Law0 min ago
BNP
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by katie83. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
A cursory google search reveals numerous members of the BNP heirarchy have convictions for violent behaviour associated with racism. Their leaflets present their 'acceptable' face, but be clear, at heart, they are neo-nazis. They advocate a policy of forced resettlement of minority ethnic people.
Nick Griffin is also a holocaust denier.
Incidentally, why is it that the sort of people who go around saying 'black people are taking away their jobs' never consider the reason they're unemployed is because they're knuckle-dragging halfwits with behaviour problems?
Anyone else find it amusing that so many people have this problem? The so called BNP speaks for very little of the country and certainly not the majority of my countrymen....Islanders who were prepared to barrcade themselves on their island and stop ferries to stop the home office forcibly removing a immigrant family....that's how many of my countrymen feel.
I personally keep in touch with many of the political parties views and manifestos and the BNP is basically racism lite....watered down slightly for mass appeal but scratch the surface and see the beast beneath....Nick Griffin was convicted of incitement to racial hatred in April 1998, has called the Holocaust 'the hoax of the 20th century' and co-written a pamphlet entitled Who are the Mindbenders?, alleging that a Jewish consipiracy runs the media, where it provides an 'endless diet of pro-multiracial, pro-homosexual, anti-British trash'.
Robert Bennett, a leading BNP member in Oldham in 2002 served 5 years in prison for the gang rape of a woman, he has also served 7 years for armed robbery and has more than 30 convictions.
The BNP national organiser, Tony Lecomber, was sentenced to 3 years for unlawful wounding of a Jewish schoolteacher.
The BNP's southeast London organiser has 17 convictions for crimes including burglary, theft and drugs offences. The East Midlands organiser, Steve Belshaw, has a conviction for assaulting a lawyer in Mansfield and the Burnley organiser was jailed for three months for electoral fraud....All in all a nice bunch of chaps even when you consider the low opinion the public has in general of politicians and their morals.
Anyway, in answer to the original question: 1. because they are racist (there have always been some people who are instinctively racist and just can't help it; they just don't like differences) 2. they are not racist, but they want to protest about social issues such as housing or jobs 3. they are persuaded into believing that these social issues are exacerbated by immigration or asylum seekers 4. because they believe the lies which are peddled by the BNP in claiming that Asians and/or immigrants and/or asylum seekers are given preferential treatment in housing etc (i.e. because they are gullible and/or ill-informed) 5. They are plain ignorant and are not aware of the racist policies of the BNP (e.g. Maureen Stowe, who recently defected from the BNP after having been elected as one of their councillors).
When I was at university, one of my fellow students met a student who was a member of the BNP, and became curious about it, on the assumption that the BNP was a friendly patriotic party like the SNP. I was very surprised at the time that my colleague had not previously been aware of the BNP, even though he was supposedly a politics student :-)
Immigration has always been an essential part of the modern British capitalist economy, and key public services would strain greatly without the flexibility which it allows. I am not sure whether to be glad or cautious about your endorsement of my party.