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PostPosted: Tue Mar 24, 2015 8:11 am 
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Nidge2 wrote:

Show me a picture of me waving a banner?

The banner in your signature. :roll:

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PostPosted: Tue Mar 24, 2015 8:38 am 
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grandad wrote:
Nidge2 wrote:

Show me a picture of me waving a banner?

The banner in your signature. :roll:



Whats that got to do with my personal opinion? Get a grip for fucks sake.


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PostPosted: Tue Mar 24, 2015 11:31 am 
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As Farage has just been reminded, there’s no fascist like a liberal fascist


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by James Delingpole23 Mar 2015662



Suppose Labour leader Ed Miliband had been out yesterday for a quiet bacon sandwich with his wife and kids only to be harassed and terrorised by a bunch of protestors from the Daily Mail. Can you imagine the coverage it would get on the BBC and in the Guardian?

And what about if Green party leader Natalie Bennett had a few friends round for a vegan barbecue, only to be driven from their supplies of tofu and mung beans and cucumber dip by a crowd of Spectator journalists dressed in pin stripe suits and bowler hats?

There’s a reason you can’t imagine these scenarios, except in jest. It’s because the right-leaning media just doesn’t promote or engage in political activism in the way that the left-leaning media does, especially not the kind of direct action stunt we saw yesterday being carried out against Nigel Farage by a mob led by an activist (and occasional Guardian columnist) called Dan Glass. (h/t Bishop Hill)

The Guardian clearly loves Dan Glass. Here’s what it had to say a few years back about his work “fighting to stop the injustice of climate change.”


Dan Glass, 27, activist

“Whenever anybody sticks their head above the parapet they’re seen as a lunatic, but we need to show the inadequacies of the legal system for protecting the earth.”


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Youth climate activists blog : Dan Glass

Dan was recently named one of Attitude Magazine’s 66 new role models for his work on bridging the gay rights and environmental justice movements. He revels in creating militant but cheeky ways to be a “thorn in the side of those destroying the planet”; he has stuck himself to a former prime minister, occupied Aberdeen airport, danced with old ladies blighted by flightpaths, and worked in deprived inner-city communities with So We Stand. Dan has spent much of 2010 in court, over action he took with protest group Plane Stupid at Aberdeen airport, and is now on trial for allegedly conspiring to shut down Ratcliffe-on-Soar coal-fired power station (the verdict is expected today). You can read his article on the disproportionate effects of climate change on marginalised communities in December’s Attitude magazine – it’s the one with lots of naked men on the cover.

Besides having run three columns by Glass, the Guardian has also given space to the Trotskyite burblings of perma-revolutionary Eva Jasiewicz – another member of the fancy dress mob who harrassed the Farages at the weekend. And also to this woman, Pennie Quinton who was also boasting on Twitter about her involvement in the anti-UKIP renta-mob. See also Guardian contributor Emily Churchill (no relation, one imagines), who crowed about having helped ruin the Farage family lunch with the phrase “We are family!”

Now you could argue that the Guardian can’t be held responsible for the actions of a few idiots who have written for it in the past. Maybe not. But what you can most definitely blame it for, I think, is the uncritical coverage it gives both to them individually (see flattering profile of Glass above) and collectively at protests everywhere from Kingsnorth to Balcombe.

Whether these protests are about breast-feeding or coal-fired power or fracking or neonicotinoids or bankers or air travel, what you find time and again is the same hardcore of activists at the heart of each protest. The cause seems to be almost an irrelevance. What counts far more is the intensity of their shrill self-righteousness and the corresponding passion of their hatred for whichever particular target they happen to be protesting against on that particular day.

You can see that self-righteousness in some of the comments below the Guardian’s report on the Farage affair. Here’s one from a charmer calling himself “Postcolonial”.


Well I suppose they could have tarred and feathered him. But we can still dream.

And here is the Guardian’s columnist Suzanne Moore telling us that the protestors who had Farage’s children fleeing in fear were just a lovely, harmless, playful bunch really and that the Farages over-reacted…

Those protesting against Farage were in fancy dress, which is why the pub owners thought it was some kind of birthday party. They called themselves “a cabaret of diversity” and were seeking to represent some of the groups Farage has offended: “Migrants, HIV activists, gay people, disabled people and breast-feeding mothers.” No doubt this boisterous group may have seemed a bit scary although, to be honest, it all looked harmlessly theatrical in the pictures.

The worst thing that Moore can find to say about the incident is that it may play to Farage’s advantage.


And actually, it may backfire for other reasons too, because increasingly Farage plays the victim. And this allows him to. He can present himself as the innocent victim of attacks by fruitcakes, when, in fact, he spends most of his time attacking the vulnerable.

(If Moore had wanted to make the point with the charm and wit of which unfortunately she is incapable, she might have nicked this, much funnier analysis from a Guardian commentator called Boynamedstu: “Because nothing will make people considering voting for UKIP change their mind than a coachload of inner city dwelling, unemployed drama graduates and soap dodgers intimidating him and scaring his kids while he is out for a Sunday lunch. These arsehats have probably done more to increase the UKIP vote than a front page picture of a Romanian eating a swan while [edited by admin] on a Princess Di commemorative tea towel.”)

One of the fondest delusions of the left – heavily promoted by the Guardian and the BBC, among others – is that civilisation is continually on the brink of being destroyed by a handful of “far-right” groups, be they the EDL, the BNP, Combat 18 or whichever initialled one-man-and-a-dog outfit happens to be the current left-wing bete noir of the month.

But this threat from the “far-right” is a liberal fantasy. Not just a fantasy, but also a monstrous, deliberate and cynical distraction from the truth, which is that almost all the non-Islamist ugliness, malevolence and political aggression of our time emanates from the fascistic left rather than from any organisation that seriously deserves the title “right-wing”. We saw this during the Scottish elections in the bully-boy tactics of the SNP. We saw it at the various Occupy demos. And we see it time and again in the antics of the “watermelons” (green on the outside, red on the inside) of the green movement (several of whose members, see above, were involved in the mobbing of the Farages).

Along with Islamism, liberal fascism represents probably the biggest threat to freedom, civilisation and decency of our era. And you know what’s the most depressing thing about it? These scum – as Farage so rightly called them – not only think they have right and justice on their side. They also genuinely, sincerely believe that they are nice.

It’s a sick, weird world we live in, is it not?


http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/03 ... l-fascist/

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PostPosted: Tue Mar 24, 2015 12:37 pm 
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The great unwashed.

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PostPosted: Tue Mar 24, 2015 1:23 pm 
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02mkm1c

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PostPosted: Wed Mar 25, 2015 2:52 pm 
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Everything that's wrong with this country seems to be summed up in this article


Police investigate threats to anti-Ukip protesters





Demonstrators who forced Nigel Farage to flee pub receive abusive messages by text and email as well as on Twitter and Facebook


Police are investigating threatening messages sent to the anti-Ukip protesters who forced the party leader Nigel Farage to flee his local pub on Sunday.

After the demonstration, which the Ukip leader said caused distress to his two youngest children, the activists were sent abuse via text and email, as well as on Twitter and Facebook.

Some of the protesters were sent messages detailing what the senders believed were their addresses and phone numbers, and some messages threatened reprisals. One Facebook post read: “If they think they are safe from being slaughtered, they are not.”

In a tweet, one of the protesters was told: “In a free country with legal private weapons, I would have opened fire on you fascists out of self-defense [sic].”

The Metropolitan police confirmed it was investigating the threats.

The messages came after demonstrators in fancy dress held a “diversity cabaret” on Sunday afternoon at a pub in Downe, Kent, where the Ukip leader was dining with his wife and children. Farage claimed that a relative had to go back to look for the children after he left the scene in a car apparently driven by his wife.


The protest provoked an angry reaction in some quarters, not least from Farage, who on Sunday evening called the demonstrators “scum”.

The far-right party Britain First, which invades mosques and runs “Christian patrols” through the streets in armoured vehicles, claimed to have found the home addresses of some of the protesters and threatened to give them a “taste of their own medicine”.

Britain First has expressed its support for Ukip in the general election. It was revealed last month that it orchestrated a campaign to send thousands of complaints to Channel 4 after it aired a film that portrayed Ukip in a bad light.

Ukip has distanced itself from the threatening messages. A spokesman said it “in no way” condoned them. “In fact we condemn them. Two wrongs never make a right.”

An anonymous message to the organiser of the demonstration, Dan Glass, read: “I will be speaking to you soon.” The sender later told the Guardian that he would be “dealing with Mr Glass in person in the next few weeks”.

The correspondent refused to give a name but included details purportedly related to Glass’s private life. In a text message, Glass was warned to “watch out”, while – in another – a man who appeared to be a Ukip supporter suggested Glass jump off a cliff.

One of the many tweets directed at the protesters read: “You shouldn’t have done that and you will be sorry.” Glass said he had also received calls from “about 30 creepy men” that were “threatening my life”.

He said he could handle threats but that those sent to others were the reason he contacted the police.

Asked whether, in the light of his own demonstration, he agreed that people had the right to carry out peaceful protests at his house and those of his fellow demonstrators, Glass said no. “Nigel Farage was in a public place. He has also made a feature throughout his campaign of being pictured in pubs suggesting he is a man of the people and happy to hang out with ‘the people’. Going to his house would have been completely different because your home is where you expect privacy.

“The pub is a public place, it’s not equivalent of someone’s home, especially when pubs are routinely the setting for his party political publicity.” He added that he did not blame Ukip directly for the messages.

A spokesman for the Metropolitan police said: “Police in Islington are investigating an allegation of malicious communications. The allegation was made on Monday, 23 March. Officers from the community safety unit in Islington are investigating. There have been no arrests. Inquiries continue.”

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