Saturday 23 November 2019

GENERAL ELECTION 2019: All the Fake Choices You Can Imagine

So Atifa Shah, the Labour Party's latest in a long line of Muslim high-fliers, has defected to the Conservative Party in time for the general election next month. As well she might; after all, she wants to be on the winning side. And of course she stands for true conservative values; after all, she wants to conserve Muslim traditions and never misses an opportunity to push the Muslim agenda. Just as she stood for Labour's socialist values of looking after minority groups, particularly ones from backgrounds that are ethnically other; after all, she wants to look after her own community and this is all very noble. We ought to do likewise. She has been at the forefront of the promotion of women, yet has had little to say on the subject matter of Muslim Asian gangs raping and prostituting young white girls in her constituency of Rochdale, as might be expected, although all this seems to be in line with the policies of both parties she has represented.

 

 

 

There has been quite a lot of politicians shuffling from one party to another of late. In September, Philip Lee crossed the floor to join the Liberal Democrats because he felt that abiding by a public referendum was somehow undemocratic. He will fit right in with the commitment to integrity shown by that party. As a testament to his pulling power, he was swiftly joined by two Independent girls, Luciana Berger and Angela Smith, who had resigned from the Labour Party in February because Jeremy Corbyn was not doing enough for the Jews, which was in Berger's own interest. Berger does a lot for Jewish causes and has been Director of Labour Friends of Israel and a committee member of the London Jewish Forum. They were followed in turn by Sam Gyimah, an ethnic Ghanaian who had previously been a Conservative, presumably for reasons of diversity.

 

Ann Widdicombe is now with the Brexit Party after decades in the Conservative Party, although in this case such political transvesticism might well be understandable given the Conservative Party's Leftward drift over the decades. Widdicombe has always been vehemently against the LGBT agenda, which is why she has joined a party fielding two 'transgender' candidates in the next general election: 'Jessica' Swift in the Grantham and Stamford constituency and 'Rachel' Warby in the South Northamptonshire constituency. It just goes to show how much Nigel Farage values those traditional British values of tolerance, equality, diversity, unisex toilets and quotas for minority groups. He has entered into a pact with the Conservative Party not to stand Brexit Party candidates in existing Conservative seats. The excuse given for standing these candidates is to put pressure on Boris Johnson to deliver Brexit, but is this really true?

 

The fact is that the Brexit Party appeals to the same demographic as the Conservative Party in falsely portraying itself as the party of traditional values. There are therefore several possible scenarios to come out of the general election. The first is the obvious one: they split the vote in constituencies where the Conservatives have a chance of winning. From this, there are four further realistic possibilities: Labour win; a weak Conservative government is formed like the one we have now that has no power to do anything; a coalition of anti-Brexit parties is formed to take government; a coalition of the Brexit Party and Conservatives is formed. In scenarios one and three, obviously we can expect to remain in the European Union and proceed with full-force Freudo-Marxist SJW politics. In scenario two, Brexit will continue to be delayed indefinitely and we will continue with radical liberalism. In scenario four, we will exit the EU and continue with radical liberalism.

 

And this is the whole point, as you may have gathered from the ironic stories above: it does not matter who gets into power or whether we leave the EU or not; the choice, ideologically, politically and philosophically, is the same one we have had for many years, between Freudo-Marxist communism and radical liberalism, both of which have converged to such a point where it is all but impossible to distiguish the one from the other. These supposedly important choices are nothing of the sort, yet they are aggrandised as such by that bunch of low-calibre thespians known as politicians. How much immigration is up for debate between the parties, but not the ethnicity of immigrants; neither is a halt to immigration, let alone reversing the tide of immigration. Laws regarding LGBT are now set in stone with no party wishing to reverse the revolution of the last sixty years. And so on.

 

 

 

Several of my Faceberg friends have invested themselves in the Brexit Party. It is a dead end. It is Conservative Party 2.0 and may actually prove to be even more liberal than Boris Johnson's present incarnation of that party. In addition to the tranny candidates, the Brexit Party is fielding plenty of non-Whites (including in relatively diversity-free areas), such as Danyaal Raja in the Glasgow South constituency, Jimi Ogunnusi in Bath and Andrew Stewart in Doncaster North. I have mentioned before about Farage's pledge to replace EU immigration with Commonwealth immigration. One of my Faceberg friends even unfriended me recently for pointing out how liberal the Brexit Party really is. Frankly, putting one's faith in a failed stockbroker like Nigel Farage to look after the country is like asking a BBC employee to look after the kids.

 

I know I say this time and again, but until people stop trying to find the next '#ourguy' or putting an X next to a party that mumbles something about possibly reducing immigration a little bit and maybe being a bit tougher on crime, we are not going to get very far. Farage has always been part of the establishment. As I keep repeating: real opposition is not demonised in the media, it is blacked out by the media. This is why parties like the British Democratic Party and National Front are never given air time or page space. You can do your bit by promoting them, helping them and voting for them.

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