Friday 29 June 2012

a despicable Marxist event


 the halal method 
just like to bring you the labour Islam event in stoke on Trent this will now prove we the bnp have being right for so long this proves without a doubt that labour are doing what they do best its happen in Birmingham and London and now in my home city of stoke on Trent one of my colleagues wards has being leafleted with this vile unjust leaflet  as the labour Muslim council are trying to educate the people on the demonic religion of Islam now what kind of religion would allow stoning  people beheading of  people  slaughtering of  animals by means of slitting the poor defenseless animals throat (halal) child sex grooming the list goes on and now we have it here in stoke what next is this labour held council going do heres the event advertisement taken from the local paper

the one above is pinned to a wall and the small sign is tied to a lamp post i wonder how much this Muslim labour held council as payed  for these oh sorry they haven't payed we have the soft tax payers i personally witness the lord mayor of stoke on Trent and several labour councilors going to this event  now this should tell the people of this once great city something that the labour party is now the Muslim run labour party and that they will do what ever these Muslims want

Sunday 24 June 2012

update on the labour councilor

just a update on the labour councilor who beat is girlfriend up he is now on a harassment charge a rightly so but he still remains a part of labour hope not hate should be diving all over this seems they leaflet amd protect labour so why aren't they i wonder


Restraining order for Councillor Thomas Lawton in harassment case

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Saturday, June 23, 2012
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LABOUR councillor Thomas Lawton has been ordered to stay away from a woman he was accused of harassing.
The 21-year-old was handed a five-year restraining order at North Staffordshire Magistrates' Court following complaints by Melissa Hampton.
  1. Thomas Lawton
    Thomas Lawton represents Silverdale and Parksite on Newcastle Borough Council.
Deputy District Judge David Miller warned Mr Lawton he could be jailed if he attempted to contact Ms Hampton again.
Mr Lawton, who represents Silverdale and Parksite on Newcastle Borough Council, has now resigned from chairing the authority's Labour group.
He was charged with harassment after sending Ms Hampton a series of texts on April 13.
He had previously received a warning and a formal caution from the police after earlier complaints of harassment.
The texts Mr Lawton sent related to a request for a mobile phone to be returned.
Prosecutor Ian Pinkney said: "There were five messages over the course of 40 minutes, where he was trying to satisfy a query about a phone. This was the last straw for the complainant. She'd had enough. There had been police warnings and a caution."
But Judge Miller ruled that the series of texts on that particular day did not amount to a course of conduct and dismissed the charges against Mr Lawton.
But he said a restraining order to prevent any further harassment would be appropriate in this case.
The order, which will be in force until 2017, bars Mr Lawton from contacting Ms Hampton, directly or indirectly, in person, by phone, or electronically.
Breaching a restraining order is a criminal offence which can result in a prison sentence.
Judge Miller said: "The charges against you have been dismissed. But do not think I am approving what you did on April 13. Sending those text messages about the return of some property may not have been a bad thing to do, but you had been warned by police that your conduct amounted to harassment.
"If there is any further contact you will be in breach of this restraining order. It will also mean that this conduct will be brought up again.
"I am satisfied you have been guilty of causing harassment to Melissa Hampton. There is a need to protect her from further harassment. If you have to contact her again it must be through a solicitor."
Mr Lawton, of Droitwich Close, Silverdale, was elected to the borough council last May.
A spokesman for West Midlands Labour Party said: "Councillor Lawton has stood down as vice-chairman of the licensing committee and as chairman of the Labour group, for personal reasons."
Council leader and Labour group leader Gareth Snell declined to comment further.

Saturday 23 June 2012

the british goverment knew all along

just a short video about the holocaust now its interesting really because by what hate no hope and the uaf say we are suppose to be holocaust deniers and I'm a bnp member and I'm watching this now if there are any uaf hope not hate members that read my blog please i would love to hear what you have to say about this one the words are THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT yes labour/conservatives knew all along what was going on and they sat back and did nothing they allow millions of innocent people to die and did nothing so next time you have the audacity to call us holocaust deniers remember this they knew all along please enjoy the video please follow the link below or please look on YouTube for the forgotten evidence of Auschwitz   





the battle of rorkes drift it reminds me of stoke on Trent

lt gonville bromhead 
the battle of Rorkes drift also known as the defense of  Rorkes drift lead by lieutenant john chard of the royal engineers immediately followed\ the British defeat at the battle of isandlwana on 22 January 1879 and continued into the following day 23 January 150 British and colonial troops successfully defended the garrison against an intense assault by 3,000 - 4,000 Zulu warriors these warriors came close to defeating this small unit of troops  rorkes drift known as kwajim (jimsland )  in the Zulu language it was a mission station and former trading post of James rorke 

DEFENSIVE PREPARATION

once the British found out that they faced such a large force of native Zulu warriors they made preparations to defend the station with the garrison some 400 men working quickly to construct a defensive perimeter near completion chard posted the force around the perimeter plus adding some of the abled patients from the hospital ward arming them with rifles posted at points along side the biscuit box barricade the Zulus consisted of  men from 3 different forces udloko uthulwana indlondo amabutho regiments at the end of battle the British lost 14 dead 2 others mortally wounded and 8 more seriously wounded the Zulu lost around the amount of 351 bodies were counted and at least 500 wounded and captured the amount of ammunition used was 20,000 rounds only 900 remained at the end of battle now these troops fought with gallantry and they stood there ground like true British men and these men received the Victoria cross for what they did

Awarded the Victoria Cross:[49]
In 1879 there was no provision for the posthumous granting of the Victoria Cross, and so it could not be awarded to anyone who had died in performing an act of bravery. In light of this, an unofficial 'twelfth VC' may be added to those listed: Private Joseph Williams, B Coy, 2nd/24th Foot, who was killed during the fight in the hospital and for whom it was mentioned in despatches that "had he lived he would have been recommended for the Victoria Cross"


now i see it as we in Stoke on Trent  bnp are faced in much the same situation surrounded by labour party  and its ethnic  voters we as these troops who fought in this battle will not give in  we will carry on fighting in the same gallant way we  will stand our ground and we will defend whats is our land and  our country





Sunday 10 June 2012

a absolute brilliant day in Blackpool



a very wet day in Blackpool turned out to be a brilliant day for all nationalists of all different groups and a successful one at that we the nationalist bared what was a really wet day so that we could get Charlene downes and the other girls that have being touched and murdered  by these vile disgusting pedophiles justice now i no that not every Muslim is the same but the ones that are doing this should be dealt with not just the Muslims ones but any pedophile whether they are white black Asian Muslim should face hanging plus any person or organisation that sympathies with these people ( hate no hope-uaf )lets face it its not just happening to white girls its happening to Sikh black white and the political establishment allow this to happen and nothing gets done  but if it was a Muslim girl my god there would be investigations compensation you name they would get it it would be in every newspaper on every channel on TV all we have to do is look at the Stephen Lawrence case on that there's our proof  but one thing hes was black not white that's the difference but the fight will go on and we will be victorious and we   will get justice above is the leaflet from the demo


Sunday 3 June 2012

deep respect to all that served in all the wars


'This isn't the Britain we fought for,' say the 'unknown warriors' of WWII

By TONY RENNELL
Sarah Robinson was just a teenager when World War II broke out. 
She endured the Blitz, watching for fires during Luftwaffe air raids armed with a bucket of sand. 
Often she would walk ten miles home from work in the blackout, with bombs falling around her. 
As soon as she turned 18, she joined the Royal Navy to do her bit for the war effort. 
Soldiers
Some WWII soldiers, and families of those lost in the war, have complained society today shows no sign of the effort they made to help
Hers was a small part in a huge, history-making enterprise, and her contribution epitomises her generation's sense of service and sacrifice.
Nearly 400,000 Britons died. Millions more were scarred by the experience, physically and mentally. 
But was it worth it? Her answer - and the answer of many of her contemporaries, now in their 80s and 90s - is a resounding No. 
 
They despise what has become of the Britain they once fought to save. It's not our country any more, they say, in sorrow and anger.
Sarah harks back to the days when 'people kept the laws and were polite and courteous. We didn't have much money, but we were contented and happy. 
'People whistled and sang. There was still the United Kingdom, our country, which we had fought for, our freedom, democracy. But where is it now?!'
Royal Navy
Sarah Robinson, who joined the Royal Navy when she was 18, says the Britain she once knew no longer exists
The feelings of Sarah and others from this most selfless generation about the modern world have been recorded by a Tyneside writer, 33-year-old Nicholas Pringle.
Curious about his grandmother's generation and what they did in the war, he decided three years ago to send letters to local newspapers across the country asking for those who lived through the war to write to him with their experiences. 
He rounded off his request with this question: 'Are you happy with how your country has turned out? What do you think your fallen comrades would have made of life in 21st-century Britain?'
What is extraordinary about the 150 replies he received, which he has now published as a book, is their vehement insistence that those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the war would now be turning in their graves. 
There is the occasional bright spot - one veteran describes Britain as 'still the best country in the world' - but the overall tone is one of profound disillusionment.
'I sing no song for the once-proud country that spawned me,' wrote a sailor who fought the Japanese in the Far East, 'and I wonder why I ever tried.'
'My patriotism has gone out of the window,' said another ex-serviceman.
In the Mail this week, Gordon Brown wrote about 'our debt of dignity to the war generation'. 
But the truth that emerges from these letters is that the survivors of that war generation have nothing but contempt for his government. 
They feel, in a word that leaps out time and time again, 'betrayed'.
New Labour, said one ex-commando who took part in the disastrous Dieppe raid in which 4,000 men were lost, was 'more of a shambles than some of the actions I was in during the war, and that's saying something!'
He added: 'Those comrades of mine who never made it back would be appalled if they could see the world as it is today. 
'They would wonder what happened to the Brave New World they fought so damned hard for.'
Nor can David Cameron take any comfort from the elderly. 
His 'hug a hoodie' advice was scorned by a generation of brave men and women now too scared, they say, to leave their homes at night. 
Immigration tops the list of complaints.

'This Land of Hope and Glory is just a land of yobs and drunks'

'People come here, get everything they ask, for free, laughing at our expense,' was a typical observation. 
'We old people struggle on pensions, not knowing how to make ends meet. If I had my time again, would we fight as before? Need you ask?'
Many writers are bewildered and overwhelmed by a multicultural Britain that, they say bitterly, they were never consulted about nor feel comfortable with. 
'Our country has been given away to foreigners while we, the generation who fought for freedom, are having to sell our homes for care and are being refused medical services because incomers come first.'
Her words may be offensive to many - and rightly so - but Sarah Robinson defiantly states: 'We are affronted by the appearance of Muslim and Sikh costumes on our streets.' 
Hoodie
This picture of a teenage hoodie making a disrespectful gesture at Tory leader David Cameron illustrates a wartime WAAF's comments that Britain has become 'a land of yobs and drunks'
But then political correctness is another thing they take strong issue with, along with politicians generally - 'liars, incompetents and self-aggrandising charlatans' (with the revealing exception of Enoch Powell).
The loss of British sovereignty to the European Union caused almost as much distress. 'Nearly all veterans want Britain to leave the EU,' wrote one. 
Frank, a merchant navy sailor, thought of those who gave their lives 'for King and country', only for Britain to become 'an offshore island of a Europe where France and Germany hold sway. Ironic, isn't it?'

'Our culture is draining away and we are forbidden to say anything'

 
As a group, they feel furious at not being able to speak their minds. 
They see the lack of debate and the damning of dissenters as racists or Little Englanders as deeply upsetting affronts to freedom of speech. 
'Our British culture is draining away at an ever increasing pace,' wrote an ex-Durham Light Infantryman, 'and we are almost forbidden to make any comment.'
A widow from Solihull blamed the Thatcher years 'when we started to lose all our industry and profit became the only aim in life'. 
Her husband, a veteran of Dunkirk and Burma, died a disappointed man, believing that his seven years in the Army were wasted.
'It is 18 years since I lost him and as I look around parts of Birmingham today you would never know you were in England,' she wrote.
'He would have hated it. He also disliked the immoral way things are going. I don't think people are really happy now, for all the modern, easy-living conveniences.
'I disagree with same-sex marriages, schoolgirl mothers, rubbish TV programmes, so-called celebrities and, most of all, unlimited immigration.
'I am very unhappy about the way this country is being transformed. I go nowhere after dark. I don't even answer my doorbell then.'
A Desert Rat who battled his way through El Alamein, Sicily, Italy and Greece was in despair.
'This is not the country I fought for. Political correctness, lack of discipline, compensation madness, uncontrolled immigration - the "do-gooders" have a lot to answer for.
'If you see youngsters doing something they shouldn't and you say anything, you just get a mouthful of foul language.'
Undoubtedly, some of the complaints are 'grumpy old man' gripes, as the veterans themselves recognise - from chewing gum on pavements and motorists using mobile phones to the march of computerisation ('why can't I just go to the station and buy a railway ticket?') and the dearth of pop music tunes you can hum.
But it is the fundamental change in society's values which they find hardest to come to terms with. 
Bring back birching and hanging, the sanctions they grew up with, they say. Put more bobbies back on the beat.
'We were rigidly taught good manners and respect for older people,' said a wartime WAAF, 'but the nanny state has ruined all that. Television programmes are full of violence and obscene language.
This Land of Hope and Glory is in reality a land of yobs, drug addicts, drunkard youths and teenage mothers who think they are owed all for nothing.' 
Aged 85, she has little wish to go on living.
For others, the strength of character that got them through the war is still helping them to survive the disappointments of peacetime.
A crofter's son from Scotland who served on the Arctic convoys taking supplies to Russia found the immediate post-war years hard. 
Soldiers
Soldiers of the British Expeditionary Force leave the UK for France aboard a troopship to help the French Resistance during WWII
'In those days we had no welfare support from any source. It was as though we had served our country to the full and were then forgotten.
'However, we were very resilient and determined to make a go of it, and many of us, including myself, succeeded. 
'How times have changed now, with the countless many clamouring to get welfare benefits for the asking.'
A medic who made it through Dunkirk and D-Day thought the fallen would be appalled by the lack of manners in modern life and the worship of celebrities, plus 'the patent dishonesty of politicians'.
Another common issue was their bemusement at the idea anyone could live in constant debt. 
'We were brought up to believe that if you hadn't the money, you waited till you had!' one wrote.
However, this particular man was unusual among the 150 respondents in believing that there were many pluses to modern life. 
He even had a good word to say about the European Union and felt it would appeal to the fallen 'if only for maintaining the peace in Europe over the past 60 years or so'.
He praised the breaking down of class barriers in Britain compared with the years when he was young and 'infinitely' increased prosperity. 
'More clothes, cars, holidays abroad, home ownership. As a young teacher in the Fifties I had one suit (Army issue) and the luxury of a sports jacket and flannels at the weekend.
'Education has made vast progress. In my early days I taught classes of 50. Only five per cent of children went on to further education compared with over 40 per cent today.
'The emancipation of women has also been a huge plus, with the introduction of the Pill a large contributor. Before the war, women teachers were dismissed as soon as they married.'
A Land Girl who laboured on farms in Devon during the war agreed that 'we have so much to be grateful for.
'So much progress has been made to transform the standard of living since the war.'
But she could not help asking whether people were any happier.
She bemoaned the advent of the Pill and the collapse of sexual morality. 'In my day, drugs were unknown, families remained together, divorce was a rarity and children felt secure.

 'We're now controlled by Germany and France. What a sad irony!'

'Were our sacrifices made so hooligans may run wild? And aggressive behaviour be accepted as the norm by TV interviewers and society in general?'
A captain with a Military Cross for valour under fire thought Britain was still the best country in the world.
The 'occasional' sight of parents and nicely dressed children gave an otherwise gloomy veteran of the Italian campaign a sense that 'what we did all those years ago was not for nothing'.
A grandmother, the widow of a Royal Marine who took part in the D-Day landings, felt the National Health Service had descended into chaos but was grateful for a pensioner's free television licence, 'which brings art, travel and animals into my home', and being able to text her grandchildren.
Just being alive was a bonus. 'Although I hate what is happening to our country, I am so happy to be here, grumbling, but remembering better, happier days,' she wrote.
But one of the bitterest complaints of the veterans was that their trenchant views on many of the matters aired here were constantly ignored by those in authority.
Their letters of complaint to councillors and MPs went unanswered. 
It was as if they didn't matter, except when wheeled out for the rituals of Remembrance Day. 
Graves and poppies
One person complained it is not right those lost in the World Wars are only remembered publicly on Remembrance Day
'Why do so many of the British public confuse sentimentality with genuine concern for others?' asked one letter-writer.
But this was the generation honoured in Remembrance services last weekend, showered with gratitude and teary-eyed sentiments as their dwindling ranks marched unsteadily past the Cenotaph and other war memorials throughout the UK.
The overall impression any reader of the letters gets is that this generation feel unheard, unwanted and unimportant.
This remarkable collection of their thoughts should give us pause for reflection. 
They may be deemed beyond their sell-by date (and many of their views may seem unacceptable, flouting every sort of 'ism' imaginable) but, by their deeds of 60-plus years ago, they have won the right to be listened to and their disillusionment noted with respect.
In one letter in this collection, an RAF mechanic quoted a poem about comrades who fell in battle: 'I mourned them then, But now surviving in a world, Indifferent to their hopes and dreams, I grieve more for the living.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1229643/This-isnt-Britain-fought-say-unknown-warriors-WWII.html#ixzz1wjN8NKB2