The BNP Does Political Philosophy
April 23rd, 2010From the manifesto:
We intend to rebuild the social contract where the criminal was afraid of the police and upright citizens were protected by the law.
From the manifesto:
We intend to rebuild the social contract where the criminal was afraid of the police and upright citizens were protected by the law.
From the manifesto:
The BNP will ensure that the distribution of National Lottery funds takes place in a fashion which encourages British culture, and not to so-called ‘modern art’ projects that insult, debase and discredit art.
Similar considerations apply to the Turner Prize, which has long become a degenerate icon of modern day social engineering.
From the manifesto:
The BNP will combat Islamist terrorism in Britain by halting and reversing Muslim immigration which will reduce the recruiting base for domestic terrorists, and by striking a peace treaty with the Islamic world. This peace treaty must stipulate that the Islamic world will stop trying to Islamify Britain and the West. In return, Britain will agree to refrain from interfering in the internal affairs of Islamic nations.
From the manifesto:
Being British is more than merely possessing a modern document known as a passport. It runs far deeper than that: it is to belong to a special chain of unique people who have the natural law right to remain a majority in their ancestral homeland.
From the manifesto:
Group identity, belonging, loyalty and allegiance, in other words, are not products of ‘false consciousness’, economics, imperialism or sociological processes; they are an essential part of elementary human nature.
From the manifesto:
We know of no great civilisation that was created or sustained by a multicultural population. Indeed, many have collapsed because they became multicultural, with Rome and Ancient Egypt being well known examples of this process.
The fascists in the British National Party have declared November to be White History Month.
From the Onion‘s 2003 archives: White History Year Resumes.
On 3 April 1938, at any rate. Very interesting article in the New Statesman (and it’s not often you can say that).
Daniel Davies, no stranger to internet flamewars, explains why blogs are likely to spell the death of both far-left and far-right politics in the UK:
Blogs are rather like sodium pentathol or Stella Artois in their effect on social inhibitions, so when you add them to a scene which is largely composed of people with poor impulse control at the best of times, then you are basically lighting the blue touch paper…
To watch the SWP/Respect bust-up, Socialist Unity is the place to go; the BNP is self-destructing in blogland over here.
Searchlight reports from last night’s BNP meeting in Leeds.