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Only the BNP Stands Up for the Rights of the Indigenous People of Britain

December 4, 2009 - By News Team

liverpool-BNP-meeting1209Now that the anti-white Equality Act has been passed by all parties in Parliament, the British National Party alone is the only party which stands unequivocally and unashamedly for the rights of the indigenous British people.

Speaking at the monthly meeting of Liverpool BNP, party foreign affairs spokesman Arthur Kemp said that all the other parties had endorsed the principle behind the Equality Act, which is to place Third World immigrants above the indigenous population of Britain.

“This act legalises active discrimination against white males in the employment sector, and threatens to make that discrimination enforceable by law within three years if government and private institutions have not ‘shown enough progress’ in transformation,” Mr Kemp said.

“Although this law will force the BNP to drop all its membership criteria, it exempts religious bodies. This means it will be illegal for the BNP to decide who it wants as members, but allows Muslims to segregate women in mosques. If that does not tell you what this is all about, then nothing will,” he said.

He added that the BNP would fully adhere to the provisions of the Equality Act and remain a properly constituted party, but, once in power, would repeal that “evil” law. The BNP’s policy of putting the indigenous people of these lands first would also never change, he added.

Turing to the definition of indigenous people, Mr Kemp said there was a clear ethnic and racial element to defining an indigenous nation. “When people talk about Australian Aboriginals, they mean a people who look a certain way. They do not mean European people.

“If I had to say look, over there, there is a Japanese person, and everyone turned round and saw Sammy Davis Jr, they would wonder where the Japanese person was.  The reason why they would do that is because there is a distinct ethnic group appearance to Japanese people.

“And there is nothing wrong with that, that is the way things ought to be. No-one would talk about a black Japanese person, or a black Chinese person.  So it is with the indigenous people of Great Britain,” he said. “They are a north western European people, and they have just as much a right to protection under indigenous people status as any Amazonian rain forest tribe from being overrun in their own homelands.

“For this is what mass immigration is,” Mr Kemp continued. “It is the ethnic dispossession of a people of their native lands through mass colonisation.”

Mr Kemp pointed out that history was replete with examples of where colonisation had caused indigenous peoples to be dispossessed of their native lands. “Australia’s Aborigines were dispossessed of their lands by European colonisation. The North American Indians were dispossessed of their lands by European colonisation.

“There is nothing we can do about that, that is historical fact, and those nations must now deal with today’s realities, which is that they are majority European nations and have the right to remain so.

“But we must say that what happened to the Australian Aborigines was a tragedy. That which happened to the North American Indians was a tragedy.

“While we cannot fix the wrongs of the past, we can prevent those wrongs from being repeated again in our time. It would be tragedy equal to anything of the past if the indigenous people of Britain were to be dispossessed of their lands through mass immigration, which is exactly what is happening now,” Mr Kemp said to cheers from the crowd.

“People ask what is the difference between immigration and colonisation? The difference is this: immigration is when you have a China Town in London and colonisation is when London becomes China Town.”

First speaker of the evening was local super activist Gary Aronson, who announced to loud applause that he was going to be parliamentary candidate for the BNP in the Mosley constituency at the next election. Mr Aronson said that Mosley was one of the areas which had been officially abandoned by the Labour Party because of a lack of resources.

The seat was therefore of particular interest to the BNP, Mr Aronson said.

Meeting chairman and Liverpool organiser Peter Squires told the crowd that the BNP would be fighting seven or eight seats in Merseyside in the election. The highly successful meeting raised over £310 in collections.





Nick Griffin MEP

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