With local elections looming the Tories have predictably played the race card in an attempt to delude the British public that they are serious about addressing the immigration problem, or as one blog commentator more accurately put it, the colonisation problem. In his recent speech Prime Minister David Cameron stated that immigration has led to “discomfort and disjointednes”. In some parts of Britain local residents would describe the problem in much starker terms.
Needless to say Cameron made the obligatory obeisance to the joys of diversity. He claimed that “our country has benefitted immeasurably from immigration” and that “immigrants make a huge contribution to Britain. We recognise that - and we welcome it”. In fact the benefits from immigration have been minimal. There have been undoubted benefits to our cuisine, and some Asian shopkeepers provide longer opening hours than might have occurred under an entirely indigenous ownership. And that is about it as far as the benefits are concerned.
The downside has been much more comprehensive. There has been racial conflict, gang warfare, local communites have become divided, social cohesion destroyed, wages kept down, criminality has increased, the threat from religious terrorism introduced, and on top of all this there is the raft of equality legislation empowering the state to control what we can do and say. The disadvantages of uncontrolled third world immigration are overwhelming, The British public can see this but the politicians of the major parties are blind to the problem.
If politicans are serious about ending the immigration problem they will need to do the following. Pull out of the European Union so that we can control our borders. Withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights which consistently puts the rights of immigrants above those of the indigenous population. Limit asylum claims to European countries only which was the original intention. Ban all immigration from the third world, in particular the arranged marriages scam in which spouses enter the country from abroad. If Asians here want to continue with this cultural practice they are free to leave this country and settle in their ancestral homelands instead.
If the above necessary measures are all taken the immigration problem can be sorted out relatively quickly. It however does not solve the colonisation problem, which will take much longer to bring under control. Since this is a problem that is fundamentally about race it will require a specifically racial solution. This can only be achieved by offering generous financial inducements to legally resident ethnic minorites to leave the country. Those who are here illegally will need to be removed as at present but with rather more vigour. These measures are necessary since the alternative of national disintegration towards which we are heading is too awful to contemplate. The Tories have consistently failed to address this challenge and David Cameron's recent speech makes no real attempt to do so.
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
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