Sunday, 31 August 2008

The Anti- English Racism Of Ratna Dutt.

Daily Mail reports new births as the following: 64.4% WHITE BRITISH, 8.7% Asian, 5.1% Irish/Other White, 5% Black, 3.5% Mixed Race, 2.4% Chinese/Other, 10.9% Unrecorded.
Ratna Dutt of the Race Equality Foundation says "Britain is more racially diverse than ever, which is brilliant."
Her thinly disguised anti-English racism is plain to see. I mean, how can anyone who loves diversity think of the world as a more diverse place with the extinction of the English? (A mathmatical certainty if the immigration and immigrant birth issues aren't addressed?)
Does she think the U.S. to be a beacon for multi-racialism with no Native Americas to speak of?

Perhaps she'll use that old chestnut, "the English are a mongrel race so can't claim a racial identity anyway".
Oblivious to the fact that immigrants in Birtain each claim their seperate identities loudly and clearly (indeed, with public funds and government legislation to 'encourage' their expansion) so, mongrel race or not, we who are left still have a distinct English identity and a right to protect it.
It's also the only identity who's entire existence is being determined here.

The truth is all countries have had historic migrations. It's just that until recently (i.e. world travel opportunities) all those migrations have been from the SURROUNDING areas of those countries. All of a similar RACIAL and CULTURAL identity.
That is why only recently have we British had anything more than a few percent of non-white and also why until recently we were one of the least divided, most homogeneous nations on earth.
And why it is IMPOSSIBLE for us absorb world migration without becoming a Balkanised set of REGIONS each backed by a M.N.C. controlled E.U. or other international body. (Ie. E.U. regional policy funding.)

"Forty years ago visitors described Britain as homogeneous. That unlike the U.S. and other comparable countries there were relatively few important lines of division. Whereas race, religion and territory divided other countries they did not in Britain."
Politics U.K. 5th Edition.

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