Saturday 30 July 2011

BNP RIP

For many years I believed the BNP was going to be the only force that would ensure that the British way of life, our culture, traditions and history would be protected and that Nick Griffin was to be our saviour. There was a time I truly believed he would lead us into a new tomorrow and like many other political friends and associates from that time, looked up to Nick believing him to be the Nationalist hero of our time.

However, the issues that gave rose to the expulsion of the Decembrists made me question the motives and decisions made by Nick Griffin. After having given a fair part of my life (and my privacy) to the cause of our "Nationalist family", it was very hard to admit that you had wrongly been supporting a man who was not acting in the interests of the nation. I can only relate the feeling I had, to that experienced by William Wallace when he encountered Robert the Bruce, the man he thought was his own saviour, on the battlefield – see this clip

The Betrayal

Consequently I realised early on that I could no longer support a man who for whatever reason was not acting in the interests of the BNP and the British people and was making too many mistakes and missing too many opportunities that the BNP could have capitalised on.

Sadly, there are still those who believe there is something left to salvage – there isn’t! Nick Griffin has, through his actions, ensured that all of the good people I once worked with and who did so much good work for the party were either expelled, suspended or left in disgust. The BNP will never be a credible force in British politics, there is too much baggage, corruption and nepotism and Nick Griffin has so much control that he will ensure that if he is ever ousted the BNP will collapse.

If there are so called Nationalists out there who believe anything else then seek psychiatric help now – you are sadly deluded.

I recently came across an obituary to Frederick Chilumba, the one-time president of Zambia. In it there were some familiar occurrences and thought it worthy of reproducing here:-

“He soon became known for ‘authoritarian tendencies’. When his privatisation of state-owned companies faltered, he sacked colleagues; when most Zambians found themselves even worse off as a result of his mis-management, he blamed Kaunda – whom he vilified ceaselessly – for their plight. As his second term neared its end, (he) strove to amend the constitution in order to stay in power. Having been convicted of laundering millions of pounds of state money through private bank accounts in London, he was later cleared of all charges, because the money could not be definitively traced back to government funds”.

Will the last member please close the door on the way out.

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