Hope For 2010
![]()
It is difficult to find good news at the moment. All over Europe, there are the same stories: governmental corruption; rape, murder and violence by third world immigrants and the growing multi-racial underclass; the suppression of the media and biased reporting; the destruction and undermining of our very culture by our own so-called intellectuals and artists. It is hard indeed to find good news.
This is also because the media wishes to give us a false image of what is happening in Europe. Reporters, who must subscribe to the neo-Marxist Weltanschauung when they sign their contracts, are obliged to convey the idea of inevitability of the transition to a one-world government ruled by an oligarchical elite using cultural Marxism (otherwise known as political correctness) as a means to stifle opposition. Just look at the amount of newspapers owned by the oligarch Rupert Murdoch.
His global news empire (in Britain, The Times, The Sun, The News of the World and Sky News, along with shares in ITV) are notorious for their pretence of being either unbiased or right-wing and patriotic, even though their patron is owner of a global media empire and married to an ethnically Chinese woman half his age. A major shareholder in his media empire is the Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, who has funded Islamic centres in many Western universities. Hence the continual misinformation that comes from his newspapers regarding the BNP and the peaceful rise of nationalism throughout Europe. Nationalism is belittled and denigrated as a fascist and inconsequential movement and its followers as a collection of neo-Nazis, socially inadequate rejects, subhuman morons and David Icke style cranks.
It is the same in all countries. All major businessmen adopt the globalist outlook to do business. In doing so, they have to adopt everything that goes with it: cultural Marxism and the pretence of globalism being a benign and uniting force.
This is why it is hard to find good news. One has to look hard for it. Today, I bring glad tidings. As people who read my comments and articles may have gathered, I keep one eye on events in Austria. This is not merely because I lived there at one time, but also because I believe the big breakthrough – a nationalist government in a European country – will happen there first.
For those who do not know, the nationalist party in Austria, the FPÖ, has already been in government as the minority party in a coalition with the conservatives, the ÖVP from 1999 to 2002. During this period and contrary to the democratic process, the EU imposed economic sanctions on Austria and the FPÖ lost a considerable amount of seats in the 2002 general election. The FPÖ was not helped by the breakaway group of liberals within its ranks led by Jorg Haider that formed the rival party the BZÖ in 2005.
When Haider died, I said then that there might be a silver lining to it, and this has proven to be the case. While Haider was still alive, there was no chance of reconciliation between the two factions, but now the Landeshauptmann (regional governor) of Carinthia, Gerhard Dörfler, who had taken Haider’s position in government with Carinthia’s FPK (the regional version of the BZÖ (complicated, isn’t it?), has allied the party to the FPÖ for the forthcoming presidential election this year.
What does all this mean exactly, I’m sure you’re all asking? Well, at the last council election in 2008, the FPÖ and BZÖ together polled a third of all votes. Had they still been one unified party, they would have been the second biggest party in Austria and not far off being the biggest. By rejoining the FPÖ, Dörfler’s faction, the biggest in the region of Carinthia (one of nine Länder or administrative regions in Austria), the FPÖ take a huge chunk of the BZÖ’s vote, making the BZÖ almost unelectable and thus giving the FPÖ a slim chance of having its presidential candidate elected. If the alliance continues, however, there is a fair chance that the FPÖ could win a general election outright.
One of the reasons for the success of the FPÖ has undoubtedly been the lowering of the voting age from 18 to 16, which came into force in 2007. The government at the time had considered that the Austrian youth had been sufficiently brainwashed into the neo-Marxist Weltanschauung to give them more votes. They got it absolutely wrong.
The youth and people in general in Austria are quite rightly sick to the back teeth of having a diet of Nazi guilt force fed to them. Nazism is something that happened 65 years ago now and the people that were responsible for it have either been brought to justice, died or are so elderly and infirm that the only time they can gas anyone is with a pair of their Y-fronts on an evening. Nazism is the stick the leftists beat the Germans and Austrians with, just as ours beat themselves and us with colonialism. But the emerging youth in Austria has had enough of the same sort of indoctrination our children endure. They want to be proud of themselves and their culture, and rightly so.
If the FPÖ wins the next general election and forms a coalition that pulls Austria, one of the EU’s wealthiest member states and the richest per capita, out of the European Union, it would spell disaster for the EU. It would have to force other rich member states into higher taxation to compensate, which would increase the nationalist votes in those countries. It would be the start of great things…..
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 20 January 2010 09:40 )




















