Mind Control and the Election
By Dafydd Ellis: They have used the same template for all elections where their chosen party and leader are promoted as strong and united, while the opposition party and leadership were being exposed as weak and indecisive. Labour in the seventies (weak and indecisive), made way for Thatcher and ‘strong’ leadership in the eighties. With growing public exasperation with the Conservatives, in the nineties it was “time for change” with Tony Blair and New Labour being promoted…
A Cloud For Every Silver Lining
By Frederick Dixon: We heard last week of the ever greater numbers of youngsters going up to university this year. It looks as if very soon the target of 50% of the age group will be exceeded – what a contrast to the days of my youth when only about one in twenty of my contemporaries were “revolting students”! And a good thing too. Well it is, isn’t it? Of course it is, for the future graduates themselves whose…
Hypocrisy and crypto-racism of the Metropolitan Elite
The row over the “wealthy metropolitan elite” who use immigrants for cheap labour has had one interesting side-effect – it has exposed the racism of our rulers. The affair blew up when a hapless Tory MP called James Brokenshire tried to curry favour with his bosses by criticising the wealthy for hiring poor foreigners. In short order it was revealed that the Prime Minister and his wife had arranged UK citizenship for their Nepalese nanny.…
Ukraine – Towards a Peaceful Solution
By Max Musson: In recent days I have published two articles attempting to explain what is going on in Ukraine and the implications for White nationalists worldwide. Events have since appeared to be spiralling out of control and following the realisation that back in 1994, Britain and the USA had signed a treaty with Ukraine guaranteeing her territorial integrity, there was a period over last weekend during which we were possibly on the brink of…
We need to talk about Ed
By Kasredin: If the anti-British national press is to be believed, the Labour Party leader Ed Miliband is promising to drag us all back to the 1970s, and the days of Wilson and Callaghan. We are expected to dislike him, and to compare him with the cheese-loving inventor Wallace in the animated films by Nick Park, but let us consider some hard facts. Under the ConDem coalition government, Britain has a deficit of £120billion. Instead…
More Tory Talk – No Tory Action!
Today’s newspapers are full of stories about a momentus new speech that Prime Minister David Cameron intends to make tomorrow in the hope of winning nationalistically minded ex-Tory voters back to the Conservative Party. The speech is expected to propose restrictions on the rights of immigrants to access social housing, but no Bill introducing such changes has been put before Parliament and the forthcoming speech is not expected to provide a timetable for the immediate…
Hail The Old King!
As historians and archeologists marvel at the discovery of the remains of King Richard III of England, the public are reminded of a time when our leaders were real men and suffered the consequences of their actions. Despite a deformity of the spine, Richard III was man enough to comply with the customs and expectations of his time and lead his armies into battle. He may have been on horseback initially and surrounded by a…
Warsi Replaced By Shapps
Following David Cameron’s cabinet reshuffle yesterday, many observers, heartened by the replacement of outgoing Muslim peer Baroness Warsi as co-chairman of the Conservative Party, will be unaware that the cabinet changes may have served to strengthen the influence over government of another minority group. When Sayeeda Warsi was appointed co-Chairman of the Conservative Party in 2010, this controversial decision by David Cameron distracted attention away from the other co-Chairman, the rather less obvious ‘minority group…