A Nail in the Fuse Box: The Persecution of the British National Party
The
suppression of political parties is becoming an
interesting feature of life in the managerial superstate
known as the European Union It happened
six years ago in Belgium, to the
anti-immigration Vlaams Blok. And in London, High
Court hearings have just (November 8th and 9th)
that will determine the fate of the British National
Party. Since judgment was reserved, we do not yet know
whether BNP assets will be seized and whether party
leader Nick Griffin, who is an elected Member of the
European Parliament, will be sent to prison. We do know
what has become of England: it is now a
soft totalitarian police state.
For those who may be unaware of it, the British National Party is what its name says it is. It opposes immigration and the associated political correctness and attacks on freedom of speech and association. It also opposes British membership of the European Union and British involvement in wars of military aggression that do nothing to secure the peace and prosperity of the British people. And it is contemptuous of the claims about man-made climate change that are an excuse for the massive enrichment of ruling classes everywhere.
Not surprisingly, the BNP is not popular with the British ruling class. This has been hard at work for at least two generations on destroying a constitution that, since the High Middle Ages, had been uniquely effective at restraining power. This is a ruling class that rejoices in having put common law protections through a shredding machine; and in alienating sovereignty to a mass of foreign and even unknown organisations, to the point where democracy has become a joke; and in sponsoring the mass immigration needed to reduce working class living standards and to justify totalitarian "anti-racist" witch-hunts.
Yes, not surprisingly, the BNP is a witch that must be hunted. It is described as a "racist" party, and its members as violent and even psychopathic criminals. Its leader, Nick Griffin, is remarkable for his ability to assemble softly-spoken persons of quality into something like a baying mob.
To describe all the ways in which Mr. Griffin and his party are persecuted would take an essay which would also be a dissertation on the growth of the British police state. I have not the space to write such an essay. Therefore, I will look at the two chief current persecutions.
- The first was announced on Tuesday the 2nd November 2010: Michael Gove, the Secretary of State for Education, told The Guardian newspaper that he would allow headmasters of state schools to dismiss any teachers known to be members of the BNP.
The ostensible reason for this is that members of the BNP cannot be trusted not to preach "hatred" in the classroom. Mr. Gove said:
"I don't believe that membership of the BNP is
compatible with being a teacher. One of the things I
plan to do is to allow headteachers and governing bodies
the powers and confidence to be able to dismiss teachers
engaging in extremist activity."[BNP
members to be barred from teaching |Education
secretary pledges new powers for heads to dismiss
teachers who are members of groups with 'extremist
tenor', by Jeevan Vasagar]
Gove did add that this permission to dismiss would also cover members of other "extremist" organisations. However, it is to be doubted if radical Moslems and members of Trotskyite groups will be at risk of losing their jobs. There are too many of them in teaching, and they are too well-organised and too well-connected.
The permission might eventually be extended to religious Jews and Christians who refuse to celebrate the rich diversity of sexual orientations that is part of our established faith in England. Or it might not. But the permission will certainly be used ruthlessly to seek out and remove all schoolteachers who are, or who might have been, members of the BNP.
- The second persecution has been under way for a couple of years: the concerted effort by the managerial state to suppress the BNP.
There is in England a taxpayer-funded body called the Equality and Human Rights Commission. This was set up under the Equality Act 2006, and it ostensibly exists to ensure that people are treated fairly and have their rights respected. One of its main actual functions has been to sue the BNP to the verge of bankruptcy in the name of "human rights".
In
August 2009, the Commission began proceedings
against the BNP under sections 24 and 25(5) of the
Equality Act, on the grounds that BNP membership was
confined to natives of the
Since then, the Commission has been lavishing the taxpayers' money on an action that is supposed to vindicate the right of non-whites to join the BNP—a questionable cause of action, bearing in mind that few non-whites can really be aching to join an organisation like the BNP, and bearing in mind that the British State overall has been running the biggest budget deficit in the civilised world.
But vindicating abstract rights has not been the purpose of the action. Its real purpose has been to shut down the BNP. The legal proceedings could achieve this in three ways:
First, the BNP might lose and be compelled to admit large numbers of non-white members. These could then exploit its internal structures or take further legal action until there was no more BNP.
Second, the BNP might lose and then be sued again for breach of the final order. This could result in forfeiture of all party assets and the jailing of Mr. Griffin.
Third, win or lose, the BNP might be forced into bankruptcy by the costs of defending an action that had unlimited funding.
This real purpose became absolutely clear in the March of 2010, when the BNP did change its rules to admit non-whites, and the Commission immediately moved to the second option in its strategy for destruction. The BNP imposed two conditions on new members to prevent flooding attempts. First, prospective members should be visited at home, to see if they were suitable for membership. Second, all members should declare support for the "continued creation, fostering, maintenance and existence" of an indigenous British race, and should support action towards "stemming and reversing" immigration. The Commission argued that these conditions amounted to "indirect racial discrimination".
The Commission
won that round. On the 12th March 2010, a
Judge
outlawed
the requirement for home visits, saying that this might
lead to intimidation—though admitting that there was no
evidence it ever had. He also outlawed the requirement
to declare support for party principle and policy. He
said:
"I hold that the BNP are
likely to commit unlawful acts of discrimination within
section 1b Race Relations Act 1976 in the terms on which
they are prepared to admit persons to membership under
the 12th addition of their constitution."
[New
BNP membership rules judged to be biased,
Manchester Evening
News, March 12, 2010]
The reason
for this, the Judge went on, was that no non-white
person could support these policies without compromising
his "personal
sense of self-worth and dignity as a member of their
racial group".
And so the
BNP changed its membership rules again—it would now
accept members regardless of whether they agreed with its policies.
However,
these conditions for membership were only suspended by
the BNP, not removed. And so the Commission went to
court again, this time arguing that the BNP was in
contempt for not complying in full with the earlier
judgment.
As I reported
earlier, judgement has been reserved.
We can,
however, be sure that, if the Commission turns out to
have lost, it will find some other grounds of continuing
its taxpayer-funded vendetta against the BNP.
How much
more of this the BNP can take before it goes bankrupt is
hard to say. As of August 2010, the BNP was said to be
£500,000 in debt. This is about a quarter of its
annual income. Much of this debt appears to have been
run up in legal costs.
Every time
I write one of these articles about the persecution of
the BNP, I get several dozen e-mails from
people who claim that the party really is a national
socialist organization, and that
its recent conversion, under Nick Griffin, is a
convenient lie.
I find this
an irrelevant claim. I happen to believe that the BNP
is a white nationalist organization. Even if it were not,
though—even if the BNP leadership really did believe
that non-whites were less than human and that the
Holocaust never happened, but should have—the rights and
wrongs of this case would be unchanged.
It is
unfair to treat people in this manner. What has been
done, and is being done, to the BNP is oppressive. It is
not the sort of thing that happens in a functioning
liberal democracy. In a liberal democracy, people have
an unquestioned right to say whatever they please on
public issues—and they do not suffer even
official discrimination, let alone legal harassment.
In a liberal democracy, they have an unquestioned right
to associate or not with whomever they please—and are
not subject to administrative and legal bullying about
"inclusiveness"
and the unacceptability of
"hate". The
fact that
BNP members and the party itself are victims of
state harassment—and, as said, there is much more than
the two instances just given—indicates just how much
England has moved towards totalitarianism.
I go
further. If Nick Griffin and the BNP were openly avowed
followers of Adolf Hitler, and if they met together in
public to listen to the webcasts of
Harold Covington, they would probably be more left
alone than they are. They are persecuted for their
opinions on race and immigration. But they are
persecuted still more because of all else they
oppose or stand for. For all it did badly in the
elections of May 2010 (in terms of seats—as two left
wing blogs perceptively noted
here and
here, it did strikingly well in terms of votes) the
BNP remains the one possible voice for working class
dissent from the established order of things.
And though
unfair in itself, what is being done to the BNP should
make any reasonable man worried about the future of
But destroy the BNP, and the result will not be a vacuum. Other movements will emerge. These will be less interested in organising to win elections and debates than in arguing their case on the streets. Already, there is an English Defence League that has no apparent interest in electoral politics. This is almost certainly less thuggish than the ruling class and the MSM claim it to be. Equally, though, it is less constitutional in its aims and methods than the BNP. And the English Defence League may be only the beginning of the next stage in working class dissent from the established order of things.
Until modern trip switches (circuit breakers) became the norm, household wiring in England was protected from overheating by wired fuses. Each ceramic fuse contained about an inch and a half of wire to a stated ampage. This connected power as it came into a property to one ring circuit. Any power surge or appliance failure would result in immediate burning out of the fuse. The fuses were deliberately the weakest point in the whole wiring system. One reason they have now been replaced with trip switches is because many people were in the habit of replacing fuse wires with nails. This meant that fuses never blew—instead, houses burned down.
What the
What may follow is well enough known to any student of history.
Dr. Sean Gabb [Email him] is a writer, academic, broadcaster and Director of the Libertarian Alliance in England. His monograph Cultural Revolution, Culture War: How Conservatives Lost England, and How to Get It Back is downloadable here. For his account of the Property and Freedom Society's 2008 conference in Bodrum, Turkey, click here. For his address to the 2009 PFS conference, "What is the Ruling Class?", click here; for videos of the other presentations, click here.