Monday 5 November 2007

Gunpowder, Treason and Plot

Today of all days, let us consider that eighty per cent of the laws to which we are subject are made by a supranational body which meets in secret and publishes no Official Report. A foreign power maintains a huge military presence here, accountable to nobody. We have no intelligence capability apart from that power's largesse, and are about to spend an eye-wateringly obscene amount of money on yet more nuclear weapons wholly dependent on it. Our foreign policy now consists purely of participation in inter-agency talks at that foreign power's capital.

Several of our MPs are openly, and probably the majority is more-or-less covertly, signed up to the cause of European military integration under overall American command. At least those MPs openly so signed up are under the day-to-day direction, as to the conduct of their parliamentary duties, of a cabal of cranks and crooks an ocean away. The old Members for Moscow had to await telegrams, and even the old Members for Johannesburg had to use the landline telephone. But such is progress (for those in both of exactly those same treasonable traditions). And as a result, Britain is embroiled in her two most disastrous wars ever, for absolutely no apparent reason.

Meanwhile, a fully armed terrorist organisation is in government in Northern Ireland while still proclaiming its own Army Council to be the sovereign body throughout Ireland. A party at best ambivalent about the Union is in government in Wales, and a party whose activist base is ferociously opposed to the Union is the only party of government in Scotland.

Bring on the bonfires.

1 comment:

  1. And throw Kamm on the first one, say I.

    Over on his fan site, Harry's Place, Kamm is now trying to claim that you and I are one and the same, and repeating his libels against Neil Clark. He is completely obsessed with the idea that all sorts of people are one and the same. So who might in fact be the same person as Oliver Kamm?

    He also says that the BPA only exists in my imagination, which of course he thinks is your imagination. Yet he seems to devote an enormous amount of attention to it.

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