18 December 2009

Where's Charlie?

Iain Martin would like to know.

Charlie Whelan's in the back room at Unite guarding the large pile of cash he's saved by cutting off campaign funds from his electorally doomed comrade, Jonah Brown. That money is for AFTER the election, not before it.

Unite are Labour's bankers. Once Brown is gone, do you think Whelan and the Comrades will accept a Conservative government? No, they will wreak vengeance upon government and electorate. (This means you.) They will fight every inch of the way.

These people do not give a toss for Parliamentary democracy. You only have to consider Gordon Brown's contempt for the House of Commons (where YOU are represented) to know the truth of that. They are concerned only with power. They want it, and once they have it, they will not give it up. If it is prised from their grip, they will try to take it back no matter what the cost.

The Left will have small strikes all over the place to begin with and a General Strike as soon as they identify the critical moment. That's why Charlie Whelan and the Brothers have £25 million in the bank but won't sign any cheques for Brown.

The conditions are ripe.

  • Parliamentary democracy is cracking under the strain of Labour's system of corrupt patronage and the international socialism of the EU.
  • Social cohesion is paper-thin: Gordon Brown has seen to that by undermining family structures, setting public employees against the wealth-creating sector and setting racial groups against each other through uncontrolled immigration and appeasement of militant Islamists, compounded by patronising and insulting the white working class.
  • Following the example of every Labour government Britain has ever had, Brown has bankrupted the national economy leaving a scorched-earth legacy for the next government of massive public and private debt, shattered pension funds, higher taxes and reduced public services.
  • The formerly United Kingdom is disunited. Our ancient constitution has been dismantled and most of it abolished by Labour's ceding our lawmaking to the unelected officials of Brussels and the judges of Strasbourg.
  • Today we get insane 'climate change' commitments to reduce our standard of living by 30 per cent at about the time the lights will go out anyway because Labour refused to build new power stations under pressure from its own left wing.
  • The police have never been stronger or more intrusive upon the private citizen.
  • Our armed forces, whom the Left so revile when the citizenry is not listening, have never been weaker: air cover absent, ships being mothballed, RAF stations closing, even as we are fighting a vicious war of attrition in the murderous Afghan hills.

Yes, the conditions are in place. Labour-in-government has done its job. Now it's time to hand the country over to Charlie Whelan and the Brothers.

Remember the seventies? The Winter of Discontent, the streets foul with rubbish uncollected for months, ambulances leaving stroke victims untended and council workers leaving the dead unburied? Remember the poll tax riots? The miner's strike? Whelan does.

And Whelan's organisation, Unite-the-Uber-Union?

Unite is the general union, created in 2007and representing employees in manufacturing, engineering, energy, construction, IT, defence aerospace, motor industry, civil aviation, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, steel and metals, shipbuilding, scientists, technologists, professional and managerial staff, electronics and telecommunications, tobacco, food and drink, textiles, ceramics, paper, printing, professional staff in universities, commercial sales, the voluntary sector, banking and financial services, and the National Health Service, administrative, clerical, technical and supervisory; agriculture; building, construction and civil engineering; chemical, oil and rubber manufacture; civil air transport; docks and waterways; food, drink and tobacco; general workers; passenger services; power and engineering; public services; road transport commercial; textiles; vehicle building and automotive.

Sooner rather than later, we may have to think about which of those sectors we can do without for a while.

Fasten your seatbelts.

1 comments:

  1. We can if needs be do without all of them - because we will have to if the scenario you paint comes to pass.

    And if we are forced to do without them we might actually find that they don't really do that much anyway and therefore they are irrelevant in the scheme of things.

    So - why not take them head on. Let's allow individual people who have been severely affected by any strike to sue the union organisers personally.

    Also we should remove the protection that unions presently enjoy from being sued for taking strike action, and allow businesses that have suffered loss of income to sue the union involved. That will take care of their 25 million quick smart.

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