ordinary working lads worried sick about jobs and how to make ends meet. Any whiff of the BNP was swiftly sent packing.

Take a snap shot of protests in Dublin or on the UK picket lines during the recent protest and you'd be hard pressed to find a hard-liner from the right or left among them. But the constant fear is that the far right and far left will always try to jump on the bandwagon and try to whip up support.

But it isn't a nationalist movement which government fears. It is civil unrest from ordinary folk. The plans for civil disorder were there at the refineries with police dogs, mounted police, riot police and masked officers using the excuse of the appalling weather to hid their true identity from prying eyes.

Those with long enough memories will remember in shame the days when police officers with white shirts suddenly appeared at the pit villages during the miners strike. In those days PC plod wore a blue shirt with white reserved for the Met. The London boys were being bussed up north for a pitched battle.

Then the nation was divided between sympathy for the miners and Thatcher's government.

Today's Dublin protest shows starkly that any such outburst of public anger and frustration is not so clearly polarised and that would make it far more difficult to control, in what is still a long winter of discontent.

Picture: Dublin protest (BBC)

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Friday, November 21, 2008

Hitler's BNP Membership, Shock

The recent row over BNP membership leaks has been given the Hitler's bunker treatment. Political satire is often the best weapon. Be warned though, the mash-up does contain some acid wit.

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