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Response to a Common Question

This is a Facebook response that I was asked to compose for a Nationalist activist who was asked this loaded question by a leftist: ‘How are you British?’

The man then countered this with an equally lengthy response which could have been summed up in one sentence. ‘I am a Marxist, I don’t believe in nations, borders and flags’. In other words, we’re at polar opposites ideologically.

I am British, this fact does not mean that I view the non-British as inferior to myself, merely different. Since when did recognition or acknowledgement of a difference constitute hatred? If anything, it is a fundamental understanding of diversity.

I am British because I carry the unique genetic markers detailed by David Miles in his excellent tome ‘The Tribes of Britain’. You may mistakenly believe that you can undermine my identity by parroting black propaganda: ‘the British are mongrels’, you might squeal. It is simply a biological fallacy.

There’s been a lot of arguing over the last ten years, but it’s now more or less agreed that about 80 percent of Britons’ genes come from hunter-gatherers who came in immediately after the Ice Age” (Miles 2004).

You may counter this fact by stating that I may be the descendant of one of a successive wave of migrant groups from continental Europe. Having studied my lineage, I can discount any particular migrant group arriving after the 1600′s. My sir name gives testament to my forbears having lived, loved and died on these isles for almost 1,000 years. Incidentally, this is several hundred years longer than the indigenous Maori of New Zealand.

Discounting all of the above, the United Nations literature on Indigenous peoples, states that I can claim to be part of the ethnic British by virtue of a shared culture ancestry, language and history.

Further, I have sworn allegiance to Queen and country as part of my service to the nation.

I qualify as British on every tenet. I was born here, this isn’t luck, as Marxists would have you believe. I was born here because my ancestors struggled through famine, warfare and plague, yet they never abandoned this country. Building a nation that provided free healthcare so I could be delivered into the world via a hospital, and not a dirty barn. It is an investment that our ancestors made in our lives and all the future generations to come. An investment that was paid in blood several times over.

Their sacrifice was not made for the benefit of other peoples.

BNP policy is not to make Britain 100% British. It hasn’t been 100% British for a very long time. The BNP states that it exists to preserve our culture, heritage and relative homogeneity. It exists to prevent ethnocide, at a time when UN legislation only acts to preserve indigenous peoples that have already been mostly destroyed.

As for individual members being 100% British, well, this is unlikely. However, as with other indigenous groups, you are not required to be 100% American Indian, Inuit or Maori to be considered part of the indigenous group, as long as you fulfil the tenets listed above.

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