The Green Party - A Communist Party with a Designer Green Label
Von: St Georges Day April 23rd (bbbbbdfgdfgdgddfg@googlemail.com) [Profil]
Datum: 01.05.2008 12:36
Message-ID: <ab85442e-47f1-4e91-872e-3300911c294e@m45g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.politics.british uk.food+drink.misc uk.politics.environment uk.rec.walking uk.environment
Datum: 01.05.2008 12:36
Message-ID: <ab85442e-47f1-4e91-872e-3300911c294e@m45g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.politics.british uk.food+drink.misc uk.politics.environment uk.rec.walking uk.environment
The Green Party is green on the outside and red on the inside like a water melon. It is only green as far as the Body Shop is green - it's a designer label. Do you think the folk of the countryside alliance are urban socialists like the Green Party is? No they aren't! Don't fall for the designer Hemp labels of the communist Green Party. Immigration plus more immigration equals urban spread. Imagine, if you will, the casualty department of a city centre hospital. Also imagine a badly fitted paving slab in the pavement immediately outside its front door. Then visualize a steady stream of injured pedestrians, nursing bruised knees and gashed elbows, seeking treatment within - having failed to successfully negotiate the delinquent item of “road-ware” installed outside. Not too difficult to imagine is it? Then, if you will, try to get your mind around this - the Head of the said casualty department, fed up with the situation, puts pen to paper and writes to his local Health Authority in despair. Bizarrely he implores them to build him a new and larger casualty department with more staffing so that he may be better equipped to cope with the increased workload arising from the badly fitted slab! Sounds unbelievably doesn't it? But unfortunately this analogy is not so wide of the mark! Read on and see if you agree. One morning recently, whilst reading my copy of the Guardian over a bowl of cornflakes, I noticed that the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE) have apparently written to “the prime minister, Tony Blair” urging him to “make dramatic changes to the government's house building plans to avoid urban sprawl in Britain's countryside.” The letter, according to the Guardian, claimed that the CPRE also wanted the government to raise the target for development on brownfield land from 60% to 75%”. Quite right on both counts I thought. Well done the CPRE. The essence of the letter apparently is that the CPRE want the government to increase building densities in London and the South East to “at least” 80 homes per hectare, from the present 30 to 50, to protect our countryside from the effects of urban sprawl – a suggestion that will have property developers everywhere rubbing their hands in glee I suspect! However the problem with the letter isn’t what it allegedly said but rather what it singularly FAILED TO SAY! In the same way as the Head of our anecdotal casualty department avoids any mention of the cause of his problem – so apparently do our friends at the CPRE! To illustrate this point let’s examine its background in a little depth. London and the South East of England, in particular, are in urgent need of additional housing because the population is increasing at a rate that is outstripping availability. Changes in lifestyle, with many more people choosing (divorce/separation) or having (pensioners) to live alone, is considered a secondary factor. But why is the population of London and the South East rising so quickly? Well, as everyone acknowledges (except, apparently, the CPRE) it’s largely, although not entirely, due to never ending immigration into that corner of our country. So, to ask the obvious, why isn’t the CPRE vigorously campaigning against the primary cause of the problem rather than its consequences? Indeed, one may ask with much justification, what is the point of campaigning against urban sprawl at all if you choose to ignore its root cause? None at all that I can see! So come on you people at the CPRE, if you are really serious about protecting our rural heritage from urban sprawl, join us in campaigning against the ruinous effects of mass immigration on our rural environment. It’s not a matter of race but a matter of space – space being something we are rapidly running out of. http://www.bnp.org.uk/landandpeople/index.htm[ Auf dieses Posting antworten ]
