
How can I prove that racism and hypocrisy exists in modern Britain amongst those who believe they are anti-racism and anti-discrimination? It’s really quite easy. You must simply listen to the things that ethnic ‘minorities’ say, which the ultra leftist and fascist British people agree with.
Ever heard a Pakistani person cal themselves a ‘British Pakistani’ ? Probably. In fact, I recall an Indian, or a Pakistani (or wherever) on the Nick Griffin/Question Time saga say that they are incredibly proud to be a ‘British Pakistani’. So what’s wrong with this? Let’s analyse it.
Consider what the racial foreigner actually means by ‘Pakistani’. Obviously, they are referring to their ethnic background or racial origin. Ethnically they are different to what they prefer to call the ‘white British’. We [the BNP] acknowledge that – we’re ethno nationalists, of course we do. Though by these racial foreigners, these hypocritical scumbags, admitting they are a ‘British Pakistani’ they are openly agreeing with BNP policy. They are accepting that they are ethnically Pakistani, but civically British.
This is precisely what the BNP has been saying for decades, and it is only ever accepted when the ultra left and the foreigners say it – primarily because people overlook what the things they say actually mean! As soon as the ethno nationalists say the same thing, they are instantly branded racist or fascist. By the new meaning of the word, I’m happy to admit that I am a racialist – in that I accept that race is an important and defining characteristic of a person – but certainly by no means am I a racist. Certainly by no means, is any person aligning perfectly with the BNP a racist. As Andrew Brons said in his first Sky News Interview after the BNP EU breakthrough, ‘we hate nobody’.
So why am I so arsed about the ‘British Pakistani’ and ‘British Indian’ matter? Simply because it should work both ways. With a Pakistani admitting that they are only civically British – what does that make me?
By their own admission, it makes me a British Briton. ‘British’ meaning I’m civically British, and Briton defining my race. I am an ethnic Briton, as much as Trevor McDonald is presumably African, and that bitch Sayeed Warsi is ethnically elsewhere – wherever that horrific, fascist little hag is actually from.
If we’re going to take care of such a small minded and frankly racist bunch of racial foreigners, in a way that they are allowed to acknowledge and appreciate their own ethnic heritage (Black history month, anyone?) then as Arthur Kemp once said – ‘we claim that same right for ourselves!’
The British derive from the majority ethnic population prior to the 1948 British Nationality Act. Back in 1947, prior to mass immigration and the population change of our country, the majority population consisted of ‘white’ people. These peoples’ stock consisted mostly of Celtic, Norse and Anglo Saxon ethnicities.
Just because we British happen to be white, however, does not mean that all white people are ethnically British. This is what seems to confuse the lefties and the racial foreigners. The media and the leftist bigots would want you to believe that the BNP considers every white person British, but that’s absolutely not true.
What’s important to note with this matter of homogeneity and indigenous peoples, is that the BNP hasn’t made all of this up. This is a matter of facts. It is not a matter of ideology, opinion or anybody’s manifesto – indigenous people of different lands exist. End of story.
Consider the Maoris of New Zealand. Earliest evidence of these people living in their ethnic homeland is merely 700 years old – yet these people are internationally recognised as indigenous, and are protected by law. Now consider us forgotten British people. The ethnic British have lived in the British motherland for over 10,000 years – significantly longer than the Maoris in New Zealand. Yet we’re not recognised as indigenous in our own motherland.
So, to you who do not believe in an indigenous people of Great Britain, do share with me why you don’t believe. Denying an indigenous people existing in Great Britain is like denying that cheese exists, or that Anne Widdecombe looks like a weeble.