Marxist scum confesses to the reality of anti-white genocide, anti-anglosaxon culture wars and the real agenda of the British and Australian socialists
it wasn’t because we liked immigrants, but
because we didn’t like Britain. We saw immigrants – from anywhere – as
allies against the staid, settled, conservative society that our country
still was at the end of the Sixties. Also, we liked to feel oh, so
superior to the bewildered people – usually in the poorest parts of
Britain – who found their neighbourhoods suddenly transformed into
supposedly ‘vibrant communities’. If they dared to express the mildest
objections, we called them bigots.
Revolutionary students didn’t come from such ‘vibrant’ areas
(we came, as far as I could tell, mostly from Surrey and the nicer parts
of London). We might live in ‘vibrant’ places for a few (usually
squalid) years, amid unmown lawns and overflowing dustbins. But we did
so as irresponsible, childless transients – not as homeowners, or as
parents of school-age children, or as old people hoping for a bit of
serenity at the ends of their lives. When we graduated and began to earn
serious money, we generally headed for expensive London enclaves and
became extremely choosy about where our children went to school, a
choice we happily denied the urban poor, the ones we sneered at as
‘racists’.What did we know, or care, of the great silent revolution
which even then was beginning to transform the lives of the British
poor?
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