Saturday 29 November 2008

Victory for BNP as Liverpool Police Drop all Charges against Activists



Thousands of ‘Racism Cuts Both Ways’ booklets and other BNP leaflets were distributed in a co-ordinated day of campaigning in the city centre, which saw the Truth Truck and three other A-frame advertising vehicles sweep through large parts of the surrounding suburbs, all proudly carrying the party’s message to thousands of well wishers. The BNP activists on foot - which included party chairman Nick Griffin, deputy leader Simon Darby, Greater London Assembly member Richard Barnbrook - then converged on the city centre at around midday, occupying one of the major pedestrianised intersections.There, with flags flying, the BNP activists, which included an age range spread from pensioners to youngsters, continued distributing leaflets and recruiting from members of the public. A small crowd of bussed-in leftists were kept at bay by a police presence.After an hour and half, the BNP crowd moved to the steps of St. George’s Hall in the city centre, where Mr Griffin gave a short address, pointing out that it was the preparedness of the BNP activists to be arrested en masse which had driven the police to withdraw all charges against the ‘Liverpool 13' earlier in the day.

Friday 28 November 2008

Which Faith does our Church defend?


It seems incredible to us that those leaders of the Christian Church here in Britain so determined to appease Islam in our country, appear so apparently ignorant of the suffering of their co-religionists in the Serbian province of Kosovo!
Are they not aware, for instance, that since KFOR took responsibility for the province that around two hundred Christian churches, monasteries, shrines and other sites of worship have been systematically destroyed or otherwise desecrate, in what can only be seen as an organised campaign of cultural cleansing?
Can they really be unaware that quite apart from the great many Christians who have been murdered, raped, robbed and mutilated over the last nine years, that hundreds of thousands more have been driven from their homes and forced to flee for their lives by the adherents of the very religion that they go to such lengths to defend? Many would regard this as ethnic cleansing!
Do they seriously believe that Kosovo marks the end of Islamic expansion in Europe and are truly ignorant of Islamicist designs on adjoining areas of Serbia and Macedonia – both having very significant Islamic communities?
Do they really believe there will ever be peace in the Balkans whilst there are those amongst the Religion of “Piece” who, because of “recognition”, will now be encouraged to seek another piece of Serbia, another piece of Macedonia, another piece of Bosnia, another piece of Montenegro etc?
Is our Church, here in Britain, led by fools, ignoramuses or merely third-columnists?
A brief video, which touches upon “Greater Albania”, may be viewed here: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Xrj-wkhwIUI&NR=1
An interactive document which lists some 76 Christian Churches and other sites destroyed, damaged or otherwise desecrated during the five months following the arrival of KFOR “peacekeepers” in Kosovo – but not the almost one hundred sites since – may be viewed here. http://www.kosovo.net/sk/crucified/default.htm
Readers should click on the name of the site in the table within the document to activate associated images and text.
What future our country with spiritual guardians such as these in place?


Thursday 27 November 2008

The Green man. Symbol of man's connection to nature.


The enigmatic and often disturbing foliate heads and masks which adorn many of our churches are pagan in origin, albeit Roman and Greek paganism, and can be found in all corners of what was the Roman Empire. The Green Man has been adopted world-wide with some stunning sixth century representations to be found in the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.
However, the Green Man has found a special and intriguing place in British history in the past thousand years or so. He flourished throughout England in Medieval times, and he is also infamously seen at the Rosslyn Chapel (mid fifteenth century) in Midlothian, Scotland where he has a part to play in a storm of controversy and conspiracy theories.
The first carvings of foliate heads originated in Roman art during the second half of the first century AD. These early foliate heads and masks were usually adorned with acanthus leaves, a common plant in the Mediterranean at the time.
Foliate heads made an appearance at Neumagen in Germany carved on the sarcophagi of wine merchants during the second and third centuries. As Kathleen Basford wonders in her book ‘The Green Man’, this “perhaps recalls the ancient rustic festivals held in honour of Dionysos where revellers stained their faces with new wine and masked them with huge beards made out of leaves.”
However, the Green Man didn’t make his first appearance in Britain until the eleventh century where he put down roots in the Church and adapted his leafy structure to the English way of life, incorporating oak leaves, hawthorn, ivy and hops during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
In twelfth century churches such as St John the Evangelist, (Elkstone, Gloucestershire) and St Leonard, (Linley, Shropshire) the Green Man is crudely depicted in the stonework, but in St Mary and St David (Kilpeck, Herefordshire) the doorway carvings are beautifully chiselled in intricate detail.
The Green man began life in Britain and countries north of the Alps as a diabolical figure. In Exeter Cathedral he is depicted as being trodden upon by The Virgin, but without knowing the artist’s motives we can only guess at what he was trying to portray. Perhaps it is the triumph of Christianity over paganism or the triumph of ‘higher’ man over his animal nature. The Green Man has also been portrayed as the three-headed Satan (Triceps Beelzebub, the Trinity of Evil) which shows evidence of being perpetuated in Scandinavia but is comparatively rare in Britain. Fifteenth century examples of the unholy Trinity can be found in the Green Man’s portrayal as a devil in Chester Cathedral and as a crowned tricephalos at Cartmel Priory, Cumbria.
The Green Man branched out and flourished within the confines of the Church across Europe in the thirteenth century with unusual and startling depictions in Bamberg Cathedral, Germany and in Auxerre Cathedral, France. The former is in stone - a rectangular, almost stylised portrait of the Green Man - with an indescribable, yet knowing, expression, while in Auxerre he peers down at the congregation in bewilderment.
Nowadays, the Green Man is claimed as belonging to various groups, from neo-Pagans to certain occult societies. The worship of nature and the worship of the severed head certainly have places in British folk-lore and customs stretching back in time and a recurring character is Jack in the Green. He is also known as the Grass King, King of the May, the Wild Man, King of the Wood and more, and it can be said that in any of these incarnations he represents the spirit of vegetation. Frazer’s ‘The Golden Bough’ cites many examples of customs pertaining to Jack in the Green, too numerous to mention, but suffice it to say that the custom of beheading a foliate man effigy at the vernal equinox is persistent throughout Europe.
We can only guess at the reasons why the Church adopted the Green Man and in what context their architects meant him to be portrayed. In more recent centuries he has captured the public imagination as can be seen by the number of pubs bearing his name. However, as artists and pagans alike continue with their fascination with the Green Man it seems that we haven’t outgrown him yet nor completely forgotten that we are, like him, enmeshed with our natural surroundings.

Politically motivated Police raids on local BNP members.


Four BNP activists from Blackburn and Nelson were interviewed by police yesterday over perfectly legal leaflets after ‘internal pressure from the Muslim Police Association’ a senior police source has said.Brian Parker, Robin Evans, Tony Bamber and Lee Karner — all hardworking BNP activists, were detained by police in Gestapo-like dawn raids yesterday, and taken to Burnley police station for ‘interviews under caution.’ They were released at 5pm yesterday and unconditionally bailed until February next year.The leaflets that sparked off the detentions were a local one linking Muslim gangs to the heroin trade, and the BNP’s national Islam leaflet (download your own copy by clicking here).Both leaflets are perfectly legal, having been thoroughly vetted. The local heroin leaflet was in fact already the subject of an investigation by the Crown Prosecution Service, who ruled definitively that it was legal.The CPS’s made the decision not to prosecute over the leaflet, however a source within the Police has let us know the decision to make the arrests was made higher up the chain of command and not at a local level, confirming what we already know to be a politically motivated move.
The leaflet, which points out the preponderance of Islamic gangs in the heroin trade and the fact that the majority of heroin comes from Pakistan and Afghanistan — did not sit well with the National Association of Muslim Police (Christians need not apply) who have instigated a renewed investigation, according to a police source.BNP leader Nick Griffin and several dozen activists from the local area and around the country (including, but not limited to, Andrew and Peter Tierney from Liverpool, who brought their now-famous A-frame vehicle; Adam Walker and a small team from the North East; and Derek Adams from Manchester) demonstrated outside Burnley police station until late.“We received a fantastic response from the public,” Mr Griffin said. “One member of the public stopped, found out what was going on, and, so incensed at the outrage, complained to the police and gave the BNP a £100 donation on the spot,” he said.The BNP will, of course, fight this travesty of justice, and, just like the media coverage given to the supposed membership list “leak,” this latest attempt to demonise the party will blow back in its originators’ faces.

Police probe machete attack at 21st birthday party


A GANG of youths rolled up with machetes, baseball bats and snooker cues in an "altercation" with party guests outside Nelson Cricket Club.
Police said up to 100 people, including families with children, were at the 21st birthday celebration on Friday night when the "nasty incident" occurred, leaving three people needing hospital treatment and others as "walking wounded".
Originally three Asian men arrived in a red Honda Civic Type R at 10-45 p.m. and argued with smokers outside the club before driving away, only to return 30 minutes later with up to a dozen Asian males in more cars, brandishing baseball bats, and knives plus other weapons.One man from the party was left with 40 stiches to the face , another a suspected broken hand and a third with severe bruising. All were treated at Royal Blackburn Hospital.Police are still seeking the initial three occupants of the red car and are asking for anyone with information to come forward.Det. Insp. Sion Hall said: "It was a really nasty job."However, he isn't treating it as a racially motivated attack. "We're cautious at the moment as to what sparked it off," he said. "Just because Asians and whites have been fighting doesn't necessarily make it a racially-motivated incident, but if that is later the case then it will be reflected in the charges."Police said the armed gang fled when they were outnumbered by guests from inside the venue, and the red Honda hit a woman as they "erratically" sped away.Others were treated for minor injuries at Burnley General Hospital. All have since been discharged and are currently recovering.DI Hall added: "I would appeal for the occupants of the red Honda to come and speak to the police."Two local Asian men from the Briarfield area were arrested and charged with the attack shortly after the incident. but for reasons only known to the Police were later released on bail.

Remembrance in the Rain at Nelson and Colne


The dedication shown by so many BNP branches across Britain paying homage to the fallen on Remembrance Day is exemplified by Pendle BNP.
The Pendle Branch remembered our glorious war dead at Colne in the morning and Nelson in the afternoon by laying crosses on behalf of the British National Party at both services. Pendle BNP’s two serving councillors, Cllr Brian Norton Parker and Cllr Adam Grant attended both services in the most atrocious of weather.
The picture shows just some of the determined BNP members who defied the inclement weather to attend, fully aware of the gallantry of those servicemen who faced far worse than mere rain and wind.

EU endorses Halal cruelty




The HYPOCRITICAL European Commission has proposed new rules to “improve the welfare of animals during their slaughter” according to media reports. Yet in the same breath as this body tells us about their plans to “improve animal welfare during slaughter” they inform us that barbaric Halal slaughter will be allowed to continue!
Where is the logic in that we ask?
And whilst slaughterhouses will be monitored more frequently to ensure pre-slaughter stunning techniques are effective – no such considerations are to be extended to those unfortunate beasts destined for a slow Halal death.
According to one EU Commissioner for Health: “These proposals will make a real difference to the way animals are treated at the time of slaughter, as well as promoting innovation and providing a level playing field for operators” – not for the millions of cattle, sheep, lambs, goats and poultry facing inane ritual slaughter it won’t!
Meanwhile the senior policy advisor to Compassion in World Farming, Peter Stevenson, whilst welcoming the proposals said that they did not go far enough to protect animals. He is reported as saying in respect of Halal slaughter: “Whilst we fully respect religious beliefs, this should not extend to permitting a slaughter method that causes pain and distress.”
So the “bottom line” remains as before – whilst mainstream slaughter methods are to be tightened up in the interest of animal welfare – practitioners of Halal slaughter can legally continue to subject millions of beasts to a slow barbaric death in the name of religion!
As an aside, the silence of all those Labour MPs who voted for a ban on fox hunting professing their opposition to animal cruelty is, as they say, deafening. Then again the Labour Party, every bit as much as the CONservatives, are increasingly dependent upon certain ethnic minorities in terms of votes and money.
Land & People joins with the British National Party in demanding an end to this, the most prolific form of animal cruelty practised in Britain, and a ban on the importation of all meat products derived from the obscenity that is ritual slaughter