POLITICAL correctness (PC) is a form of autism which, among other things, is an inability to imagine. To illustrate: when an autistic looks at a car, they see a car, like the rest of us. But if you say to an autistic “Imagine that car wasn’t there” they’ll look at you, baffled, and say something like “But that car is there”.
Pete Winstanley, one of the most PC contributors to HAS, gives us statistics on the number of ethnic minorities currently in London (HAS, Nov 3). He fails to mention the high birth rate among immigrants, plus ongoing immigration, which tells us what is coming: an Islamised Britain with whites in a minority.
Grasping the latter point requires little imagination, but this small amount of imagination is beyond the autistic PC brigade.
As for Mr Winstanley’s disapproval of a “white-only”
Britain, perhaps he could give us his views on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.
Any mention of white British “indigenous people” makes one a Nazi in the eyes of the politically correct. Worse still, this “disgraceful” UN declaration refers to the right of indigenous people “not to be subjected to forced assimilation or destruction of their culture”.
Adam Walker, Bishop Auckland Prospective Parliamentary Candidate, British National Party.
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