Wednesday 22 June 2016

Racism or Migration Watch?






Racism or Migration Watch? 

UKIP leader, Nigel Farage’s poster, “The Breaking Point”, far from being Racist, is a wake-up call for the Tory Government and the Labour Party, to get us out of the EU before a fresh influx of new migrants, at this very moment being granted documents to travel in the Schengen zone and in the UK.  As a member of the EU, Britain has no power to disobey its policy of freedom of people movement; anyone with an EU passport can breeze into the UK as easily as anywhere in the EU.  

The poster, featuring thousands of Syrian refugees and other migrants entering Europe in the last few years, has no bearing on the images of Jews leaving Nazi Germany in WW2.  Yet distastefully, the comparison was drawn by the establishment, inciting racism and hate for the UK Independence Party which had made this EU referendum possible, and completely failing to get the important message that by Remaining in the EU there are more problems arriving to challenge the hard-pressed British people, who are already facing an invasion by EU migrants, in such numbers as never encountered in their lifetime. 

Armed with their new IDs, migrants will be heading for the UK: handouts of £38 per person, medical assessment to eliminate unknown diseases, and issued with a National Insurance Number for job-seeker’s allowance and other family benefits, with the Chancellor’s new £9-an-hour Living Wage requiring no qualifications or the English language, will be an offer found nowhere else on earth!  

EU’s trade agreement with Canada has been ongoing for 9 years; 7 years with China and India, none of which are yet finalised.  How long will it take the EU to incorporate the “reform” negotiated by the Prime Minister to delay for four years before new migrants can claim benefits?  Let’s hope it’s before these migrants are allowed to draw on our pension fund!

Meanwhile, our national debt continues to rise from £1.5 trillion last year.     

In some areas British-born children are being put on waiting lists so East European children, within three years of arriving in the UK, can claim £1,000 per child for their schools to employ extra Russian, Polish or Latvian staff, so lucrative for the education department, that more schools are being built for new arrivals from EU’s 11 ex-Soviet Communist states, turning Britain into a Slavic-speaking country. That will truly please Putin of Russia, and in time the ISIL leaders too, Mr Cameron.

Britain will thrive outside the EU  

Just one hundred years ago Britain had an Empire that stretched across the world; our pioneers were brave; our politicians were energetic and far-sighted.  Our Parliament made laws that improved life in Britain and countries across five continents, in both North and Southern hemispheres.  For centuries our explorers had returned with innovative ideas and creative inventions.  Britons enjoyed drinking tea from the East and coffee from the West and exported our expertise in building bridges and railways throughout the world. 

We were the envy of the Americas as well as of Europe, Asia and the whole world, so much so countries like Germany and Japan made aggressive grab for a slice of our empire and ingenuity, causing the two World Wars which Britain, with the help of global allies, managed to defeat and contain, but the heavy cost depleted all our resources and manpower.  

Many pensioners over age 80 would remember the severe rationing, the immense loss and sacrifices and making do with what minimum, life had to offer.  With no cash or resources for reparation, Britain had to relinquish power for those colonies suitable for self-government, parting with good grace and mutual respect; with such dignity that the Queen is still held in high honour by 53 Commonwealth nations over half a century, a measure of Britain’s achievement no other country had ever attained.  

Our establishment made the biggest mistake not quitting the EEC when Margaret Thatcher voiced her doubts in 1992 about the Maastricht Treaty, which transformed the Common Market into the political European Union, stripping the UK of powers to negotiate with non-EU countries and in less than a quarter of a century, decimated our agriculture and fishery; with wasteful directives that closed many small businesses, village stores, mining and manufacturing industries, and even our steel works today.  

54,000 EU laws had sapped our Parliament of sovereignty.  For Britain to regain our flamboyance and prosperity, we need to rebuild our supremacy over sea and air, recapture our self-reliance and be in control of our own destiny.  The EU is chaotic, disorganised and extremely dangerous for democracy. After 40 years of dependence, our people are ready to take up the rein again.  It’s time for sovereign Britain to thrive outside the EU. It is time to Vote Leave on 23rd June!
 

Vote to Leave the EU 

I can’t believe the Home Secretary had terminated the £4 million contract with the aviation firm Cobham that provided round-the-clock monitoring over British waters, when CCTV revealed Albanians are being smuggled into Britain over several years. The Home Office had processed over 4,650 Albanian asylum applications, seven out of ten given permission to stay. 

Former head of the Navy, Admiral Lord West said cancelling airborne surveillance had left coastal defence “in a very parlous state”. The MP Christopher Chope told Theresa May, taking away our coastal protection would leave our country vulnerable.  The UK Border Force responsible for tackling illegal immigration is forced to rely on the charity National Coast Watch Institution to help police the region.   

British taxpayers who made this country the fifth largest economy in the world should be adequately protected.  If Albanians can be smuggled ashore, so can ISIL activists in Belgium and France; clearing up their atrocities would be costly and devastating.  Based on our economy this year the EU is likely to demand payment of £19 billion gross into its budget; with a rebate of £4 billion for agriculture and fishery and £4.4 billion given as EU grants or subsidies to Wales, Cornwall, university science & research and other public services, £10 billion could be saved to support the NHS and other priorities, if we vote to leave the EU.  

It’s not right to put British-born children on waiting lists in some schools where Eastern European children arriving in the UK less than three years, get an extra £1,000 per pupil for their schools to employ staff speaking Russian, Polish or Latvian.  At St. Norbert’s Catholic primary school in Spalding, Lincolnshire, 70% of pupils from Eastern Europe (eight years ago it was just 17%) bring in £375,000 a year. 

George Osborne had claimed pensioners would be £32,000 worse off with Brexit, but annuity payouts have plunged nearly 17% in the past year, and new EU rules on Solvency II coming into force, in 3,200 pages of legislation, are forcing insurers to stock-pile cash for emergencies, and will cost a hefty £3 billion to enforce, with complex software.  New savers leaving work now, buying a twenty year retirement pot of £100,000 would receive £10,600 to £15,040 less a year, even before we vote to Leave.  The longer we Remain in the EU the more rules will erode our savings. Fortunately the EU is one mistake we can un-make by voting to leave on 23rd of June.

EU referendum: Queen reportedly asks dinner guests for ‘three good reasons why Britain should be part of Europe’

Buckingham Palace spokesman says monarch ‘is above politics and acts on the advice of her Government in political matters’ in response to royal author Robert Lacey’s claim
The Queen is reported to have asked dinner guests to give her “three good reasons why Britain should be part of Europe”, according to royal author Robert Lacey said the monarch posed the challenge recently.

Mr Lacey told the Press Association: “The Queen likes a healthy debate around the dinner table. It was just a question.
“She's aware of the complexities for different parts of the UK.
“As we know, she's very careful not to betray whatever her personal opinions may be on this. You can say the same of her husband.”

“'Give me three good reasons', she has apparently been asking her dinner companions recently, 'why Britain should be part of Europe?'” Mr Lacey wrote.


No comments:

Post a Comment