EU Referendum – Let’s Get Out While We Can!
Today David Cameron set out his reasons why Britain should remain within the European Union in a speech he made at the British Museum. His office released a full transcript of the speech and below I reproduce the main points of that speech together with my own rebuttals exposing the many flaws in his arguments: David Cameron began by rightly stating that the decision before the British people is a momentous one and one that…
Another Dodgy Dossier
How could anyone vote to leave the European Union now that we know that we will all be £4,300 a year better off by 2030 if we stay in? Except that we will all be better off anyway even if we leave, just not by quite as much – and all of that is assuming that economic growth continues at a predictable rate until 2030. And in economics nothing is predictable. If we are trying…
Sea Changes
The fall of the Left/Liberal consensus has long been anticipated by those on our side of politics; the Left is devoid of ideas and originality, all of its nostrums have been tested to destruction and the consequences – societal breakdown – are all around us. The empty husk waits only for a fresh, strong, breeze to blow it out of the positions of power and influence which it still occupies by sheer inertia. Alex Kurtagic…
Stronger, Safer, Better Off – Out!
After a great deal of huffing and puffing, of late night dramas, of last minute crises, of shirt sleeved “battling for Britain”, Mr. Cameron got his “deal”, just as we always knew he would; and it was an empty husk just as we had always known it would be. But it may be enough to deliver him the victory which he craves for he is undoubtedly an effective campaigner, and he has on his side not…
The British People – Which Way Now?
Since the late 1800s, when the British Empire was at its height and we British had our greatest influence over the world, and following two successfully won World Wars the after-effects of which have been devastating for our nation, we British now seem to have reached our lowest ebb and at a time when there would appear to be no clear leader to follow and seemingly, no clear ideological path forward either. This is not…
As Year Four of Our Struggle Begins
As 2015 draws to a close, many of us will be looking back over the year, assessing what has been achieved and deciding what new needs to be done if we are to be more successful in 2016, than we have been in the past. This is a time of year for reflection and for resetting our compass, if we have started drifting off course, and it is the same whether we are considering our…
Some Thoughts on the Corbyn Phenomenon
By Max Musson: Most people from all political persuasions are both surprised and bemused by the election of Jeremy Corbyn to the leadership of the Labour Party, not knowing quite what to think. There are those members of the public who are of a more radical left-wing persuasion who will no doubt be rather pleased by Corbyn’s success and the prospect of being able to vote for a decidedly left-wing prime ministerial candidate at the next…
Death in the Aegean
By Max Musson: This story features a man who recklessly took his wife, who could not swim, together with his two small sons, just three and five years of age, who also could not swim, on a perilous sea journey in a small unseaworthy boat, in a foolish attempt to reach a Greek island and thereby acquire the benefits of European citizenship. There was no need for this family to make such a perilous journey as even though the…
The Effeminization of Politics
By Frederick Dixon: Well, we’ve all seen the photo of that poor little lad washed up on the beach in Turkey, but would we have guessed that it would blow open the gates of Europe? Even if we didn’t, it wouldn’t have taken long for the truth to sink in as the BBC’s crocodile tears department went to work. So cynically has this tragedy been exploited to further the open borders agenda of the Left, that those who…
The Nation and Immigration from the Standpoint of Economics
By Max Musson: For most people the concept of ‘our nation’ is inextricably linked to notions of common ancestry and common cultural heritage, and it is therefore understandable that most people are alarmed or at least concerned by the volume and extent of non-White immigration into Britain and more widely into other European countries from the Third World, primarily Africa and Southern Asia. Governments however have sought to allay this alarm and concern by playing…