Portsmouth Says ‘No’ To Invaders

The following report is from one of our members in Portsmouth:

“Today on my lunch break, while walking through Portsmouth Guildhall Square, I saw a banner hanging from the balcony overlooking the council offices and the busy square. Upon moving closer I could read the message and see those hanging it. Having seen their masks, I at first thought National Action was in town. But as I went up to speak with the lads I found this was not the case.

As I approached the lads attempting a disarming smile, with my hands in the air, and with the re-assuring statement, “I’m on your side”, they moved to meet me half way. At first they simply said they were “concerned citizens” (perhaps thinking I was suspicious), but as I engaged them further in conversation it became clear to me they were definitely dissident nationalists of some sort.

When I mentioned their resemblance to National Action, they acknowledged that they knew of National Action, but continued to maintain that they were not aligned to any specific group.

I introduced myself as a member of Western Spring and name-dropped a few organisations and Nationalist perspectives, and the demonstrators began to relax and were more open with me. I asked of the ‘5W’ on their banner they told me it represented “We go where we want”. There were 5 or 6 of them on the balcony and there were a few more of their group positioned around the square, incognito and providing security, with whom they were communicating.

I left them with my contact details and a link to the Western Spring website and returned to the square, where in the space of 15 minutes around 15 holier-than-thou bleeding hearts had gathered, many with placards, which had undoubtedly been knocked up at the university using materials that where intended for educational rather than political purposes.

The counter-protestors were mainly students: the usual woolly minded utopian dreamers, together with a few politicos spouting the usual platitudes to a salivating media. However, the general public passing by were more interested in the nationalist anti-refugee demonstration and the banner.

According to the Portsmouth News, Carys Morgan, a student from the University of Portsmouth, attended the counterdemonstration, lecturing local people and telling them they should welcome the influx of invaders to their area.  A fittingly she is described in the comments section of the newspaper as a “silly little girl”.

Please follow this link to the Portsmouth News and show your support for the many good comments left by readers of the Portsmouth News, by clicking the “like” button.

In conclusion, the demonstration by this nationalist group, which I found call themselves the ‘Pie and Mash Squad’, was a great success with media coverage online, in print, on camera, and perhaps on BBS South East tonight. Demonstrations do not suit everybody, but this event has brought likeminded people together and my message to the Pie and Mash Squad is ‘Thanks for brightening my day, you have my contact details fellas, so please get in touch!”

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8 thoughts on “Portsmouth Says ‘No’ To Invaders

  1. Well done to those young men. I followed the link as suggested, some excellent comments, especially the one about the students rosy future as BBC diversity co-ordinators.

  2. Michael Woodbridge

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    Well done W5. I got there first as an Art student between 1964-70. I was pretty much on my own posting ‘British National Youth’ stickers on lamp posts and annoying by my fellow Art student Lefties by distributing John Bean’s paper ‘Combat’- together with Mosley’s ‘National European’. As I’ve got older my views have matured of course and I’m now a member of the British National Socialist Movement.

  3. It is encouraging to see an example of what Nick Grifford calls ‘a small act of rebellion’. Another such example of a small act of rebellion can be found at the White Genocide Project website in their Australia news section. In both examples it is important that the demonstrators look, speak and act like normal people rather than as members of some lunatic fringe so that the public can identify with them. After all they are speaking for the majority who have been cowed into silence over the subject of immigration and fake refugees. Therefore they should not adopt the style and presentation of so called ‘far right’ groups like National Action. National Action and other such fringe groups claim to be National Socialists which most people interpret to mean neo-Nazi and thus they become isolated from the masses and easily intimidated by more numerous anti-fascists. I think that those nationalist demonstrators in Portsmouth should not have covered their faces, because such a gesture suggests to the public that their perfectly reasonable position held by the majority will result in reprisals if it expressed in public. Instead they should lead by example and identify themselves and openly state their views to the media to give courage to the majority who think like them.

    i am reminded of a comment by Enoch Powell who said that most of the letters he received from his constituents about immigration were anonymous. The fear and conformity imposed on the public by the state on the subject of race and immigration gives you some idea of what it must have been like to live in Ceausescu’s Romania.

  4. Michael Woodbridge

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    I have long felt the same way as Byrthoth about the need for openness. We were brought up to have “the courage of our convictions.” If we are too ashamed to show our faces, how can we expect the public to support us? If we behave like criminals, with something to hide, is it any wonder if we’re demonised, and treated like criminals? We don’t actually live in Ceausescu’s Romania and so far and it is mainly social embarrassment which prevents many speaking out loud and clear. Hans Anderson’s tale of the ‘King’s New Clothes’ says it all. Just imagine, if everyone who felt as we do about race and immigration found the courage to make their feelings clear to all and sundry regardless of the consequences, our political landscape would change overnight.

    1. The political landscape is unfreezing Michael, but slowly. The unfreezing is happening to the public rather than the elite, thanks to transformations being wrought to our society by immigration on such a scale that the average person can no longer exercise self censorship.

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