UKIP ARE launching a £1.5 million poster campaign
for the European elections. The money comes from the millionaire Paul Sykes,
one time Tory supporter and provider; so let us have no nudge-nudge wink-wink references
to his personal wealth from the Tory Daily
Mail; who are even touting for quotes from Labour MPs to do Nigel Farage
and Ukip down.
There
is a grand journalistic alliance between Tory, Liberal, and Labour supporting
papers and media, to finish Farage off. Ideological enemies are uniting to
disparage Ukip's assault on the three main party's social democratic ideology.
We
have even returned to the old use of an old favourite by Ukip's enemies -
'racist'; and according to Dan Hodges writing in the Daily Telegraph, not only racist, but worse than the BNP. This
reincarnation of the term 'racist', an old favourite used against anyone who
opposed the Labour Party unleashing of mass migration from Europe in 2008, has
been, in a Frankenstein sense, re-created.
Now
the political class is running scared, and so scare stories must be created to
make people scared. They have tried insinuating that Farage is a drunk, an
adulterer, and a fraudster. All attempts have failed. So it has now come full
circle and that old favourite of the liberal elite has reared its head once
more.
They
have charged Farage with racism because of one of the posters. I have seen the
posters published in the press; and the only one which, I assume has lead to
charges of racism is the one which has a pointed finger with message "26 million people in Europe are
looking for work. And whose are they after?" Well does this question
merit the racist response?
This
is a message that many ordinary British people will understand - even those who,
out of party loyalty, will vote for the three main parties on May 22nd.
This question is not racist, it is a question millions of ordinary people know
the answer to but are afraid of being branded racist for answering it outside
of their homes or the public house.
To
pretend that the massive influx of migration, whether from within or from
without Europe, has no bearing on the wages of the indigenous population, is
tantamount to burying ones head in the sand. Which I am afraid, for domestic
political reasons, and tribal survival, the press and the three main political
parties are guilty of: and in the few weeks left leading up to the European
elections, do not be surprised if Nigel Farage is being insinuated as
paedophile by the allied press and media.
We
are becoming an overcrowded island. It has nothing to do with racism; although
our complacent elite wish to portray it as such. The Daily Mail does not accuse Ukip of racism, but goes out of its way
to give much comment to those who do, in the hope of damaging Ukip's chances, and
in the hope of improving David Cameron's.
THE OTHER POSTERS, like the one which asks, 'Who really runs this country?' has a
Union flag with its centre set alight to reveal the European flag beneath and
spreading to eventually eliminate the union flag. This is not racist either;
but the truth. This country is being drawn ever closer to European political
and monetary union.
Ever
more of our laws are being questioned by the superior (in the hierarchical
sense) judicial bodies in Europe. Bodies which we have to obey because our
political parties have signed away our sovereignty - is this racism?
Another
poster shows a British worker wearing the safety gear that protects him in his job - yellow safety helmet and a yellow
fluorescent sleeveless vest. He is pictured sitting on the pavement with his
back up against the wall. In front of him sits a cup. He is seeking
contributions from the public, like some busker. The slogan reads 'EU policy at work. British workers are hit
hard by unlimited cheap labour' - is this racist?
ALL UKIP are trying to do is warn the people of this
country that their ruling elite are set upon this nation becoming part of a
United States of Europe. It has nothing to do with race, but culture and numbers.
Numbers which have already made their impact on our schools, housing, the NHS,
and welfare. It is about numbers not 'foreigners'.
Our
business community welcome the avalanche; for it offers them the chance to pay
wages lower than even the minimum wage; our liberal middle classes welcome this
invasion for the same reason - cheap
domestic cleaners and household servants.
Ukip
are not racist. Rather the liberal elite are, along with many businessmen, in
the market for cheap labour; and it seems that, in reality, it is all they care
about: and anyone who opposes them are the racists. This is no longer about
party, for the three main ones are basically the same . I have a test for the
British press. How many of their journalists have hired a domestic worker from
outside of this country? How many BBC workers have done the same?
Dan
Hodges's racist charges and Fascist comparisons with the BNP made against Ukip,
diminishes him as a journalist who wishes his opinions to be taken seriously.
He is the Telegraphs token Lefty who the paper thinks it needs to employ for
the sake of journalistic equilibrium. His piece however, is the work of a blatherskite.
Nigel
Farage is certainly getting under the skin of all the main parties and their
hangers on - especially the political journalists, who have an unhealthy
relationship - if not a dependency - on the main parties. They are like those
little fish who follow the sharks around the ocean finding sustenance by riding
on and nibbling their backs. It is a symbiotic relationship which the lobby
journalists in particular would not like to see disturbed in any way.
Farage
will still have good European election; and I will tell those journalists why.
They could discover that Farage was responsible for 9/11, but it would not make
any difference. Those who support Ukip and are turning to them are fed up with
the current political- media set-up. They loath the obfuscation, corruption,
and mendacity of the political class and the bottom feeders of the lobby system.
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