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Ghandi-a Homeland and Self Determination for the British

Ghandi if he was alive would probably back the British National Party and its fight for a homeland and self determination. Ghandi saw the injustice of Indians being ruled by a foreign government and a ‘Colonial’ Class of the selected elite.  George Orwell, the author of ‘1984′ saw this as well whilst serving as a colonial police officer. The power of the EU and the ‘governing elite’ which are embedded in the main political parties mean that our fight for a homeland and self determination is a just cause. Labour has become a ’facist’ party which seeks to destroy our freedoms and right to self determination. We live in a surveillance state, where you can be arrested without charge and held in detention virtually indefinitely. Not only is the ’state’ now so powerful it has most people financially by the short and curlies. In the 1980s we saw the ‘naked’ aggression of the Tory party and the police who attacked miners, car workers, and unions. Then came the poll tax riots and the attacks launched on the ‘metric martyrs. Ghandi and his followers saw that the only way to defeat ‘oppression’ was to steel themselves to the ’cause’ and convince the population in general of their rights. Ghandis movement was a liberation movement and so is the British National Party.  

Labour is out of control and lashing out. They often accuse the Tories of being ‘facists’ whilst acting ‘fascistic’ themselves. We at the BNP know why they are doing this. They are scared the BNP will cost them the next general election. I myself will be standing in Dagenham and pulling the traditional Labour vote down. I also aim to win in Dagenham. But the prospect of hundreds of BNP candidates standing up and down the country fills the Labour beast full of dread. 

However, the arrest of 12 activists in Liverpool is a new twist to Labour intimidation. In the long run though the truth will out. That means intimidation will only strengthen peoples resolve. During the miners strikes thousands were arrested and their families intimidated. Though the miners and striking workers mainly remained united even in ‘defeat’. The British are made of strong stuff. Hazel Blears and her totalitarian party ’hate’ people who have a differing opinion to theirs. They are desperate to retain power just like the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the ‘British Government’ were in India. 

That the BNP will win seats during the Euro elections there is no doubt. Six months on the financial situation will be a lot worse. There will be more extreme poverty and social break down. Labour is full of empty and broken promises. Its rank and file, its councillors, are filled with foreboding looking forward. What can they offer their families and friends, their ’people’. We all have to eat at the end of the day.

Ghandi led by example and showed how a small group can ‘fight’ against oppression. We to at the BNP believe in self determination and the rights of the individual to choose. Ghandi led a liberation movement and that is what the BNP is today.

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3 Comments For This Post

  1. Alasdair Says:

    Is this the same Gandhi, whom asked for his opinion of Western civilization, replied that he thought “it would be a good idea”?

    Sounds like an anti-white racist to me.

  2. edith crowther Says:

    Yes, we are being colonised and must fight back like Gandhi. If we are racist, then so was Gandhi, and so is Mandela, and any other defender of his own country. But in fact none of us are racist – we just love our country and want to stop it being taken over. It is easier to understand how similar many countries in the world are to us if you have lived in the Third World for years, perhaps through being a soldier.

    Foreigners who come here don’t give a true picture, any more than British tourists give a true picture of Britain when they go abroad. People tend to behave without inhibition when they are not in their own country – that’s human nature. Gandhi didn’t like western civilisation because all he saw of it was the British upper classes throwing their weight around in his country, the women were worse than the men by all accounts.

    Sometimes colonisers have to be told quite strongly that they aren’t welcome, as Gandhi did to us in India. We left soon after. Gandhi may have been non-violent, but he wasn’t very polite, or very politically correct. But he is inspiring, because clearly it sometimes works wonders simply to tell the truth.

    Mind you, Gandhi had an easy job compared to what we are faced with. Our colonisation of India was brazen and visible – and when we realised we weren’t wanted, we did pack our bags fairly quickly. The colonisation we and other countries suffer these days is insidious, like poison (a woman’s weapon). It is really really difficult to get rid of a poison – ask the growing number of asbestosis victims. I think even Gandhi would be puzzled about what to do in our circumstances.

  3. Rotait Says:

    You give Ghandi too much credit
    The fact is that after the second world war the US decided that neither Britain nor France should retain their colonies.
    Within a few years India obtained political Independence ; although , of course , the British taxpayer is still obliged to pay for their space programmes and nuclear powered aircraft carriers etc .

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