English Rights Campaign

to defend the rights and interests of the English nation

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

THE BRITISH INQUISITION

We are currently witnessing a group of immigrants standing trial for a series of attempted terrorist bombings. It is now revealed that they even attended a training camp in the UK itself.

We have further been informed that yet another terrorist suspect, supposedly subject to a control order, has escaped - firstly by hiding in a mosque and then by fleeing the country, it is believed, dressed as a Muslim woman wearing a niqab, which the authorities did not challenge out of cultural sensitivity.

Have our politicians addressed any of these issues, or debated the manner in which mass immigration is fuelling Muslim terrorism?

No. Not at all.

Instead, the race zealots have got themselves all worked up about the Big Brother reality television programme, in which a Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty has been the victim of a degree of general nastiness and bullying from 3 other female contestants.

Needless to say, the race zealots are alleging that the bullying and nastiness is racism.

Questions have been raised in the House of Commons. Tony Blair has had his say, as has Gordon Brown [who is currently grandstanding in India]. Race zealots are popping up on various news programmes. Numerous race pressure groups are lobbying Channel 4 and have urged people to complain, and up to 10,000 have.

To the politically correct, Muslim terrorism pales into insignificance when compared to a group of women bitching on the aptly named Big Brother programme.

Oh, the irony.

Channel 4 is currently carefully rejecting the complaints, as has Shilpa Shetty’s agent [to her credit]. Channel 4 is right to so reject the complaints. That the actress is being bullied and is the victim of group of unpleasant females is plain to see. But that bullying is more to do with innate female bitchiness and jealousy, as the latest show demonstrated once again.

The English Rights Campaign has no sympathy with the bullying females at all. Miss Shetty asked if this is what the UK had come down to. Unfortunately, it is. This is the era of celebrity culture, and that includes Jane Goody, Jo O’Meara and Danielle Lloyd.

Miss Shetty keeps making the mistake of seeking the approval of those who mean her harm, when she would be better to take the advice of Jermaine Jackson, who has advised her to keep her distance and her dignity rather than exchange words with Miss Goody et al.

British politicians should have more important things to do and the race zealots should stop trying to stir up racial hatred.