Hackney North & Stoke Newington - where feminist writer, Guardian and Mail on Sunday columnist Suzanne Moore is standing as an Independent - seems to be a microcosm of Britain. Ethnically diverse and trendy through gentrification though increasingly subject to the disorder and degeneracy produced by liberal policies, which includes in its long list of victims the very people liberalism was meant to protect: the poor of all races.
No education, no future.
Progressive education equals no education.
Soft policing means more crime.
Since no one expects a BNP MP to be elected in any borough other than Barking & Dagenham, all a BNP candidate has to do is be seen to defeat candidates who represent
1. feminism
2. liberalism
3. more taxes in the name of preventing climate change
It would be an excellent opportunity to appeal to the middle class voter as well as those whom the BNP now call the Civic British.
The BNP is planning to stand in Bethnal Green and Bow, but this would tend to take votes away from an excellent Muslim candidate there who supports "BNP-lite" policies, Hasib Hikmat.
http://www.unitedvoice.org.uk/object.html
It would be a lovely story if the BNP and a Muslim could do a deal on this one and together unite to more loudly denounce the liberal policies that have wreaked so much damage on the British of all races.
The idea of a BNP candidate giving his endorsement to a Muslim candidate in a constituency he is not contesting so that he can concentrate his energies on Hackney - which was where the BNP has its historical roots - would be a brave move.
REASONS FOR THE BNP TO STAND IN BETHNAL GREEN
1. The white working classes of Bethnal Green and Bow have no white candidate at all to vote for. All the candidates are Muslim.
2. Bethnal Green is more likely to give a BNP candidate a respectable vote, while venturing into the liberal stronghold of Hackney is high-risk.
REASONS FOR THE BNP TO STAND IN HACKNEY NORTH
1. The publicity generated by such a BNP raid on enemy territory would be heartening for those who wish for the return of the death penalty as a solution to dealing with the increasing numbers of criminal and murderous youth. Calling for the death penalty after the callous shooting of Agnes Sina-Inakoju last Wednesday would be a more constructive way of showing sympathy for her and those who grieve for her than yet more liberal handwringing by Suzanne Moore and her unbelievably fatuous suggestion that teaching feral youth in secondary schools that shooting people is wrong would end gun crime!
2. Challenging Green policies would also be pleasing to climate change deniers.
3. Being seen to be doing a deal with a Muslim would have a massive impact on the public perception of the BNP nationwide. Muslims and the BNP have one important thing in common anyway - their opposition to the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan. For the BNP to be seen to be soliciting the Muslim bloc vote will send out all sorts of nuanced yet reassuring messages to Muslims.
Of course such a challenge would require a candidate of exceptional quality and rare courage.
For a BNP candidate with no hope of becoming MP what should be the most rational consideration is the amount of local and national interest such a BNP candidate would generate, rather than how many votes he would get, because he cannot hope to win in either.
The majority of poor people irrespective of race in a high-crime neighbourhood would support the death penalty. Indeed, they may even support a BNP candidate if this is what he offers them what in fact amounts to
a referendum on the death penalty
and
a vote against Green policies of yet more taxation and regulation
Should a BNP candidate stand in Bethnal Green just to give the white working classes of Bethnal Green a white non-Muslim candidate to vote for, to show them that they have not been abandoned?
Which constituency should a BNP candidate stand in - Bethnal Green & Bow or Hackney North & Stoke Newington, if he could only choose one?
Which borough would make a better story for the media?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EeQeCfWwLUI&feature=related atmospheric photos set to rap about Da Murder Mile in Hackney and its surrounds. Coming to somewhere near you soon?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-13051697 Footage of the cycle-by shooting.
2 comments:
What a glorious picture.
These gang-related deaths provide us with so much contemporary popular art, I think.
All the flowers and teddy bears and spelling mistakes.
And how wonderful to die so young if you live in place like Hackney, as opposed to living a lifetime on benefits or dying in poverty and misery and disappointment.
All the friends who leave flowers wish they could go too at such a young age, I bet.
Andromeda cleverly delineates the characters of these two adjoining boroughs and the somewhat different ways they are affected by both immigration and gentrification.
Certainly if any area deserves hard-line, zero tolerance policies on drugs and crime it is Hackney – for liberalism is literally killing people there, such as poor Agnes Sina-Inakoju last Wednesday.
For this reason I hope that George Hargreaves' Christian Party will one day attempt to make a serious impact in Hackney.
Blacks will vote for a black candidate and - at root - they long for moral certainty and tough law and order policies.
The BNP would promote similar policies, but if they stood in Hackney they would only get a tiny vote because they are perceived by the blacks and liberal middle classes as racist.
Of course it may well be – as Andromeda suggests - that by standing in Bethnal Green & Bow the BNP would gain votes from those who are wondering why every single other candidate – Labour, Liberal Democrat, Conservative, Respect and United Voice derives from Bangladesh rather than Britain.
The Bengali population there is actually 40% - not 100%.
But perhaps the major parties understand that whereas white British people do not necessarily vote according to biological determinism, blacks and Muslims usually do - when they are given the option.
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