Monday, March 26, 2007

We are still swimming in shit!

First there was the 300 Spartans, then Spartacus! Now The Sparky, all freedom fighters par excellence!

I have had to change the title infill as the treacherous Noddy Blair and the fat incompetent bastards that surrounded him have taken the money and ran, as so will he very soon! He will be on the run with the rest of the most wanted Criminal and Political Traitor Outlaws in British History. They have struck a death knell to that we might never recover from! Unchecked mass immigration and phoney asylum invasions has seen White flight, terrorism and violent crime rise to unprecedented levels. As the UK fragments into many different racial and cultural bastions of hopelessness and urban decay, those who fought against another big brother dictator not so long ago wonder why all this has been allowed to happen! THEY NO LONGER RECOGNISE THEIR HOMELAND, A HOMELAND THEY FOUGHT VALIANTLY FOR! WALK AROUND ANY CITY OR LARGE TOWN YOU CANNOT POSSIBLE SAY THEY AND WE THEIR OFFSPRING HAVE NOT BEEN BETRAYED!



http://300spartanwarriors.com/300spartanswebsites/websites.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Thermopylae

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spartacus

http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/slavesandslavery/a/spartacus.htm

http://www.vroma.org/~bmcmanus/spartacus.html



The UK has not only to worry about so-called (British) Islamic Muslim Terrorists!
50 years of unchecked immigration has left a malignant and indelible mark on British society! These non-indigenous children and grandchildren as well as those that arrive daily bring their own contribution to a society that has no resemblance to the one our own Native parents and grandparents lived in!!!


DAILY EXPRESS - 19/02/2007, Leo McKinstry Daily Express columnist How gun thugs become the role model for boys without a stable family LEADER THE Government may be dismal at running the country but it is brilliant at political manipulation. After the explosion of lethal violence in London and Manchester, Tony Blair is now promising yet another "crackdown" on Britain's growing gun culture. Among his proposed measures are more powers for the police and long prison sentences for teenagers caught with firearms. At present, mandatory five-year jail terms for gun possession can be imposed only on those aged 21 and older. Blair said yesterday that he wants that age limit lowered to 17. But he is aiming at the wrong target. Tinkering with the law might grab him a few favourable headlines but it will do nothing to reduce the disturbing incidence of urban shootings. For the real problem lies not with the guns but with the people who use them. In Britain today we have a section of society that is utterly divorced from the traditional standards of civilised behaviour, one that regards thuggery, drug-dealing, intimidation and extortion as normal lifestyle choices. Embroiled in gang violence, unfazed by the idea of murder, these brutes are hardly likely to be deterred by Blair's minor legislative changes. His pledges are all the more unconvincing, given that his Government has so badly weakened the present criminal justice system. Early release schemes mean sentencing policy has become a farce, with most convicts serving only a fraction of their allotted terms.


SO BLAIR'S rhetoric yesterday about locking up young gunholders for five years is just more meaningless New Labour verbiage. In any case, Britain already has some of the most draconian gun laws in the Western world, yet they have proved ineffectual in the face of the new breed of gangsters. Since 1996, when a far tighter regulatory regime was introduced following the Dunblane massacre, the gun crime rate has actually doubled. If strong firearms laws were the answer, Britain would be the safest country in Europe and the most dangerous would be Switzerland, where it is compulsory for men of military service age to possess a gun. Our leaders should have the courage to face the real issue: the crisis of morality and authority among young men from the African and Caribbean communities.
Thanks to multi-culturalism, it has become almost taboo to suggest any link between black youths and crime but the hard facts cannot be denied. African and Caribbean men make up only around one per cent of the total British population but are responsible for almost 90 per cent of gun crime and 25 per cent of the robberies. They are also disproportionately involved in the drugs trade and prostitution. While politicians, police chiefs and the media tiptoe around these realities, some courageous blacks are willing to address the problem.


The singer Ms Dynamite, in a recent public statement against gang violence, said: "It is time for the community to stop living up to stereotypes." And the American preacher and Democrat Jesse Jackson punctured liberal-Left complacency with this remark: "There is nothing more painful than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about street robbery, then to look around and see someone white and feel relieved." But even now, after four murders in London and three shootings in Manchester in the last fortnight, the terror of accusations of racism has led to a reluctance to challenge the violent, drug-fuelled brutality of Afro-Caribbean street culture. Instead, young black males involved in gangs are painted as helpless victims, driven to pick up a weapon because of deprivation and prejudice. So a white thug killing a black teenager is - rightly - treated as an act of abhorrent savagery but a black thug killing a black teenager is portrayed as a cry for help. "A lot of these kids on the estates don't have any hope, " claims Lyn Costello, the cofounder of Mothers Against Murder and Aggression, adding the inevitable demand for more money from the Government to help children in deprived areas.


If poverty really caused gang warfare why was there so little crime in Britain in the Thirties during an era of mass unemployment and limited state welfare? The answers lie elsewhere. The crisis of young black masculinity is caused not by economic disadvantage but by the near-collapse in stable family life, by the glamorisation of guns and violence through rap videos and music and by the growing prevalence of drug use. IT IS not a form of racism to say this. Indeed, one of the most eloquent chroniclers of this crisis is Shaun Bailey, a black youth worker from west London, who persuasively argues that for black boys who grow up without positive male role models, the peer pressure of the gang becomes a substitute for adult discipline.


Our politicians must stop pretending that this problem does not exist. It is no use hiding behind the failed dogma of multi-culturalism, frightened to uphold the basic tenets of civilisation because of an anxiety about offending ethnic minority sensibilities. We do not need more laws. We need the police to enforce the present ones, dropping their present neurosis about cultural diversity. We need to smash the gangs instead of appeasing them with endless "community" projects and grants. We need a genuinely tough approach to drugs. And the black communities must take a central role in this effort, dumping the sense of victimhood and replacing it with a genuine sense of responsibility for rebuilding civic bonds and rooting out the trouble-makers. Such social responsibility is one of the duties of living in a democratic society.