
Originally Posted by
For_England
I miss the BNP; when I discovered it in 2005 (putting aside my meeting with two activists in the street in Bedfordshire in 1993, my first contact), it seemed like a real people's salvation movement, with an organically integrated message which resonated. I was in the last throes of coming out of my libertarianism (thanks to an interest in organic eating and learning about the evils of mass industrialized food production), and the common sense economics turned me into a full blown distributist. The articles were imaginative, thought-provoking, harbingers of what a new Britain might look like, with the evils and excesses of modern liberal, individualistic, artificial and industrialised society stripped away. Family values, traditional cuisine and culture, pride in our history, promotion of small businesses, freedom to speak our mind and be human once more, new and promising horizons in everything from energy production to architecture. It was a party that I was convinced, given time, would win over the farmers, the environmentalists, even the upper classes, once the image had been cleaned up and talent on the peripheries pushed to the forefront. It would snowball; already the party was out in the streets, cleaning up graffiti, cleaning up the rubbish, and putting paid to the media's lies.
Nationalist unity? Nothing but a wasteland. Meanwhile, Rome burns.
Bookmarks