Surely there cannot be that many
people in the UK who continue to have a respectful regard for those six hundred
and odd men and women who currently occupy our national legislature, on the
basis of representing the everyday interests of the millions of British voters
who elect them to that purportedly august office.
Declining electoral participation
by the people of Britain is perhaps the most telling indictment of the mutual
contempt seemingly felt by those who govern and those who agree to be governed,
between the executive and society, between MP's and their constituents. Hardly
a day goes by without some scandal, outrage, or illegal action occurring, which
helps further widen the divide between the elected representative and those who
agree to be represented.
Whether it's stealing from the
public purse, ignoring voter's concerns, retreating on electoral promises,
introducing previously undeclared ideological policies, or even blatantly
reneging on vital socio-economic issues, the yawning disconnect between the two
sides seems to threatens to tear our society apart, bringing an end to hundreds
of years of national unity.
Throw into the mix a
determination by successive governments, unelected advocate groups and outside
influences, to forcibly introduce a whole new set of foreign cultures, beliefs
and languages into Britain's main population centres; and you have a recipe for
a social disaster waiting to happen, or that is even in the process of
happening. Not content with demanding that such newcomers should themselves
adapt to existing British cultural norms that have taken hundreds of years to
cement, instead our national regulators insist that native Briton's, those
representing the vast majority of the civil population, should accept wholesale
changes to their society, to their schools, to their communities, to their
country. Is it any wonder then that the vast majority of Briton's have become
disenchanted, disenfranchised and disillusioned with the current form of
government, one that no longer seems to represent them, the indigenous peoples
of these islands?
Doubtless there are many people
in Britain who believe that our Parliamentary system, by virtue of its
reputation as the highest court in the land, automatically attracts the
brightest and the best that our country has to offer in terms of personnel and
innate human abilities. However, any number of scandals over the past few
years, involving members of both the House of Commons and the House of Lords
would seem to have put paid to any such suggestion, as typically the brightest
and the best would not usually include crooks, persistent sex-pests and other
dishonourable members, as seems to be the case today. Although the writer's own
disdain for and disgust with our current Parliament has been previously
expressed on this blog, it is always worth reiterating the point that for the
most part, the "honourable" members of both chambers are in reality,
nothing of the sort and simply represent the very worst failures, charlatans
and placemen that the various political parties have managed to muster, hiding
behind the facade of what purports to be a world beating parliamentary system.
Not content with lining their own
pockets at the public expense, stoking their individual egos on the public
stage, the Commons might best be regarded as little more than a House of
Misrepresentation, spinning and weaving established facts to best suit each
political party's strategies and world weary ideologies. From Europe to the
economy, from migration to education, from defence to foreign affairs, Labour,
Conservative and the Liberal Democrats all attempt to skew the truth to best
suit their own political ends, with little regard for how their own declared
opinions might actually affect the real truth of the matter.
Just how have we managed to reach
such a sorry state of affairs that a national government of our country has to
actively think about promoting the idea of "Britishness" being taught in British schools; or that a
British Prime Minister has to go "cap in hand", to other European
leaders, to plead for our basic rights to be restored over areas of national
competency, including those relating to border controls, trade and welfare?
Just why is any single percentage of our national laws dictated to us by
Polish, Romanian, Bulgarian, Spanish representatives? What sort of country have
we become when assorted foreign criminals, including paedophiles, rapists,
robbers, murderers, traffickers, smugglers, terrorists, etc. can find a secure
haven within our national borders, safe in the knowledge that their human
rights will always be put above those of the entire British population?
How proud and sovereign a nation
are we that we allow disparate company CEO's, foreign diplomats, overseas
Presidents and Prime Ministers to purposefully dictate our nations domestic
policies and commercial activities, from signing international trade deals, to
permitting all and sundry free and unfettered access to our towns and cities?
How is it that we have essentially handed our world standing to unelected and
anonymous politicians from the likes of Luxembourg, Portugal and Belgium,
without a by your leave from the British people? Who exactly gave Ted Heath,
Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Tony Blair or Gordon Brown permission to hand
away our historic rights to determine who comes into our country and who
doesn't, who sets the laws that we all live by, who we can and can't trade
with, what cultures we choose to value, what languages we want to hear and
speak? Instead of being law-makers, our elected political representatives have
become nation-breakers, the destroyers of British history, culture and
commonality.
Today's Labour Party meekly
claims to be the inheritors of the working class movement that lead to its first
creation, yet in reality is nothing of the sort. Run by millionaire champagne
socialists, who have little in common with the working classes, save for the
fact that they are both members of the human race, modern day Labour is simply
the reverse of the Conservative coin, the country being equally damned no
matter which way it happens to land after a general election. With a few odd
exceptions on both sides of the House, in the main, the Commons, the mother of
all parliaments, seems to be inhabited by row upon row of professional
political graduates, who've never held down a proper job outside of
Westminster, second-rate newspaper hacks, failed and highly questionable
business people, unsuccessful advocates, as well as the heirs of previous
parliamentary incumbents, who believe that appearing to serve the public as an
MP was actually far easier than having to work for a living.
The truth of the matter is that
there's no point in blaming other European leaders for Britain's present
political predicament, nor indeed President Obama, or any other world leader
who has expressed a view on the issue of our continued EU membership.
Ultimately they will express an opinion that reflects the best interests of
their own nations, Obama for America, Merkel for Germany, Hollande for France,
etc. etc. The only people who can bear any sort of legitimate responsibility
for the predicament that Britain now finds itself in over Europe, over
migration, over the economy, over national defence, over energy; and the multitude
of other vital issues that affects us all on a daily basis, is ourselves, the
great British electorate.
We are partially responsible for
the mess that our country is in, because for far too long we have chosen to
accept the barefaced lies, the political spin, the gross misrepresentations
being offered to us by the three legacy parties. We're the ones who have
allowed the unprincipled braggarts and charlatans of the Labour, Conservative
and Liberal Democrat parties to guide our nation's fortunes, or perhaps more
correctly its misfortune, over the past half century, so why should any of us
be surprised that they've made such a complete and utter hash of it?
Just how many millions of British
voters will simply turn up at the local polling station to cast their ballot
for the Labour, Conservative or Lib Dem candidate without having the slightest
clue what that individual candidate stands for, if indeed they stand for
anything at all? How many millions of people vote for the three legacy parties
purely on the basis of one or two flagship policies, without considering the
remainder of the party's manifesto, the part where the pain resides. Remember
"No More Top Down Reorganisation of the NHS", "Education,
Education, Education", the "Knowledge Society", "Immigration
Down To The Tens of Thousands", or even the much promised "Referendum
on Europe"? Just a selection of high profile manifesto promises that have
not only served to damage the country as a whole, but that have remained
largely undelivered; and yet political policies nonetheless that millions of
people doubtless voted for!
Of course in some ways it would
be nice to believe that the multiple failures of policy visited on the British
people over the past half century or so, were entirely the result of sheer
incompetence on the part of the various Labour, Conservative and Liberal
Democrat administrations; and to a lesser degree they probably were. However,
for the most part, one can only ever be drawn to the conclusion that most of
the pain and destruction inflicted on
Britain and its people, be that in terms of deindustrialisation, civil and
social division, privatisation of public utilities, the de-skilling of the
national workforce, community breakdown, devolution of Scotland, Ireland &
Wales, deferment of sovereignty to the European Union and mass immigration,
have not actually been undertaken through a lack of knowledge on the part of
our elected representatives, but with their full recognition of the social and
economic damage that they would ultimately cause not only to the country but
also to its inhabitants.
Although Margaret Thatcher's
government undoubtedly killed the British disease of radical unionism, this was
only really achieved by killing the patient, in the form of Britain's
traditional heavy industries. As a result hundreds of thousands of highly
skilled workers were made redundant, the country lost its invaluable
manufacturing base; and thousands of communities were left devastated and
devoid of meaningful employment. Thatcher's political and economic strategy, to
undermine and then destroy the troublesome Trade Union movement in Britain was
no accident, but was fundamentally a war for control of the country, one in
which the thousands of unemployed workers and hundreds of devastated communities
were simply regarded as collateral damage.
It is also now widely accepted
that Edward Heath and his fellow Conservative ministers, along with their civil
servants, knew full well that Britain's entrance into what was then the
European Economic Community in 1973, was never just about trade per se, but was
always intended to allow for the later development of a fully federalised
European super state, a proposal that was never made plain to the British
people themselves. Had it been so, then in all likelihood the EEC referendum of
1975, which was sold to the British people as a renegotiated settlement, which
protected Britain's vital national interests, would never have been given a
mandate to continue. It is to the eternal shame of both Harold Wilson and
Edward Heath that they both deliberately lied to the British public, such was
their own determination to create a vain political legacy, which has only now
started to unravel.
Sadly, the lies and deceit
continue to be repeated over our continued membership of the European Union,
with politician's of all stripes choosing to put their own beliefs, their own
personal opinions, before those of the people that they're elected to
represent. Whether it's Nick Clegg with his now largely discredited three million
jobs claim, or David Cameron with his pledge to renegotiate our membership,
before holding an In/Out referendum in 2017, promises and pledges that hold
little weight with a significant portion of the British population.
For their part, Labour, the party
founded by the Trade Union movement to represent the working classes, continue
to cling to the myth that our membership of the European Union, with its mass
migration, wage compression, declining living standards, housing shortages,
limited school places, alien languages and cultures, along with rationed
healthcare, are all a price worth paying to create an enriched multicultural
British society for the 21st century.
They too are happy to scaremonger
about the dangers of Britain leaving the European Union, warning the UK
population about much needed jobs being lost, of foreign investment being cut,
of Britain becoming isolated from both its continental neighbours and the wider
international community. All stuff and nonsense of course as many independent
reports have found. Britain with its huge capacity for consumer goods, with its
vast networks of business and diplomatic contacts, with its membership of most
international trade bodies, with its vibrant economy, its impressive financial
muscle, its membership of the Commonwealth and pre-existing international ties
would undoubtedly thrive outside of the suffocating restrictions of the
European Union. Unfortunately, Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrats are
not risk takers, or visionaries, but for the most part are small men with small
ideas and absolutely no principles when it comes to protecting Britain's best
interests. They would much rather hide behind the skirts of the European Union
than take the risk of leading their independent country out into the bigger
international community.
When considering our current
parliament, it is perhaps easy to draw some sort of parallel with the English
parliament that Oliver Cromwell found after the English Civil Wars and after
the roundheads had chopped off a monarchs head to achieve parliamentary
sovereignty. Cromwell was thought to have returned to London to find a
parliament stuffed to the gills with self-serving representatives, whose only
single intent was to maintain their own personal wealth, authority and position
in life, with absolutely no regard given to the wider citizenry of the country.
Similarly today, we appear to have an entire political class, along with their
special advisers, lobbyists and correspondents who are so dedicated to the
retention of their own positions that they have little time to consider the
needs, or indeed the demands of the wider electorate, the very people who put
them into power in the first place. Perhaps like in Cromwell's era, the time
will soon approach where this particularly contemptible congress is finally
shown the door by the British people and a truly representative parliamentary
system can be put in place, one that will finally decide the issue of our
European membership once and for all?
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