Evil Communist tyrant and Dictator Joe Stalin & the Tony Blairs `back door' Bolshevik state scheme.

Stalin.gif (37379 bytes) It might seem a tad harsh comparing Joe Stalin, (who finished off the Bolsheviks' genocidal murdering spree of up to 50 million people ) with the smiling, `caring' Tony Blair. We don't have `Gulags' ... yet. However ideologically Blair is a `modern' Marxist / Bolshevik dictator, who believes that the state has the God given right to interfere in peoples lives, right down instructing parents how to bring their own children up. Regarding his record on `human rights' ask the people of Iraq what they think ! blair.jpeg (4287 bytes)ussr_small.jpg (1372 bytes)  

Latest uttering from the Blair camp Margaret Hodge children's minister said ..."the government had the right to intervene in family life and said she wanted to extend the state's influence to the home."

 

Most British people think the government is infringing too much on their personal liberty, according to a new poll.

(November 2004)

Seven out of ten respondents - an even mix of men and women - in the ICM survey for think-tank Reform said the state was curtailing too many freedoms.
Voters agreed that "too many infringements on personal liberty are being proposed on matters that should be for individuals to decide for themselves".
The poll comes after the Queen's Speech set out tough new laws to crackdown on terrorism, anti-social behaviour and identity theft. The government is also considering controlling the advertising of junk food to children.
Almost two thirds (62 per cent) of Labour voters said too many restrictions were being imposed, suggesting the government was at risk of alienating its own followers with "nanny state" legislation.

The Children Act will outlaw physical punishment by parents in England and Wales and, last week, MPs forced a ban on hunting onto the statute books despite protests from the House of Lords.
Meanwhile, children's minister Margaret Hodge said the government had the right to intervene in family life and said she wanted to extend the state's influence to the home.
The government will publish its ten-year strategy for childcare next week and plans to give all new parents a booklet on how to rear their offspring.

 

  JSTRAW.jpeg (3447 bytes)ussr_small.jpg (1372 bytes) Statement By Jack Straw

"The British aren't worth saving as a race"

A hateful statement don't you think?

 

Headlines and from the British national newspaper `The Daily Mail' dated Feb 1st 2007

 

 
 
 

 

"the government had the right to intervene in family life and said she wanted to extend the state's influence to the home."

With plans to issue instructional parenting booklets

 

mhodge.jpeg (2840 bytes)ussr_small.jpg (1372 bytes)Statement made by Margaret Hodge `Childrens Minister

 

Compulsory I.D cards for all British people by 2012 cost £100 and a £2,500 fine if you don't buy an I.D card £1000 fine if you move address without notifying the authorities.                                               

13th Nov 2003

David Blunkett has indicated there is no limit to the number of legal immigrants that the UK can absorb.
Referring to the notion that the UK is a crowded country, David Blunkett pointed out that Britain has always been a 'crowded, vigorous island', and said he could imagine no maximum limit to the population.

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David Blunket

 

Sept 2004

Foreign Secretary Jack Straw has defended his controversial handshake with Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe implying he first did not realise who it was.
Mr Straw was filmed greeting the widely-condemned leader during a reception in New York last week in the lead up to the United Nations General Assembly.

President Mugabe's brutal regime has been heavily criticised for a notorious human rights record and allegations of election rigging and persecution* of opponents. (sic) (killing)
Members of Mugabe's government and senior members of his Zanu PF party are banned from entering the European Union.
Mr Straw shook the dictator's hand during a reception for South African President Thabo Mbeki and was filmed by a team which was following him around the UN.
The footage was broadcast last night and the Foreign Secretary said later: "I hadn't expected to see President Mugabe there.
 

"Because it was quite dark in that corner I was being pushed towards shaking hands with somebody just as a matter of courtesy and then it transpired it was President Mugabe. (So would shake hands with Hitler if it was dark enough?)
"But the fact that there is a serious disagreement between Zimbabwe and the United Kingdom does not mean that you should then be discourteous or rude."  (RUDE ???)
 

The day after Robert Mugabe's, political mandate was renewed, White farmer Terry Ford was  tied to a tree by the partisans of the president of Zimbabwe, and murdered. The first of many murders of White farmers and their families, that continue to this day.

Robert Mugabe's sister then took over the farm.

Not seen much of that on the T.V news? I wonder why?

With  Joshua Nkomo, Mugabe led a Marxist-inspired guerrilla war that forced the white-dominated government of Ian Smith to accept universal elections, which Mugabe's party, Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), easily won. His rule was marked by violence and intimidation and by a decreasing tolerance of political opposition. In an act bordering on naked aggression, Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has overruled his own black majority and begun the process of seizing white-owned farmland in Zimbabwe. Having watched the humiliating loss Mugabe suffered in the Feb. 14 constitutional referendum, many Zimbabwe-watchers familiar with the nature of the Mugabe regime wondered what his reaction would be. Their fears seem to be coming true. Mugabe has encouraged masses of Marxist operatives and citizens to simply squat on the farmland in question. In fact, so many squatters have taken up residence on white-owned farms that the rural farming areas of the nation "are on the verge of collapse," said one Zimbabwean official.

Particularly hard hit have been the tobacco farms. Tobacco is Zimbabwe's leading export crop and a major cash producer for both farmers and the government. "Illegal invasions" by Marxist followers of Mugabe have been mounting in recent weeks.

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