Norman Pannell Conservative member for Liverpool (Kirkdale) served in
the Nigerian Legislature and lived in Africa for over 10 years. He proposed
a motion at the 1958 Tory conference for reciprocal rights of entry with
other Commonwealth countries, for the U.K. had an open door policy and
let anyone in. When I visited Nigeria two years ago as a member
of Parliament without ultimate responsibility for the affairs of the that
country, I was given an entry permit valid for 14 days and renewable subject
to good behaviour. He also addressed the 1961 conference on the
perils of admitting criminals and the sick. The debate was stage-managed
to stop Cyril Osborne speaking who stood outside in the rain handing out
off-prints of a letter of his from the mornings Telegraph. Pannell
stated that though Butler had disagreed with limiting numbers, had agreed
with his suggestion of deporting immigrants who commit crimes but nothing
had been done.
There is the importation of diseases which puts the population at risk.
In a letter to the Times of 13th December 1960, Harold Gurden wrote, On
the health question we find the middle ring of the city(Birmingham), where
immigrants are mainly concentrated, heavily peppered with dots of tuberculosis
incidence. It is the opinion of medical officers that at least some immigrants
are suffering with this disease before entering the country...We have
a duty to our constituents. In 2007 it has been revealed that we
have a record number of cases of TB. This has been imported by our authorities.
When we were homogenous we trusted one another and the police did not
need to be armed; now they regularly have to shoot people in the street,
we are in a surveillance state and have totalitarian race laws to oppress
us. At a Society For Individual freedom meeting at Birmingham Town Hall,
on 18 4 1968, 2 days before Enochs famous Rivers of Blood speech,
Sir Ronald Bell warned of the forthcoming Race Relations Act, I
am profoundly convinced that if this immediate threat is not sharply challenged
and then fought with as great a persistence as has been shown over recent
years by those who have worked for this engine of oppression, then many
further uses of law and of the power of the state for shaping mens
minds will follow.
To control thought totalitarians redefine words and change the meaning
of legal terms.
K. Harvey Proctor addressed the 1983 Conservative party conference ,but
no senior party member sat on the platform apart from a glum looking John
Biffen who only clapped sparely. Mrs Thatcher was not present. In 1981
Proctor had announced a plan by the Monday club Immigration and Repatriation
Committee to repatriate 50,000 immigrants a year. The forward to the document
was by Sir Ronald Bell. At a Monday Club dinner in early 1984 guest of
honour Enoch Powell revealed that the Conservative party had threatened
to not speak to Proctor for his belief in repatriation which would have
been the first time in their history they had sent one of their MPs
to Coventry! In his outstanding book The Unarmed Invasion(1965)
Lord Elton wrote, We seem to be re-enacting the story of the Roman
Empire, which in its decadence imported subject races to do the menial
tasks. In his autobiography the great Rock guitarist Eric Clapton
tells of adverts he saw while touring Jamaica for immigrants to come here
and how clear it was that they were being brought here as cheap labour.
A passage in Edward Gibbons masterpiece The Decline and Fall
of Rome is prophetic. He pondered what would have befallen us had
Muslims won the battle of Poitiers in France in 733. He saw that battle
as a major turning point in European history: the Arabian fleet
might have sailed without a naval combat into the mouth of the Thames.
Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools
of Oxford, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the
sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mahomet." They are there
now because our rulers are on their side against us. The Saudi monarchy
are building The Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies (OCIS), founded in
1985, Prince Charles is its honorary patron. It is the biggest Muslim
educational centre in the United Kingdom and built as a traditional Oxford
college around a central cloistered quadrangle. The 10,230 sq m four-storey
building will feature study and research facilities, a lecture theatre,
a large library and an environmentally controlled archive for rare documents;
a prayer hall with traditional dome and minaret tower. The centre includes
a 108-foot-high minaret and a 75-foot-high dome. It is estimated at £65
million. We rember that this traitorous university is pushing us out of
their in favour of overseas students. As reported in the Independent 21
April 2004.
A TV poll marking 40 years since Enochs 'Rivers of Blood' speech
found most people anticipate racial conflict over the years to come. The
unprecedented level of prosperity Europe has enjoyed for years that has
prevented the civil unrest but we are now heading into recession. In an
echo of Enochs warnings on racial civil war The Sunday
Times of June 11, 2006 reported that Rear Admiral Chris Parry, one of
Britains most senior military strategists warned that western civilisation
faces a threat on a par with the barbarian invasions that destroyed the
Roman empire. He said future migrations would be comparable to the Goths
and Vandals while north African barbary pirates could be attacking
yachts and beaches in the Mediterranean within 10 years. Europe, including
Britain, could be undermined by large immigrant groups with little allegiance
to their host countriesa reverse colonisation as Parry
described it. These groups would stay connected to their homelands by
the internet and cheap flight.
We never asked for, nor were we asked if we wanted, the new invasion,
not by proud conquering warlords, but by cringing Third World masses with
whom we have nothing in common but the elites wanted for cheap labour
and to expiate their historic guilt for them while they lived peacefully
in fine areas.
The words of these heroes became reality on 7 July 2005 when the blood
of 52 victims of Third World immigration ran in the gutters of London.
Enoch had told the Southall Chamber of Commerce on 4th November 1971,
Yet it is more truly when he looks into the eyes of Asia that the
Englishman comes face to face with those who will dispute with him possession
of his native land.
1Peter Hennessy, 'Having It So Good - Britain in the
Fifties' (Allen Lane, 2006) p 224
Hennessy's reference is: Peter Catterall (ed.),
'The Macmillan Diaries: The Cabinet Years, 1950-1957' (Macmillan, 2003)
p 382.
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