The time to stand tall is now
February 29, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Scottish Secretary
We in Scotland have not seen anything yet! The invasion of our country has begun in earnest and the political correct elite stands by and does nothing. We all see it every day foreign voices surround us our schools are slowly filling with foreign faces our jobs are taken by foreign workers the roads are at deadlock the health service failing under the shear weight of numbers our houses occupied, our villages, towns, cities and country will follow, our very religion is being replaced, we are becoming displaced in what IS OUR HOMELAND and what are you prepared to do about it?
We have to spread our message of hope to the people so cowed by forty years of political correct oppression that over half no longer vote, and let them know it is not racist to say stop immigration it is common sense. We have to let them know where we stand and this is what the new BNP Scotland leaflet aims to do.
Every member can do their bit by leafleting their street; block of flats, estate, village, 10, 100, 1000 leaflets every single one could possibly lead to a new member or at least a new voter.
If every member delivered a 1000 leaflets that would put our message into half a million Scottish homes. Groups in every area would soon begin to spring up as the people are finally woken, enclosed with this news pack is 10 copies of the leaflet go out today and put them through your neighbours doors then order your 1000 copies and start spreading the word.
Make no mistake time is running out for our people if not you, who? If not now, when?
Gary Raikes
BNP Scottish Secretary
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The Harlequin Ladybird
February 29, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Latest News
The most invasive ladybird on Earth has arrived in Scotland.
Harmonia axyridis originally from eastern Asia spread rapidly across north-western Europe and was first spotted in the south east of England Sept. 2004. It may have hitched a ride up here with tourists or come in with imported plants and flowers both are plausible vectors. It was only a matter of time before this alien predator turned up elsewhere in the UK, and they are now in Perthshire and Orkney. The assault on Scotland has begun.
Harlequin ladybirds have a rapacious appetite and are fond of aphids but having consumed all they can find will soon turn to other things. These include the young of our own native species of ladybird, (of which there are about 43), and the eggs and caterpillars of moths and butterflies.
When the Harlequin was first reported in England specialists warned that some of our more unusual species of ladybird could disappear within ten years, but it?s not only the rarer species now under threat, all are endangered. Harlequins tend to aggregate in winter and hibernate in dwellings, tens of thousands have been found in people?s homes waiting for favourable conditions to breed and hence go forth to make possible their conquest.
If the inexorable advancement of the Harlequin is not contained it could decimate our butterfly and moth population, it also bites humans and damages soft fruit, in short it?s an unfriendly pest. Organisation Buglife Scotland a conservation trust is intensely concerned about the situation and has called for government action to eradicate the ladybird.
Their aims are threefold.
1. If at all possible, to exterminate the Harlequin ladybird.
2. To join American research efforts to find a long-term solution to the problem.
3. To work in the EU to secure better bio-security for the continent.
The case of the Harlequin ladybird, however, is not a unique occurrence. Many examples abound where the introduction of a new or alien species, accidental or deliberate, has been ecologically devastating to the native residents.
Everyone must be familiar with news relating to the expanding numbers of grey squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) throughout the UK. Directly because of this increase the native red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) is in drastic decline. Greys compete with reds for food and shelter, and also spread the squirrel- poxvirus. Greys are immune to this disease, but it kills the reds. Attempts have been made to produce and establish a sort of immuno-contraceptive into the grey squirrel population, supposedly to attack their reproductive systems, alas it failed, and an effective vaccine according to Defra is at least ten years away. Meanwhile the reds have fled to the extremities of the country. There are a few in Northumberland and a few more in Scotland. Another disturbing detail is that it?s not possible to reintroduce the red squirrel into a grey squirrel region since they are easily out-competed or else become infected and die.
Plant life also has its foreign aggressors. Non-native invasive plants are the second most significant threat to our native plants after habitat destruction. Noteworthy is the Spanish Bluebell (Hyacinthoides hispanica). It hybridises with our native bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) causing a loss of genetic distinctiveness. The Spanish variety is not as delicately beautiful as our own bluebell and has no perfume. Surveys reveal one out of six woodland sites to be infected.
Another problem plant is New Zealand Pigmy Weed (Crassula helmsii), which is semi-aquatic. Just a minute fragment of this virulent species can regrow and multiply into a dense mat of vegetation. When introduced to a site it becomes the dominant species within three to five years destroying bio-diversity and choking up ponds and waterways. The cost of removing Crassula from ponds in the New Forest in 2002 was a staggering £110.000. Its sale in Scotland is banned in fact the Conservation (Scotland) Act 2004 has banned the sale of quite a number of plants which pose a danger to the environment and is presently engaged in lobbying the government with the intension to include legislation for England and Wales. Well done Scotland, we never did take kindly to being invaded.
Could there be a correspondence emerging here? Often within the science of Ecology in general and Population Dynamics in particular there is a remarkable tendency to leave mankind out of the picture. The examples above illustrate what inevitably occurs when there is competition for resources and territory, yet our theories and hypotheses are seldom directed towards ourselves. We evolved through natural selection just like ladybirds, squirrels and bluebells and therefore cannot be left out of the equation. We are subject to the same forces and behavioural predispositions. What is happening all around us all the time in the ?animal and plant kingdom? is happening to us too. We, the native population, are under threat from dwindling resources, lack of space, disease and dilution of the gene pool. Whilst remedial action is undertaken to some extent on behalf of other species there appears to be no such assistance for our native variety of Homo sapiens. We must mobilise before it?s too late? join the BNP now to battle trespassers, invaders and embryonic (at the moment) dominant species.
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BNP’s website ‘the most popular in politics’
February 18, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Latest News
A recent study shows that the main British National Party website is the most visited on the web for 2007.
The BNP secured 51% of all internet visits to party websites in the UK. Seven times more than the online pages run by Labour and the Liberal Democrats. It was also twice as popular as the Conservative’s main website.
You can read more about the report on the Daily Mail website.
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The RUSI Report
February 16, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Latest News
With such honourable credentials it is not easy to comprehend how the government could reject any of the conclusions made in the most recent statement by The Royal United Services Institute.
Or, indeed, reject any of its proposals for the implementation of superior security policies to replace the ones presently in position. Yet our supercilious, deceitful, cynical and lying regime has done just that.
Entitled ‘Risk, Threat and Security’ the report plainly states what it sees before its eyes and has long been obvious to any UK citizen not brainwashed by the inseparable Siamese twins of political correctness and multiculturalism.
The report says that we are in ‘… a state of war with a peacetime mentality’ and have lost not only our ‘national confidence’, but also our ‘national identity’, chipped at and eroded deliberately by the lib-lab-cons since the end of the war. Like anything persistently hammered at the result is disintegration. It mentions the ‘fragmentation of society’, coupled with a ‘post Christian’ culture. The upshot being that faced with the pitiless and relentless march of Islam, we are no longer able to resist. Rowan Williams has given up already! In contrast, however, the immigrant population (whose name we dare not speak) the community who refuses to integrate, the culture that is religiously united and has a sturdy self- image, is gaining in strength, influence and numbers as we speak. Together with their hatred of the West this leaves the United Kingdom in a position of being what the report calls ‘a soft touch (*for terrorist activity) from without and within’.
My parenthesis.
Our government, the report continues, has made this problem worse by failing to ‘lay down the line’ to immigrant communities, in other words continual appeasement has encouraged not lessened the threat we currently face from this rabid medieval cult of death. Give ‘em an inch and they think they’re rulers!
For the most part then the government has dismissed this evidence about the state of our nation from RUSI. Their denial is simply staggering. One wonders just how long they will be able to keep it up. Of course they have their little helpers like the BBC for instance. This august body who continually deny the BNP a platform and pursue positive discrimination wherever they can might do the country a favour by airing some of the BNP’s policies as an antidote to the situation RUSI has outlined.
1. Immigration - time to say enough.
2. Europe - back to British independence.
3. Foreign aid - time to spend money on our own people.
4. Defence - no more cuts.
5. Democracy - letting the people decide.
These are solid guiding principles and the BNP is the only party in the UK likely to rescue our national pride and integrity from the gutter where it was left along with our flag.
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Multiculturalism is making Britain ‘a soft touch for terrorists’
February 15, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Latest News
Britain has become a soft touch for terrorists, leading defence experts warn today.
The world-renowned Royal United Services Institute has delivered an unprecedented attack on the Government’s security policy. It warns that a failure to ‘lay down the line’ to immigrant populations is undermining the fight against domestic extremism. It condemns the country’s ‘fragmented’ national identity and obsession with multiculturalism. It also accuses ministers of a ‘piecemeal and erratic response’ to urgent threats to the nation and of starving the armed forces of cash to the point of ‘chronic disrepair’.
This has come across the UK like tide slowly creeping over every part of our country. The longer it is allowed to go on the quicker its flow becomes. It’s time to stop this torrent that will soon turn into a tsuanmi before it sweeps over the whole of the UK. It’s now time Scotland woke up to to this problem before its to late to stop the tide. Forget the SNP join the BNP that puts Britsh people first!
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Nationalism and Nostalgia
February 14, 2008 by
News Team)
Filed under Latest News
Is there something essentially incorrect about being a nationalist?
It means that you love your country. When the said country you love commences to become unrecognisable, however, and what went before in that country appears to be a better place then than it is now, nostalgia for how we once were becomes inseparable from nationalism. Nationalism and nostalgia are both highly unfashionable in Britain’s politically correct climate today, so much so in fact, that any expression of such values are ridiculed, demonised, and worse still, can turn you into a fugitive of the law.
This is a consequence of post- modern relativism; a malevolent set of guidelines insisting all cultures and creeds should be viewed as being equally as worthy as each other regardless of location or context. Here’s the catch though, the indigenous society is required to embrace it, endorse it, and give way to it, all at it’s own expense. Relativism is rewriting history in our schools, threatening to replace democracy with theocracy, and constantly elevating the minority above the majority whilst simultaneously instilling a sense of shame to be British into the native population.
Nostalgia, we are led to believe, implies romanticizing the past. You are not permitted to do such a thing these days for fear of being labelled ‘naff’, or even racist. Yet many are the instances when the media seems to acknowledge a need within the public domain for wistful reminiscence. In order perhaps to boost viewing numbers. Take the new drama ‘Larkrise to Candleford’ for instance. Where are the blacks, Asians, Somalis, and illegal immigrants? This series is unadulterated nostalgia for a time long gone.
Could the BBC be accused of promoting double standards by producing a program such as this on one hand, whilst at the same time their news desks continually fail to report escalating incidents of black on white racism? A quick trawl each day on the Internet through the local rags will demonstrate this claim to be accurate. http://www.uktabloid.co.uk-main%20.news.html/ is a particularly comprehensive source of information. Have a look and follow the links.
Can nationalism exist independently of nostalgia or vice versa? I don’t think it’s possible because as a technique for living within and through history nationalism requires a particular understanding of the correlation between the present and the past. Nostalgia is important and necessary, especially now as our government over the last ten years has attempted wipe the black (oops sorry!) chalk board clean.
For a nation to live and thrive it must celebrate it’s past not denounce it as shameful. We must recognise that those who lived in ‘other days’ whose traditions, political beliefs, and even verbal communication may at first glance appear unfamiliar were members of the same community… that ‘they’ were in fact us… the Scottish, English, Welsh, and Irish. Our islands, our people, our heritage.
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