Labour style democracy in Britain

“How true and we look forward to the end of the injustices of this tax robbing, corrupt, politically correct, Marxist tyranny which seeks to destroy the native peoples of these islands.”

News article filed by BNP news team

Labour doesn’t like the British people having too much of a say in the running of the country. The e-petitions which the No. 10 team of spin doctors and overpaid civil servants has on its web site are a bit of window dressing designed to give the impression that Gordon Brown will actually listen to the voice of the British voters.

No. 10 has pulled the plug on an e-petition calling for the removal of the hideous and unwelcome statue of South African terrorist and murderer Nelson Mandela; poster boy of the liberal-left who ignore the slide of South Africa into anarchy that heralded Mandela’s presidency. Such people who enthused over the unveiling of the statue in London’s Parliament Square overlook the ongoing genocide of Afrikaner farmers which began under Mandela’s administration and the rise of age old tribal conflicts within the Black African peoples. They overlook the fact that South Africa went from being the economic miracle of Africa to a crime ridden economic basket case with over 7 million (16% of the population) people infected with HIV.  The tightly controlled liberal-leftist press in Britain keeps its usually capacious mouth zipped on the horrors of modern South Africa where daily life is one of keeping alive for Black and White alike, fending off robbers and murderers. Even a visit to the supermarket could mean a http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=13&art_id=vn20070727051235589C128602. The rainbow nation of Mandela’s legacy has its streets and its farms running red with blood. August 29th 2007 and four horrific crimes are just run of the mill reporting in South African papers:

‘I watched my son die trying to save me’
A Pretoria mother who watched her son die at the hands of a gang of armed robbers says she will never forget her soulmate. Francois Viljoen ,25, a self-taught musician, was gunned down in the early hours of Saturday morning when he was woken by his mother’s screams for help.

‘Mommy, mommy, daddy is dead’
For R200 and a couple of rings, Justin Browne died in a pool of blood in his home in front of his young children. Browne, a general manager for the event company Strike Productions, died after assailants slit his throat in his Northwold, Randburg, house on Saturday night.

Retired journalist found murdered
Naked and alone on her smallholding, retired journalist Muriel Bates ,73, was stabbed to death by people who allegedly broke into her home.Bates, who was actively involved in voluntary work for the South African Air Force Association up until her death, was last seen by her neighbours about 6pm on Saturday. She lived alone on a plot in Alwynspoort, situated between Walkerville and Eikenhof, south of Joburg.

False Moses gets a free pass out of prison
Moses Petersen spent the weekend in jail because police at the Johannesburg magistrate’s court released another Moses on bail instead of him.And when Petersen complained on Thursday that he was still in custody despite paying bail, police charged him with helping Moses Azozie escape and held him until on Monday.

Not a single British newspaper bothers to carry any of these crimes which are daily features of the nation Mandela “liberated” from the Apartheid era.

Many more horrific stories can be seen http://crimexposouthafrica.net/crimexp/.

No. 10’s response

Back to Parliament Square and the e-petition which was getting Labour spin doctors somewhat edgy. Tens of thousands of Britons have been understandably angered by the unveiling of the statue to one of the world’s most notorious killers and signed the e-petition and No. 10 decide to pull the plug as the popularity of the petition was upsetting the ANC loving Labourites in Downing Street.

No. 10 writes:

“This petition was accepted in good faith and in the interests of promoting political engagement through the petitions site. We have accepted many thousands of petitions on a range of topics which take issue with government policy and have no problems in engaging in mature political debate. Since the acceptance, however, it has come to our attention that a number of groups are linking to this petition on the web and promoting it in a provocative way.

We view this as wholly against the spirit of the ePetitions project in that it is being used to generate division rather than debate. We have therefore taken the rare step of taking the petition down and we will not respond to the issue beyond this email.

To answer the original question raised, there are many statues in London which celebrate international and commonwealth figures. London is an international city and one of the greatest and most diverse cities in the world. The UK government is proud to have the statue of Nelson Mandela in Parliament square. It stands across from Winston Churchill, who led us in the defeat of fascism, and near to Abraham Lincoln, the great emancipator. Nelson Mandela is recognised around the world as a great liberator of people.

The Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone said at the unveiling of the statue: ‘Allowing his statue to be placed in a prominent position in one of the world’s most famous squares, facing the British Parliament, underlines Mandela’s special relationship with Britain and London through the long years of struggle against apartheid, and reflects his significance as a world statesman.’

The Prime Minister, Gordon Brown said on the day of the unveiling: ‘…from this day forward, this statue will stand here, in sight of this ancient forum of democracy, to commemorate and celebrate for the ages triumph in the greatest of causes and the most inspiring and greatest leader of our generation – and one of the most courageous and best-loved men of all time.

And let us salute today not just the greatness of Nelson Mandela but the goodness of the man too, of a life where as the poet said, “he rose above the greatest without arrogance and he stooped to help the weakest without condescension”.

This statue is a beacon of hope that sends round the world the most powerful of messages that “no injustice can last forever”.”

How true and we look forward to the end of the injustices of this tax robbing, corrupt, politically correct, Marxist tyranny which seeks to destroy the native peoples of these islands.

http://www.bnp.org.uk

2007-09-06