Welcome to GavPOLITICS
A note to readers
This site is the personal site
of Gavin Ayling, a member of the
Conservative Party. Please note,
this site is not associated,
funded or otherwise commissioned
by the Conservatives and
represents only the views of the
author.
If you have any thoughts or
suggestions especially where
they refer to the
Adur
/ South East area, please
let me know.
Regards, Gavin Ayling
BLOG
15 August 2005 - VJ Day
There has been much made today, of the lack of knowledge surrounding the Asian part of the Second World War. Though it
is an obvious, and much-attacked target, I must blame the schooling system here in
England.
Admittedly it has been more than a decade since I did any form of history schooling at school, but I'm quite sure this
government has not changed matters in favour of facts, detail and substance and away from 'Imagine a day in the life of..."
etc.
The Japanese were evil in the way they treated their prisoners, merciless in battle and unlikely to surrender were
it not for
the bombs. People should pay equal or greater attention to
VJ Day than
VE Day not only because that
is what completed the war, but also because British soldiers were heavily involved in the campaigns in
Burma, India and
beyond. We should all endeavour to take some time today to stop our busy lives and think about the people who made
sacrifice for us especially given the lack of recognition they get even now.
10 August 2005 - England
I have been asked to be Branch Coordinator for the Campaign for an English Parliament for East and West Sussex.
With this in mind, I will be updating information at the following location about activities planned in this
area. I will also, wherever possible, be contacting our members with details in advance:
link
10 August 2005 - Bombings fail
A survey was released today that brought the welcome news that the British people have not given up their world-beating tolerance in the face of the evil London bombings. link
Unfortunately some words with ambiguous meanings were used in the survey which allows interpretation by the tree-huggers of this world that does not reflect the main gist of the results. The results say that a majority of people are in favour of both multiculturalism and integration of immigrant communities including requiring immigrants to learn English.
This is not the definition of multiculturalism that has been doing the rounds since 1992. Multiculturalism to Labour means immigrant communities living in ghettos and causing so-called white-flight. By agreeing that immigrant communities with their imported cultures should be welcomed, while simultaneously asking that they integrate, the respondents of this survey have said that they do not like this definition of multiculturalism and the headlines that the BBC is so prominently using lend assistance to the aforementioned do-gooders.
To be clear:
Immigration was and remains a good thing for England
An England of multiple ethnicities is a good thing
Ghettoisation of mini-societies within England is a bad thing
Arranged/enforced marriage is a bad thing
Patriarchal intolerance should not be tolerated
David Davis was interviewed on BBC Radio Four's 'PM' this evening and he should be roundly congratulated for making this point clearly, calmly and despite the BBC's natural tendency to demonise anything that doesn't suit their non-libertarian, large government ideology. He said everything that he should have done and he said it without inviting the apparently balanced "voice of incredulity" that is so often the trademark of 'Today' and 'PM' interviews.
30 July 2005 - Terrorism Part 3
When I last made a post the media made it appear as though the immigration status of the Brazilian victim was
clear. While much remains strange about the shooting, I must retract with reservations my comments made on the
25th.
While it is dull, I also feel compelled to congratulate the police on their work that resulted in such complete
success yesterday.
25 July 2005 - Terrorism Part 2
It's been a long time since my last post. In that time we have been attacked again, the police have made impressive progress,
maintained sufficient secrecy and provided sufficient information. They have also shot dead a Brazilian man who, we discovered
later, was not involved in terrorism in any way.
The steady drip of information, though, has lead us now to know that he was running from the police because he had out-stayed his
welcome. The "bleeding heart brigade", as I recently heard
them so excellently described the other day, will say that this
man died at the hands of an over zealous police force who are involved in political oppression by the state. Shami Chakrabarti,
who so often misses the real target when talking about protecting civil liberties, and her ilk will continue to focus on so many
non-issues while missing the more serious ones.
The UK is soft on terrorists. This is a fact.
At the same time, the Labour Party wants to imprison people in their homes without trial; while refusing to allow phone tapping
to be used as evidence. When things appear obvious, the present government has an almost unnatural knack of missing them. People
such as the Brazilian overstayer should not be here to be shot. A warrant for his arrest should have been issued already, the police
should have known he was in London using face-recognising (and so not overly labour-intensive) CCTV. The fact that he ran from
the police was because he had done something wrong. He knew he had done something wrong and while what he had done (staying longer
than his VISA allowed) does not deserve the death penalty, this is what he so regrettably has received. My sympathy for him, however,
evaporates when I consider that he is here illegally. If he were not, he wouldn't have been shot. The police involved should feel
no guilt - they were doing what they should.
Predictions
It is always a dangerous game to predict the future, especially in a forum such as this where people will quote you again in the
future. Regardless, however, I believe we are on the cusp of something more serious than most people suspect. In the UK we allow
people to live among us who harbour such severe and twisted hatred that they would be willing to blow themselves up. At the same
time the government acts in a draconian manner but refuses to say what it should. Blair should be saying now, in no uncertain
terms, that Islamic fundamentalists are not welcome. He should not be repeating his mantra about Islam not being evil in and of
itself (is he an expert in theology?) and should concentrate on the evil doers.
Key Issues
Anyone who suggests that Muslims, or those that look like Muslims should not be stopped and searched by the police on that basis
should be immediately and loudly shouted down. It is nonsense and unambiguously so. If you were looking for an IRA suspect you
would probably be looking for a white man - there's nothing wrong with saying that. Equally, if we are trying to avoid Muslim
extremists killing any more of our people and giving Clarke more excuses to invade our personal freedoms in unrelated, but carefully
timed Acts, we must accept that the police are going to be looking for people of African or Middle-Eastern origin.
Anyone who espouses the killing of innocents in the name of a religion should be instantly banned from visiting the UK and, if they
live here already, should be deported or locked away.
Faith schools that are state-funded should be a thing of the past - religion has no place in education. Unfortunately, I know from
experience that school inspections by
Ofsted are a complete waste of time and
money because the school has plenty of prior warning in which to paint walls, install new equipment and prep students. Therefore, at
the moment, any private faith school (the existence of which I have no objection to) could be preaching dangerous and
treasonous ideology whether or not they have been inspected.
The police have spent a lot of time since the 7th of July guarding Mosques. Crime in other areas has not stopped, but these buildings
(for they're guarded at night when they are not occupied) must be protected in sleepy towns with low/no racial tensions while failing
entirely to protect those people who they are there to serve.
What may happen
If Blair fails to address the things I have mentioned above, he will feed the flames of a conflict that will make the Second World
War look like a playground scuffle. Iraq is a perfect warning to the West of what could happen if this so-called 'war on terrorism'
is not fought with Churchillian resolve. I do not think Iraq has got as bad as it will and Iraq has only mobilised
a small proportion of those that have some misplaced problem with the 'infidels'. If the West fails to address the 'problem'
of Muslim evangelism by bomb, we could face a reversal of the enlightenment the West has experienced. Democratic elections in these
backwaters of civilisation often elect conservative (not in the excellent libertarian sense that we know of here) leaders
who do not believe in individual freedom. We must not allow the elecorate of England to think thus.
The protests in Pakistan against Bush and Blair and the US and Britain suggest a growing imbalance in the world between the West
and a group of people who are convinced, wrongly, that the West is
against them.
I do not think it is scaremongering to suggest that we need to stop importing
bogus asylum seekers and illegal immigrants until we
have dealt with those that we have rightly opened our doors to either through the asylum system or through legal immigration.
Multi-culturalism is bandied about as if it is definitely a great thing. Multiculturalism as an ideal is a naive way of creating ghettos
and increased racial tension. Being British is a cultural as well as patriotic thing, and the people of Britain of all ethnicities
and religions need to embrace Britain as their country. The stoicism of Londoners that was so ably reported is a trait of the people
of Britain and this trait will not continue if we end up with ghettos and isolated communities. So-called white-flight from London
suggests a serious problem in the fabric of society which must be addressed (though I do not claim to know that answers!). Calls for
Sharia courts and changes in law to allow
Muslims (or other groups) to behave differently must be resisted.
I have written this post carefully and I have intended to avoid offence. If I have caused offence, please
let me know and I will look at your comments seriously. I have
read sections of religious texts from all the
major
religions and all, except Sikhism, Hinduism and Buddhism, contain passages that encourage
barbaric behaviour. They were written in a different time and should be read in this context. I do not believe Islam is any more
violent (though certainly more explicit in the Hadith).
Some notes
Canada: click here
UK: "The special poll based on a survey of 500 British Muslims found that a clear majority want Islamic law introduced into this country
in civil cases relating to their own community. Some 61 per cent wanted Islamic courts - operating on sharia principles – "so long as
the penalties did not contravene British law". A major part of civil cases in this country deal with family disputes such as divorce,
custody and inheritance."
Source: http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/004524.php
Gav says: Sharia law would be another way of telling Muslims that the UK considers its own institutions lacking when dealing with
"their own community's" issues. This
is not true and should not be entertained. Human Rights, despite assurances, would also be put at risk especially for women and gay people.
9 July 2005 - Hotel Profiteering
Anti-globalisation protesters' complaints that businesses do not care for anything but profits have their normally
flawed argument made stronger by the actions of hotels following the bombings. Increasing prices is not
reprehensible as consumer bodies described it, it is far worse than that.
If global capitalism has morality in it, I hope that the hotels involved in this cashing in on blood are sent
bankrupt by boycotts. If I have missed any, please
let me know:
- Thistle Hotels Group
- The Cumberland Hotel in Marble Arch
- Ramada Plaza Regent's Park
9 July 2005 - Terrorism
07/07 was shocking in ways that are hard to express. We knew it was coming, we may even have suspected that more would die,
the police and other security services claim to have stopped other attempts, but we are still deeply shocked and appalled.
I am thinking of those harmed, and I am thinking of those who have lost others.
There is no need to repeat the arguments that have been made about the reasons for the attack on London on 07/07
but it makes me sick that people so little understand the situation in the world at the moment that they think the Iraq War
(also known as the "War for Oil") is the reason for this attack. Whether the war was justified or not, which I'll
discuss later, and whether terrorism in the name of freedom from oppression is ever sometimes justified, or not,
this act of terrorism and others like it made in the name of Islam cannot be justified.
Many of my readers will have recoiled in disgust at that last paragraph as true as they find the final assertion.
Unfortunately, many people harbour an hypocrisy. They, on one hand, think that apartheid was wrong, which it was, but
on the other they think that the anti-apartheid campaigners should not have resorted to violence against those who
perpetrated it; they condemn the vichy government in France and condone the partisans in Second World War France; at
the same time they condemn terrorism in its self, forgetting these examples that the vast majority would support.
Of course, sometimes and extremely rarely, struggle, including violent struggle, is necessary and even acceptable.
This Islamoterrorism is not justified in Bali, Britain, Iraq, Russia, Spain, Turkey, or the
US. Terrorism is never justifiable against civilians and, as
Bhagat Singh showed us, change can be gained without resorting to violence against people.
Bizarrely in the recent terrorist incidents, there does not seem to be any effort on the part of the terrorists to enter
into dialogue. Even if there
were a just cause, and there isn't, without entering into any dialogue whatsoever over the higher level ideas of their
campaign, what possible results can they hope to achieve?
The Iraq war was fought, I am reasonably sure, for several reasons:
- Saddam Hussein was not controllable
- There's a lot of oil in Iraq
- There may have been a genuine belief that Saddam still had WMD
The
US and Britain
knew that if Saddam had
WMD he would not and could not threaten us with them. This means that
the
US and Britain had no interest in invading and, by implication,
should not have risked the lives of their own soldiers.
The other two reasons, however,
are in our national interest but have a smaller (ie. non-existent) moral basis. If we
were to visit Ideal-World
TM, we would have finished the Gulf War of 1991 by finishing Saddam. This would remove the ridiculous
ammunition of the liberal lobby (George Galloway etc. who do
not stand for individual liberalism by the way)
complaining that we imposed sanctions on Iraq. I doubt we would find a man alive in the
UK
who would oppose sanctions on Zimbabwe and yet somehow, sanctions on Iraq, which provided for feeding the populace in exchange
for oil, were apparently evil!
We must accept that there is an element in the world today who have genuinely held, but wrong beliefs. These people of many religions
would, if they followed their religious texts to the letter, be at perpetual war. I am not talking only of Muslims because there
are other major religions who's texts condone protection of their 'one true' God.
We in the West must protect our national interests, fight evil in the world as we would have and not shy away from conflict because
we are afraid of the terrorism-related consequences. Equally, we must not be seen to, and must not in reality be attempting to,
impose a new form of colonialism in the world. I am quite sure that people living in Zimbabwe, Cuba or North Korea (to choose three
better known countries) would rather have democracy. The Britons of the time from 1066 to now, could equally claim that they do
not live in a democracy (for all the gradual and real improvements in democratisation that Britain has gone through) but I am quite
sure we would have defended our nation had someone come along with weapons to tell us that we are not progressing quickly enough.
The steady and gradual democratisation of Britain has been initiated by people in power
seeing the need for change as well as by the imposition of the will of the people during the times of potential revolutions and now
at elections. People around the world need to be persuaded and, where possible, assisted in overthrowing undemocratic governments but,
as Iraq has shown, war should not be started by the so-called good guys.
My heart goes out to the people hurt and killed in the bombings in London. I hope that a fear of a backlash against Muslims living
in our community does not result in overzealous political correctness:
The Old Testament is part of Christianity, Islam and Judaism and, in
Christianity and Islam is only amended by newer prophets. If these are the bases of the world's major religions then deference to
them in law (Incitement to Dislike of a Religion - or words to that affect) or, indeed, by those trying to understand extremist
terrorism appears to be a mistake.
There is a problem of differing ideals between these religions and the UK's stance on terrorism: the UK won't extradite some
really nasty people because the country requesting them (for just reasons) will use the death penalty. In the Old Testament God
says the death penalty should be used for murder, homosexuality and cross-dressing, down to relatively minor transgressions such
as disobedient sons and working on the sabbath. The modern countries that use stoning as a punishment are only repeating what
God, through Moses, did to countless of his followers following the Exodus.
On subjects not related to terrorism, God undermines society's position on inheritance.
On food, God, when talking to Moses, is explicit about what can and cannot be eaten. He lists animals that must not be eaten, for reasons
unknown. Equally, apparently, wherever an animal that is forbidden (such as a pig, mouse or camel) dies, whatever it touches
is "unclean". Blood must not be eaten (causing the traditions of Halal and Kosher) and so, presumably, anyone who eats
black pudding should be shunned. Surely Christians and atheists around the world should be suffering what God threatens in
Leviticus?
A woman who has given birth to a son is also unclean for a week afterwards and, when a week has passed the child should be circumcised. A
woman who has given birth to a daughter is unclean for a fortnight afterwards.
If all these things are upheld by the non-atheist nations of the West, why are we not following them? If Islam is true, are not
the
majority
that Blair spoke of equally acting against God's will? In fact, very few of the religious people in the world follow
their religion's instructions anything like to the letter. Ignoring the death penalty, the fact that we all eat lobster and other
creatures of the sea without fins and scales and breach other instructions sent by God is a way of life for the majority of the world's
people. And yet, at the same time, we criticise Islamic fundamentalists for going against the traditions of Islam when the basis
of all three religions says, in no uncertain terms, that His people shall be victors in war if they are true to him: "And
ye shall chase your enemies, and they shall fall before you by the sword." Making false claims against the terrorists will
not appease them and will certainly not help us understand them.
The terrorists and their potential future recruits must be
taught that the world has moved on since these hateful texts were written. They must understand that the Crusades were fought by
people as backward and misguided as the modern Bin Laden supporters. The solution to Islamofacism and Islamoterrorism is not
to deny their religion's truths but to explain that their religion, just as Christianity and Judaism, must move with the times.
Some notes
I am by no means qualified to make theological assessments of religions and I do not believe in/subscribe to any religion. I
refer the reader to interesting websites such as this and
this. I would also make clear that the world
has other religions most of which do not speak of their trueness in the face of others. Live and let live is an excellent way to live
your life, in my opinion, and other religions which are worth researching are clear on this matter:
Hinduism,
Buddhism and
Sikhism (google search) or
Sikhism (good site).
20 June 2005 - A "cobbled together compromise"
Today we learnt that even Tony Blair thinks he has negotiated a bad deal from the EU in the past. Today he described previous agreements
reached at Intergovernmental Conferences (IGCs) as typically "cobbled together compromise[s]".
Maybe if he accepts this is true, the UK's presidency of the
EU should be focussed on agreeing
a document that suits the British people and, of course, the people of other EU nations. Removing the interfering institutions cobbled
together since the Single European Act in 1986.
There is a danger, in all this, that we may start to believe we can change the EU and make it an area of enterprise, opportunity and
individual freedom. This, I am afraid, is unlikely and, were it not, I may become a europhile! While the EU is staggering as it is, the least
painful way of progressing the EU's agenda would be to cut our ties with it and allow it to sink or succeed without us. If it ever acheives
that which I doubt, namely non-Franco non-meddling, non-overly-social governance, surely then would be a good time to consider rejoining?
6 June 2005 - EU Constitution
The EU Constitution has been commented on excellently by the Spectator magazine this week. I strongly recommend that readers of this
site read the article.
The EU is not a bad thing in principle, but the people who run the old European countries operate in an
"elite quarantine" which is quite alien to British politics. These people have developed a method of governance for the United States
of Europe which does not provide for explicit democracy and which does not allow the general population to propose legislation.
The Commission is the one biggest problem with the EU. The Commission is a group of people supposedly working for the benefit of the
EU and with no deference to their home nation's needs specifically. The laughable aspect, however, is that the Commissioners are expected
to work for the benefit of the EU over their own self interests. In my mind you would be hard pushed to find people who, given such power,
would be so laudable - to find such people in the political elite is just ridiculous! To compound this, Commissioners are appointed by the
Heads of State (the Council of Ministers) and so are, by definition, the political elite. In a token democratic effort, the EU
Parliament must agree to the Commission but the Parliament does not have the power to remove individual Commissioners.
What we need is to replace the Heads of State at the Council of Ministers by a single representative from each Member State, elected
directly by the people of the Member State. In countries such as the UK, the Prime Minister represents the Queen at these meetings
and is, by definition, not directly
elected. The French, with their Presidential system, vote directly for their representative, but this is still not good enough; the
President may be elected for reasons aside from their European credentials.
Ideally, the EU would be democratic (and directly) in all institutions and would be limited to legislation in areas related to free trade.
Harmonisation of pedestrian crossing paving slabs would be left to bureaucrats in Member State countries and, even more ideally, the UK
would not legislate on such matters at all.
Libertarianism should be embraced by the new Conservative leader, the EU should not impose on Member States and the national government
of the UK should not legislate on matters that could reasonably be left unlegislated, or could provide voluntary opt-outs for companies
and organisations affected.
29 May 2005 - France's Referendum
The French vote today. Whatever the result, it is good news for the UK (and especially England).
The French 'Non' voters think that the EU Constitution, that (lamentably) has a political agenda, is too Anglosaxon (free-market).
The British 'No' voters think that the EU Constitution is too anti-free-market, socially inept and, frankly (no pun intended), French.
If the French vote 'Non', the Constitution is effectively scuppered; if the French vote 'Oui' the British, who are already anti-EU in
principle and anti-EU in its current format,
must vote no!
29 May 2005 - Leadership of the Tories
It's been a quiet week in Politics-land. The Conservatives are in a semi-limbo, the Labour party is in a semi-limbo and the Liberal
Democrats have returned to their normal wilderness. It's been quite a relief!
It is a shame that the media keeps repeating that the Conservatives' rule changes for leadership selection are needed because the
membership selected Iain Duncan-Smith... They really didn't! The members positively did not select Kenneth Clarke who would sell
this country to an undemocratic supra-national organisation that no-one asked for in its current guise - that is not the same
thing at all. Ironically the rule changes currently look like benefiting David Davis who has celebrated anti-EU views.
Much has been said about getting the decision over with quickly, and I can see the benefit, but lets let things happen without
undue concern from the media... If there's nothing that we can learn, tell us nothing!
17 May 2005 - An English Parliament
The
full version of this site includes a picture I took on the evening of the election that I thought I'd share with you.
Also, in case you did not notice the English Parliament 'tick' at the top of the page, I thought I would remind you to visit
the Campaign for an English Parliament's website:
The CEP
16 May 2005 - Companies to boycott
The EU, with all its machinery geared towards a socialist superstate has an ally in the organisation, Britain in Europe.
The following link shows which companies you should boycott if you believe in individual and national freedom:
Companies to boycott.
This list includes surprises such as Reuters (a news agency bringing into question its impartiality); the expected such as amicus (a union); and heavyweights Dyson, Pricewaterhousecoopers, Kellogg's, Ford, Unilever, Xerox, Wrigley, Reuters, Kimberley Clark,
Nestle, Philips, KPMG, BAE Systems and BT.
We should all, also be concerned by the number of these companies that are British subsidiaries of foreign companies attempting
to exert influence on the way Britain takes in relation to further
integration.
15 May 2005 - A new leader... (part 1)
The Conservatives have been looking at the prospect of a new leader since the election.
To me this is an exciting prospect... Maybe the Tories will choose a libertarian, a free-thinker. Maybe the Tories will
select someone who will make the electorate sit up and think "What
would the UK be like if we were free from taxes
that, on the surface, appear to be there just for the sake of monitoring?". Maybe the UK of tomorrow would be one where
there is a transparent tax system which enables tax payers to know what they are paying for. Maybe this UK will have low
taxes that allow people to spend their money how they wish.
In this UK free-enterprise would be positively encouraged because people would see that in the early, lean years of their
new business, the government would not take irresponsibly large chunks of their capital. The VAT man, who bankrupts more
businesses than any other entity, would not be required at all. Taxes that cost to levy would be scrapped. Social policies
that have laudable aims but questionable benefits and extreme costs would be scrapped. Tax take for the government would
increase despite lowering taxes! And maybe, just maybe, the steady centralisation of the state since 1945 could be
significantly reversed.
Consider for a moment that £600,000,000,000 is spent by the government each year. Consider that there are 60,000,000 people
in the country and ask yourself what you would expect to receive were you to spend £10,000 each year on yourself and each of
your dependents. The answer, I would imagine, would be far more than is acheived under the centralist state that we currently
live under. If we were endowed with a libertarian Prime Minister we could expect the government to give us large chunks of
that cash back.
The Government's Responsibilities
A libertarian leader may believe that the government should run the following public services:
- Social security for:
- The elderly
- The disabled
- The temporarily unemployed
- Education from age 4 to age 18 See note below
- Healthcare See note below
- Defence
- Local services (refuse collection, recycling provision, planning, libraries etc.)
- Existing transport infrastructure
- Police
- Civil and Criminal Court costs
All taxes should be ear-marked when they are taken. Taxes that are not required by a particular family (such as a family that
educates its children privately) could be removed from the tax-take and provide equity. This freedom from unnecessary expense
would result in the creation of low-cost schools that ordinary people could afford (costing about the same or less than the
state sector).
Foreign aid should be limited to the removal of foreign debt. All future aid can be given by the newly empowered, and naturally
generous, British people.
Regulators that require companies to perform certain aspects of their business in a certain way (such as the
FSA) should be optional for all companies. Companies that do not
follow the rules laid down by said organisations must state clearly that they are not regulated on their literature but would have
the advantage of being competitive.
The items listed above that can be controlled by enterprising individuals should be. To protect against possible problems
resulting from this the police should be given greater powers
including the enforcement of Court Orders. If people are unencumbered by the state when attempting to engage in enterprise,
they are far more likely to succeed and less likely to be dragged into criminal or questionable trade when the looming prospect
of VAT and employment regulation starts to threaten to damage said enterprise.
A new choice at the next election
If the Tories can select a truly radical and libertarian leader during the next few months, then politics in the next few
years could take an extremely exciting and interesting turn. At the next election, the electorate will have a clear choice
between bloated, high-tax, low respect, hand-out-dependent government, and low-tax freedom.
Note
Everyone in the UK accepts that the NHS and free education are good things. However,
there is no reason that the government has to monopolise these services. A low-cost private alternative running
alongside the government services can only provide choice and better quality to the people.
Click here to go back
6 May 2005 - A strange few days
What a strange few days. From the highs of last-minute campaigning, to the peaks of Putney's result, down to the realisation
that massive swings were limited to specific constituencies, to the low of Michael Howard's announcement today.
In fairness, Michael Howard has stood by his principles and cited 'Accountability' when he made his announcement. However,
it presents a golden opportunity for the less-sympathetic media to portray the successes of the campaign as something other
than a success - a smaller failure. It should be clear that this was not a failure; the election of 2005 should be
remembered for two things.
First, obviously the Iraqi war has had some influence on the result. More importantly, however, the third election under Mr Blair's
presidency (oops) has been influenced by a begrudging electorate voting the way the BBC and The Sun says they should. It is
unfortunate that the electorate did not see through the emptiness and down-right danger of Blair's regime, namely the destruction
of the second House, the destruction of private pension funds, and as a direct result, of the stock market and people's financial
independence, the removal of cabinet government, the spectre of taxes that are already too high (and have been throughout all
the governments that I have lived through due to expenses such as the EU's £30million daily cost, the £50,000 cost of renaming
a single public toilet in Brighton & Hove from "Ladies" and "Gentlemen" to "Women" and "Men" in order to be
PC and other, apparently obvious, expenses that have no place in an accountable
government's expenditure plans), uncontrolled immigration and criminals who believe it is okay to commit crimes because
"everyone is a victim sometimes".
What the country needed was a Conservative government. Instead it is saddled with up to five more years of the dire governance
that we have been putting up with since 1992. The
thin silver lining is that this
gives the Labour party another four of five years to make it absolutely clear that they have not been the architects of the
strong economy, just the benefactors of a strong world economy. It gives the Labour party four or five more years to make it
absolutely clear that their plans for resolving the rise in violent crime, illegal immigration and associated illegal employment
and their plans to improve our failing schools are not going to be realised. Finally, it gives the government four of five more years
to over-tax middle-England and continue to provide too little benefit for that money (sometimes called "Value for Money").
If the electorate approach the next election with their eyes open, the 2009 or 2010 election should be a 1997-esque landslide
for the Conservative party. I just hope that the
correct leader is chosen at the right time and by the right method.
1 May 2005 - Who should you vote for V2.
Who Should You Vote for have updated their site to include a few extra questions. It is worth another look:
click here.
30 April 2005 - I urge you
I urge you to vote Conservative at the election on Thursday. I understand that this will not surprise the reader but I will set
out my reasons nevertheless:
- The Tories believe in freedom, freedom to go about your life and spend your money
the way you wish; freedom to carry on your business without government interference; freedom to choose where your children
are educated and freedom to choose where you are treated (private or NHS).
- The Tories understand that they were wrong in the '80s to oppose equal rights for homosexuals
- The Tories do not differentiate based upon skin colour (unlike the Labour party who
actively support degrading positive discrimination)
- The Tories know that your money is precious to you and will not tax you in order to fill holes in their finances - your money
should be treated with as much respect by the government as you would have for the money in your own care
- The Tories will not reverse Gordon Brown's only good action - independence for the Bank of England
- The Tories' rhetoric on the EU has grown to be more in line with the beliefs of
the British populace and Michael Howard has promised to renegotiate power back to London
- The Tories can be trusted. The 1997 manifesto of the Labour party would be
amusing were it not so shockingly ignored by the Labour party after their election
(click here to read it).
The Tories have been unambiguous about their promises and the Timetable for Action
(click here to read the 2005 Tory Manifesto or
PDF)
17 April 2005 - Pensions, misrepresented
The Conservatives have today unveiled excellent plans for the future of Pensions saving:
click here.
Unfortunately, the media has deliberately understated the benefits to those currently not receiving their
pension. The implication, it appears, has been that the Tories are focusing on the so-called 'grey vote'.
The Tories are actually unveiling the first policy for people who do not fit one of the "key demographics", namely:
pensioners or those with children. The people have been crying out for policies that help those, say, who are in their
50s and 60s and the BBC is not helping the people realise that this policy is just that.
16 April 2005 - Newsgroups
If you are not familiar with newsgroups, consider visiting
uk.politics.misc
using a newsgroup reader. If you are not sure, use
Google Groups
in the first place.
15 April 2005 - Just a bit of fun
WhoShouldYouVoteFor.com
asks a series of questions and provides
you with the party that most closely
matches your thinking on key policy
issues.
I think there may be something wrong
with the algorithm behind the 'Green'
aspect because while I am for protecting
the environment, I do not believe tax
should be used as a tool to that end.
Anyway, my results are shown below:
Your expected outcome:
Conservative
Your actual outcome:
Labour -68
Conservative +53
Liberal Democrat -19
UKIP +42
Green +22
According to the site, I should vote: Conservative
From the site: The
Conservative Party
is strongly against joining the Euro
and against greater use of taxation to
fund public services. The party broadly
supported the Iraq war and backs
greater policing and ID cards. The
Tories are against increasing the
minimum wage above the rate of
inflation, and have committed to
abolishing university tuition fees.
They support 'virtual vouchers' for
private education.
Take the test at
WhoShouldYouVoteFor.com
14 April 2005 - Vote Conservative not UKIP
You may be forgiven for sympathising
with UKIP, but a vote for UKIP is a
vote for Labour.
With the Parliamentary
Conservative Party's
recent announcements on European
policy, a vote for the Conservative
Party can now be considered a
Euro-sceptic vote.
LINKS
No to the Constitution
Campaign for an English Parliament