23 June 2007

BNP Day of Action in Whitby

Activists from Scarborough, Teesside, York and Bridlington BNP Groups held a Day of Action in the North Yorkshire resort of Whitby.

BNP in Whitby

The BNP team in Whitby

The event was well-attended, and the keen group of activists were organised into small groups - some manning BNP stalls, some selling the Voice of Freedom and others leafleting around the town. Scarborough BNP had designed a special leaflet for the occasion and many were delivered locally.

Freedom stall in Whitby

Freedom sellers in Whitby

There were two stalls selling BNP publications

View of stall

The stalls also offered members of the public the chance to obtain BNP national leaflets in order to learn more about what the Party stands for.

Sales team in Whitby

Freedom Sellers

Several copies of Voice of Freedom were sold to an interested public, but the weather intervened and heavy rain, thunder and lightning brought the Day of Action to a premature close.

Scarborough BNP would like to thank their friends and colleagues from Bridlington, Teesside and York BNP Groups.

Sadie Graham Addresses Scarborough BNP

Sadie outlines the Party’s recent election performance

Councillor Sadie Graham, Group Development Officer, and Harrogate Organiser Tom Linden were the latest guest speakers at Scarborough BNP.

The meeting was opened by Scarborough Organiser Trisha Scott, who welcomed the audience before handing over to Fundholder Vince Rosser, who gave an update on the Group’s finances.

Sadie Graham was the first guest speaker to address the audience, telling them it was the first time she had attended a Scarborough meeting.

Sadie’s speech concentrated on the recent elections, where the Party gained 15% of the vote on average across the country. These figures had risen to 27% in the last 100 by-elections the Party had contested.

MPs Cruddas and Hodge, in Barking and Dagenham, were now worried by the BNP and its success in the area in 2006. Even in non-traditional BNP areas, such as Scarborough, the Party was now fielding candidates, and it seemed there was no longer a “traditional” BNP area. In the last Euro elections the Party needed 12% to win a seat, but the results was spoilt by UKIP and Veritas taking a larger share of the vote and so the Party gained around 6-7%.

Candidates needed to get involved in their local communities, get known to the voters and work hard on campaigning. A good step was to get co-opted onto parish councils and work hard, making a good impression and break down the stigma attached to the BNP. The Party was more than just a political party, it was a cultural movement, Sadie concluded.

After a short break, Trisha introduced the second guest speaker of the evening, Harrogate Organiser Tom Linden.

Tom’s themes for his talk were the issues of eastern European migration and fanatical Islam in the UK.


Thanks to eastern European migration on such a massive scale, it was becoming increasingly difficult for local people to find work in areas such as hospitality, agriculture and building. Some places were even refusing to employ people who did not speak Polish because all the other employees were Polish and locals would not be accepted by the Poles, who did not even speak English. Tom pointed out that, although it was widely claimed that the eastern Europeans were merely doing the jobs that local people refused to do, that could not possibly be the case, as these employers had employed local people before 2004, otherwise jobs would never have been done! British workers have been dismissed from their jobs and replaced by Poles, who were cheaper to employ. However, British workers already had skills, or they could learn them, we do not need the Poles or other migrants to do any of these jobs.

Tom then turned to the worst threat Britain has ever faced - militant Islam.

According to police figures, there were 200 al Qaeda cells in the UK, 1600 fully-trained terrorist operatives and 30 plots currently underway.

In Beeston, Leeds, where three of the terrorists who attacked London in July 2005 had lived, three trees were planted to show solidarity with the community and its loss on 7th July. There had been a two minutes silence at the planting, but it would have been more fitting to remember the 52 innocent victims of 7th July, and plant trees in their memory, rather than the perpetrators.

In France, there are currently 751 Muslim-controlled areas, where the police have no control and do not even venture into. There are riots each weekend and over one thousand police officers injured each year. France is the closest country to England in terms of distance, and now in England there is Sharia law imposed in Dewsbury for civil cases, with funding of £177,000 each year.

Tom concluded that attitudes towards the BNP are changing, and people now want to become involved.

Trisha thanked the audience for attending and announced that the collection raised £111.

Political Correctness Comes to Scarborough

Political correctness came to Scarborough recently in the form of a fund raising music event.

Children at a local nursery sang “Baa Baa Rainbow Sheep” instead of the traditional “Baa Baa Black Sheep“. This drew local criticism, saying that children were “in the grips of political correctness” and that nursery rhymes were part of our cultural heritage.

We have the “rainbow sheep” but what will be next? “Four and twenty rainbow birds” instead of “four and twenty blackbirds”?

Have you ever seen a rainbow sheep out there? No, neither have we!

15 June 2007

Scarborough Beaches and Dogs

Our own opinions:

We often hear in Scarborough how much cleaner the beaches are once the dogs have been banned between May and September.

Whilst we agree that ALL dog owners should be made to clean up after their pets, we feel that dogs are not the big problem on local beaches.

Do dogs leave messy nappies? Do dogs leave plastic drinks cups? Do dogs leave broken glass and bottles? Do dogs leave condoms? Do dogs leave syringes? These are the real problems on local beaches. Many dog owners are responsible and clean up after their pets. It's just a pity that more non-dog-owners are not so responsible too.

14 June 2007

Education Standards in Britain

My own opinion (again!)

Having read from "knowledgeable" and "expert" sources that the reason people are unemployed is because "they lack basic skills such as numeracy or literacy", I would like to know what those people who say that think about some of the standards in people who are employed?

For example, last week I saw a sign in a Scarborough travel agency advertising "holidays for family's". Now, as we know, it's the unemployed who are illiterate, and obviously those in work must be super-intelligent! Someone ought to explain to this highly-intelligent working individual that "family's" is the possessive form of the singular word "family". The plural of "family" is "families" which, in the possessive would be "families'".

How gross it must be for these super-intelligent people to have an unemployed person (who, don't forget, should really be illiterate and innumerate!) correcting their appalling grammar.

This unemployed person is a science graduate who reads The Times and can certainly teach these super-intelligent employees a thing or two.

The Local Elections

The highest vote for the Scarborough BNP (in terms of numbers) was in Filey ward, where Kevan Foulds gained 340 votes.

The results of the four Scarborough BNP candidates:

http://www.bnp.org.uk/election2007/reg_showresult.php?cand_id=534&ward_id=131&year=2007

http://www.bnp.org.uk/election2007/reg_showresult.php?cand_id=381&ward_id=246&year=2007

http://www.bnp.org.uk/election2007/reg_showresult.php?cand_id=419&ward_id=319&year=2007

http://www.bnp.org.uk/election2007/reg_showresult.php?cand_id=10&ward_id=638&year=2007

The number of votes for other parties are sometimes shown as the total for that party if more than one candidate stood.