Nick Griffin’s hidden agenda

I’m surprised that I’ve never seen the above clip before. I’m equally surprised that it only has just under 9,000 views. This is the kind of evidence that needs to be spread far and wide. Nick Griffin openly declares that the BNP hide behind a soft lexis of propaganda in order to gain popularity. Perhaps more shockingly, he happily reveals his true agenda – a whites-only Britain.

In the video, Griffin imparts BNP spin-tactics. He says:

There’s a difference between selling out your ideas and selling your ideas. The British National Party isn’t about selling out its ideas – which are your ideas too – but we are determined now to sell them. That means to use saleable words

Basically, Griffin has told an audience consisting of David Duke supporters, i.e. racists, that the BNP holds the same views.  He categorically says that the BNP has not changed at its core. It’s still the same fascist National Front that it used to be. Yet the BNP is gaining popularity. Some people are starting believe that they aren’t racist, just realist. They’re falling for the softly-softly BNP spin and being lured in by the buzz-words. Griffin sheds light on their new propaganda tactic:

[selling our ideas] basically means using saleable words…freedom, security, identity, democracy. Nobody can criticise them. Nobody can come at you and attack you on those ideas. They are saleable.

Griffin clearly identifies areas that the BNP can manipulate and distort in order to gain support for the party. The idea that your freedom is at risk from foreign invaders, you should feel insecure because of the risk of terrorism, misrepresenting perceptions of political correctness as erosion of identity and heritage – I could go on. Hyperbole, fear-mongering and scapegoats are the BNP’s biggest weapons.

The man showed that he is intent on duping the public into thinking the BNP holds legitimate views when he said if the BNP is “subtle enough” then they may find themselves in control of the media, and subsequently in a position to brainwash the electorate into wanting the removal of all non-whites from Britain. This is abhorrent, scary and once again highlights that the BNP are not fit to be listed as a political party.

Griffin says:

“If you hold that [fascist policy] out as your sole aim to start with, you’re going to get nowhere.  So, instead of talking about racial purity we talk about identity.”

The evidence just comes through thick and fast. The BNP do not want non-whites in Britain, no matter what they say in the press or on their website. They will use the public’s desperation at our current ruling elite to gain popularity and pursue their hidden motives. The truth lies under the surface as has been proven time and time and time again.

Nick Griffin once said:

Without the white race nothing matters. [Other right-wing parties] believe that the answer to the race question is integration and a futile attempt to create “Black Britons”, while we affirm that non-Whites have no place here at all and will not rest until every last one has left our land.

There’s no room for the BNP in Britain.

Use your box when voting locally.

voteThe upcoming local elections on June 4th may be an interesting reflection of how the public feels about national politics. However, this should not be the case.

 

When coming to vote for a local councillor, many of the population will have the expenses scandal, the economic crisis, settlement rights for Ghurkas and many more issues whizzing around their heads like a swarm of angry locusts, eating away at the rationale of voting in local elections.

 

None of these issues are particularly important at local council level. Yet they may well be the deciding factors when people are ticking the box.

 

Don’t vote for a party, vote for the candidate. If you’re a stalwart Tory but your local Tory candidate is an arse, don’t vote for them. Vote for the most competent candidate that shares your views on local issues. Vote for the candidate that seems most trustworthy and has a loud, clear, representative voice. Independents are more likely to be strong candidates as they are entering politics off their own backs, genuinely wanting action and change with a passion for local issues.

 

The only time you should consider a party when voting locally is the BNP. Anyone who represents the BNP is not a reasonable, straight-thinking individual.

 

The key is research. Read up about each candidate. Contact them personally to ask for more details on their views. Make sure that when you are standing in that booth the decision you make is informed.

 

Forget party politics in local elections.