Sunday 14 June 2009

Bronsed and Reidenned

Not too much effort would have needed to have gone into “exposing” the National Front activities of Andrew Brons. Yes, it was deep into his adult life. So was John Reid’s Communism, at the height of the Cold War, and when he was the Party’s enforcer at the Stirling University Union with its large cash turnover. Charles Clarke, Stephen Byers, Alan Milburn, Geoff Gallop, Alistair Darling, Patricia Hewitt, Harriet Harman, Tony McNulty and numerous others were rather older than 17, too.

It faintly baffles me that Brons was able to find employment as a lecturer, and to do so all the way up until he retired. But then, he was teaching Political Science, and presumably not publishing as a theoretician in that field. He just had to explain how d’Hondt worked, that sort of thing. He wasn’t writing books saying that the gulags didn’t exist, or, if they did, were perfectly justified under the circumstances. He would have been a professor in that case.

Nor was he living and working through the existence of Nazi Germany. Had he carried his Communist Party card right the way though Hungary, Czechoslovakia, the lot, then he might now be a Companion of Honour.

4 comments:

  1. Why don't you join the BNP if you think Brons is defendable over Reid. The fascists might even use you as their mascot ("we can't be racists, if he backs us"), and you would gain the publicity you so ridiculously crave.

    Repulsive individual. Why were you ever in the Labour Party?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Neither of them is defensible.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Perhaps he was in it in order to secure social democracy and thus prevent a Marxist or Fascist putsch?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Don't confuse the poor, sweet, simple soul, Jeff.

    Of course, the Marxist putsch has now happened. But we must not mention it, must we, Anonymous?

    ReplyDelete