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Past Quotes


"...On the release of terrorist prisoners from Northern Ireland, the obvious question to ask those who speak of "political prisoners" is whether they regard David Copeland, the Brixton bomber, as a political prisoner, too.

"After all, he, the IRA and loyalist groups have all planted bombs in crowded streets, in furtherance of their political aims.

"A week before Copeland, I was treated to the nauseating spectacle of Ken Livingstone calling for tougher action against people who planted bombs in the streets of London.

"Unfortunately, his words didn't choke him"

--Peter Davey, The Daily Telegraph, 27 July 2000


"Britain's armed forces are trimed down to the bone.  With constant cheeseparing 'economies' by a government that is anti-military by instinct and refuses to fight for British interests, our forces are short of men, of weapons, of ammunition, of maintenance and of training.

"Yet in this perilous situation the government deems it appropriate to send British troops to - of all places - Sierra Leone!  And it now looks as if they're going to be kept there!

"As long as it was necessary to evacuate British nationals from the danger zones in the civil war in that country, there was some point in their presence there.  But it's long past the time for their withdrawl.  So why are they staying?

"This question is particularly urgent at a time when there is another part the world where our forces are badly needed.  In 'Zimbabwe' (formerly Rhodesia) white farmers are having their property raided and occupied and are becoming the victims of savage beatings, murder and rape.  And these criminal acts have the blessing of the boss of the country, Robert Mugabe!

"There are nearly 80,000 white people in Rhodesia, most of whom are of British descent and many of whom were born in Britain.  Yet the Blair Government does not seem disposed to lift a finger to help them.

"Britian should pull her service personnel out of sierra Leone - and former Yugoslavia - and everywhere else where neither British people nor British interests are threatened - and we should ditch them forthwith to 'Zimbabwe' to sort out Mugabe and rescue our own people from the horrors he's inflicting on them!"

--Spearhead, No. 376, June 2000.


"The Murder of Stephen Lawerence may have been an act of unconscious retaliation.  Relataliation for the numberless insults and igdignities and atrocities which have been visited on the white population of south London over the last thirty years by the Afro-Caribbean underclass."

"...the indigenous working class of inner London are an oppressed minority.  They are oppressed by having been turned into strangers in their own country in little more than a generation.  They are oppressed by massive levels of AfroCaribbean violence and criminality.  They are oppressed by schools which don't teach their children anything, except to be ashamed of their own history and heritage.  They are oppressed by a hedgemonic official mentality, promulgated in the schools and the townhalls, which preaches uncritical admiration, of all culturals and ethnicities, except theirs.  They are oppressed by the fact that it is impossible to complain openly about any of these things, for fear of being called 'racists'."

"The black British underclass underclass may not be as large or as heavily armed as its American counterpart, but it is every bit as dangerous and vicious, and it displays most of the same range of social pathologies.  And now, courtesy of Lord Macpherson, its members have virtual immunity from arerest.  And they know it, and they are running amok."

--J F Cronin, Right Now, April - June 2000.


"If the Labour party paid a proper fee for the public relations services it receives from the BBC, it should be possible to reduce the annual licence fee, if not abolish it altogether."

--David Fiford, The Daily Telegraph, 16 May 2000.


"Street crime has increased in London, while 'stop and searches' have fallen amid accusations that the tactic was used disproportionately against black people.

"The Met's analysis of descriptions offered by victims of street crime in 1998-99 suggested that 60 per cent of offenders were non-white..."

--John Steele, The Daily Telegraph, 15 May 2000.


"It is a fact that there are more paedophiles among gay men than among the overall male community.  That is surely an unacceptable risk to children."

--Valerie Riches, Family and Youth Concern, 24 April 2000.


"Last year, more new cases of HIV were diagnosed in Lambeth Southwark and Lewisham than any other health authority in the country.  Almost 40 per cent of the new cases were among heterosexuals and more than half were in ethnic minority groups.  Many of the HIV infections in heterosexuals were probably picked up in Africa before people moved to London. "

--Zoe Morris, London Evening Standard, 11 April 2000.


"Rape is a vile and degrading offence.  But the suggestion in your report today, that men who are accused of rape and claim that the complainant consented should have to prove their innocence, is most worrying for anybody concerned with basic human rights.  Quite apart from whether such a change in the burden of proof is compatible with the Government's obligations under the Human Rights Act, such a change will inevitably lead to wrongful convictions resulting in innocent men having to serve long terms of imprisonment."

--Mr Robert Rhodes, QC, The Times, 8 April 2000.


"As non-whites increasingly invade the country through immigration and the racial balance runs against whites, we will see an increasing level of interracial violence directed against whites, an increasing level of discrimination and outright persecution of whites for any challenge or resistance to non-white domination, and an increasing level of barbarization of our culture as immigrant and indigenous non-whites challenge and replace white civilization."

--Dr Samuel Taylor, American Renaissance Conference.


"...When this Government came to power there were just 26,000 asylum seekers, now there are 100,000 - and they are just the figures the Government is prepared to own up to.

"They don't include the thousands of others who've got here by plane or boat or train and are now living in four-bedroom houses courtesy of Muggins Britain.  What's even more galling is that large numbers of these asylum seekers come from perfectly nice democratic countries where there is no conflict, no persecution but, more tellingly, no benefit system.

"A reporter friend rang this week to say he'd arrived in some Romanian village where the locals could speak no English save for phrases like,"Lovely England - free houses, nice food, good clothes".

"Yes, lovely England, where beggars live rent-free in four- bedroomed houses while those of us who work for a living have to huddle up in what we can afford."

--Carole Malone,. The Sunday Mirror, 19 March 2000.


"THE BRITISH Government is on 'standby' to offer more assistance.  £2.2 million of taxpayers money has already been sent.

"On the same day I read this, I read that Dr Peter Wilde, director of cardiothoracic services at Bristol Royal Infirmary, claims that as many as ten patients could have died in the past six months because they had to wait too long for heart operations.  He blamed 'lack of resources'.

I find it hard to understand that when British people are dying because of a lack of funding in the NHS, the Government can find more than £2 million to send abroad.  We should help our own people first and only then should taxpayers' money should go abroad."

--Brendan Murphy, The Daily Mail, 2nd March 2000.


"The Executive, contrary to all current political and media hype, is a shotgun marriage, with the hand of the IRA ever on the trigger.

"The moment Britain's sell-out of Ulster appears to be falling behind schedule, the murders will begin again leading to yet more concessions."

--John Tyndall, Spearhead, No. 371, January 2000.


"Well done to Brigadier Lawless for his stand on ‘gays’ in the Forces.

"For once someone in authority has the guts to stand up for the majority.

"The Blair dictatorship’s obsession with homosexuals takes no account of the practical issues involved.

"Service personnel often work in cramped and dangerous conditions, which can involve bedding down together.  Absolute trust is essential.

"The old forces maxim of ‘watch your back’ will take on a whole new meaning to troops in the field."

--M Walker, The Sun, 2nd February 2000


"When the late Enoch Powell spoke against Britain’s immigration, policy most of us called him a racist.

"But comparing the situation now, with ‘asylum-seekers’ costing us millions of pounds to keep and the vast majority bogus, it makes you think he had a point."

--A Komer, The Sun, 1st February 2000


"If this government was to get back the third world debt that is owed to this country then we could supply our NHS with intensive care beds instead of paying £900 per night to a private hospital.

"The debt owed is British tax-payers money so it should be used to look after our own people"

--Alan Shirt, The News of the World, 16th January 2000.


"A few days into the new Millennium, and already one man has been shot and three men savagely beaten by those terrorists that the Secretary of State and other politicians living in woolly-jumper land tell us are on ceasefire."

"Yet the terrorists have not had it al their own way.  Angelo Fusco, a member of the IRA's M60 gang, which murdered SAS Captain Westmacott in the 1980's, has been arrested by the Gardai and may be returned to Northern Ireland.   Fusco has been living openly in the republic for the past 18 months.  The problem with returning him to Northern Ireland to serve his life sentence for the murder of a British soldier is that he will be released in less time than someone convicted for non-payment of a £1,000 fine."

--Both by Vincent McKenna, Director, NIHRB, The Daily Telegraph, 6th January 2000.


"After hearing about the delays in the opening of the Millennium Eye and the confusion surrounding the delivery of tickets for the launch of the Dome, I think the organisers must be training to become politicians.

"They keep moving the goalposts, believe their own publicity and most importantly, are never wrong.  It is always everyone else's fault.

"Maybe they should go into the European Parliament.  Think of all the money that can be wasted and all the empty promises that can be made there..."

--Gerry Mainwaring, The Sun, 3rd January 2000.


"I was astonished to read that almost all the terrorists in the Maze Prison were let out.  They are hardened killers and criminals who should serve their sentences.

"After all, it isn't as if their murdered victims will be able to spend Christmas with their families."

--M.P. Audrey, The Sun, 29th December 1999.


"The only people to benefit from cancelling the poorest countries' debts would be the corrupt rulers of those countries, the western banks that receive the millions these leaders steal from their people, and the arms deals who will happily sell more weapons for more highly profitable wars within and between these poor countries."

--James Rowntree, The Daily Telegraph, 17th December 1999.


"Whose money goes to fund these banks to make the money available to poorer countries?  Poor, hard-working people in wealthier countries, such as me maybe?  If that is the fact, why should my hard-earned pittance bolster the despots and dictators who wage wars and sacrifice their own people willy-nilly?  Why should I be held responsible and underwrite their despotism"

--Paulene Johnson, The Daily Telegraph, 17th December 1999.


"Glasgow is the heroin capital of Europe.  Violent crime and burglary is rife.  This week Strathclyde police launched a new initiative urging people to shop their neighbours for not wearing a seat belt.

"Last month they stopped 20,000 motorists for a random quiz on road safety, simply to give them an excuse for carrying out unjustified breath tests.   Between now and the first week in January, the west of Scotland will be turned into a virtual no-go area.  Yet burglaries and car crimes will go uninvestigated."

--Richard Littlejohn, The Sun, 14th December 1999.


"Although ultimately cleared of PC Blakelock's murder, Silcott was named as the leader of the riot death mob by 14 witnesses.

"Now he has become the master manipulator, able and naturally more than happy to dictate the terms of interviews with left-leaning publications."

--Stephen Wright, The Daily Mail, 14th December 1999.


"I READ with astonishment that Boyzone's Stephen Gately is 'gay' and wants to adopt a child.  I find it odd that the British Agencies For Adoption And Fostering say there's no reason why he shouldn't.

"As a happily married woman I was told I couldn't - no reasons were given.  I know someone who was turned down for being too fat.  Maybe if we had lots of money, were 'gay' and famous we both have the children we so desperately long for."

--Mrs.D Holloway, The Sun, 10th December 1999.


"Sinn Fein claims that a linear-amplified device was built into the roof of a Ford Mondeo.  Mr Adams claimed yesterday that the security services are responsible.

"We hope he is right.  Sinn Fein is a talking head for the IRA:  Mr McGuiness has actually been imprisoned for being an IRA member.  That organisation has a vast arsenal of illegal weapons.  It has yet to decommission a single one of them - let alone all of them, as it is required to do under the terms of the Belfast Agreement by next May.  Sinn Fein/IRA are a criminal conspiracy against law, order and real peace."

--The Daily Telegraph, 9th December 1999.


"Homosexuals are not an oppressed minority today.  A minority, yes.  The General Household Survey found that only 0.1 per cent of households are headed by a same sex couple.  As to the four indicators of oppression - Poverty, Unemployment, Powerlessness & Social exclusion - homosexuals are among a successful & favoured elite exercising influence out of all proportion to their numbers.

--Ann Whitaker, The Daily Telegraph, 7th December 1999, p23.


"In an 18-hour intensive searching operation at Dover 140 illegal immigrants were discovered.  This equates to over 25,000 illegal immigrants coming into Britain each year through Dover alone!  The tragic absurdity of our immigration laws means that all those captured will be allowed to remain by claiming asylum.   Last year 23,000 similarly 'inadequately documented passengers' (to use the official euphemism) claimed asylum when caught trying to enter Britain.  At the last count there was a backlog of 64,770 asylum applications outstanding - and these just refer to heads of households.  The Home Office admit that these figures should be multiplied by three to get the real number of applicants."

--Right Now, October - December 1999, p22.


"There is no place, however, for homosexuals or lesbians in our armed forces.  This country has become inflicted with the prominence of the foul and disgusting sexual orientation of so-called 'Gay Rights' groups.  Physical homosexuality is sodomy and those who practise such acts are sodomites, and should be called as such.  Those serving in the armed forces must be set apart from those in civilian employment.  Homosexuals in the forces arouse the violent hostility of their comrades in arms and undermine authority.  The situation becomes intolerable when homosexuals are given authority over the objects of their attentions."

--General Sir Walter Walker, KCB, CBE, DSO**, PMN, PSNB (Former NATO Commander-in-Chief), Right Now, October - December 1999, p8.


"Perhaps the most important post of all in the new Northern Ireland Executive is that of education minister.  He will be the public face of the new government both to parents and children many of whom, Protestant and Catholic alike, have seen relatives murdered by the IRA.

"Who was appointed to it yesterday, thanks to senior civil servants and d'Hondt rules?  Why, none other than Martin McGuinness, the unrepentant terrorist leader, once imprisoned for IRA membership.  The appointment is the political equivalent of child abuse."

--The Daily Telegraph, 30th November 1999, p31.


"In his Mansion House speech this week, the Prime Minister announced 'There are now more English speakers in China, thanks to the BBC, than there are in Britain'.

"How much, I wonder, is that attributable to the BBC and how much down to the Government's policy on asylum-seekers?"

--Richard Littlejohn, The Sun, 26th November 1999, p11


"No army in history has ever voluntary given up its weapons while winning a war and Sinn Fein/IRA is no exception.  The future will be surely bleak if they are admitted to the Northern Ireland Executive: they know full well that the British Government will not have the stomach to dismantle the assembly when there is a failure to disarm by the appointed date.

"They have learnt from experience that the threat of renewed violence is a winning weapon as they inch ever close to their objective of the United Ireland.

"There is a tragic inevitability in responding to these threats with appeasement and the republicans must be well pleased with the political climate pervading Westminster."

--Ian Maiden, The Daily Telegraph, 25th November 1999


"Mr Blair has promised to plough millions into tackling AIDS in the developing world.

"Why is he doing this when thousands are dying each year in this country of cancer

"It's about time Britain came first when it comes to spending our own money.

"Treatment of cancer in this country is a joke."

--Dave Cooper, The Sun, 23rd November 1999, p31


"'No one is interested in what we were, except for nostalgia'  Our text for today is taken from the speech of the Prime Minister to the Lord Mayor's banquet on Monday night.  They are the words of someone who, ashamed of his past, projects this guilt on to the nation.  Just as he wishes to forget his quondam unilateralism and opposition to trade union reform, so he turns his back on British history before the advent of New Labour, seeing it only as a cause for apology".

--The Daily Telegraph, 23rd November 1999


"The Sinn Fein statement offered no decommissioning pledge.   Nor did the I.R.A statement , so that organisation is not 'tied-in' to anything. "In any event Sinn Fein and the I.R.A are one and the same.  It is worrying to see Mr Trimble participating in a verbal game that Sinn Fein/I.R.A play for tactical purposes."

--The Daily Telegraph, 19th November


"The conflict is not over, nor is the struggle"

--Martin Ferris; Senior Sinn Fein negotiator, and IRA Army Council member, 16th November 1999.


There is a terror of being tainted with accusations of 'homophobia'.  This is a concept invented to advance the selfish interests of homosexuals by slandering anyone who disapproves of homosexuality as a foaming bigot".

"Homosexuality is a minority pursuit a bit like fox-hunting.  Unlike fox-hunting it's not under threat.  Because homosexuals are over-represented at every level of government, their agenda is continually being advanced".

--Richard Littlejohn, The Sun,16th November 1999, p11


"Like many other charities, St. Dunstan's is struggling to pay the bills.  Yet its applications for help from the government and the National Lottery Board has been turned down.  Funny how there's no shortage of money for asylum seekers, gypsies, drug addicts, young criminals and all manner of fatuous 'Cool Britannia' art projects, but not a penny can be found for brave men and women who lost their sight fighting for this country".

--Richard Littlejohn, The Sun, 12th November 1999, p11


QUOTES ON THE EUROPEAN UNION

QUOTES ON HOMOSEXUALITY


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