In 2000, three years into the Tony Blair government, Professor Colin Crouch published his book, Coping with Post-Democracy. Crouch argued that ‘a post-democratic society is one that continues to have, and to use, all the institutions of democracy, but in which they increasingly become a formal shell. The energy and innovative drive pass away from the democratic arena and into small circles of a politico-economic elite’. One of the brains behind the Blair governments, Peter Mandelson, later used the term, but in an approving fashion. That was no surprise, given Mandelson’s preference for holidays on the yachts of Russian oligarchs, his membership of the WEF, and chairmanship of the investment bank, Lazards. But neither the academic, Crouch, nor Lord Mandelson (perhaps), could imagine just how far post-democracy has advanced over the last few years. Nor we suspect, do the majority of the British peoples realise. We now live under a Regime that can only be described as ‘Simulation Democracy’. The domestic blow-back from the horror of the current round of the Palestinian-Israeli war, has revealed just how developed the Simulation Democracy is, and just how further it is prepared to go to reinforce its position. The changes in the make-up of our society over the last few decades, specifically the creation of a Muslim colony of over three million, largely concentrated in areas that the Labour Party sees as its own, has led to political turmoil on the streets and in Parliament. The two main political parties are now faced with the impossible challenge of reconciling the interests of two ethnic ‘communities’. That impossibility was revealed just a couple of weeks ago as Labour MPs, in fear of their lives from Islamic terror, and Keir Starmer, with his pre-Commons vote phone call to the President of Israel, pushed the Speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, into overturning Parliamentary rules. This series of events revealed the craven cowardice of our supposedly sovereign Parliament. Then, soon afterwards, the election of George Galloway (veteran campaigner, neo-Communist, and long-standing supporter of the Palestinian cause) to the Rochdale seat, led to a further reveal by the Regime, by the Simulation Democracy. Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, held a press conference outside 10 Downing Street, behind the double row of gates and concrete blocks. The theme of his statement was that ‘democracy is threatened’. He attacked the election of Galloway by the electors of Rochdale. That is, a Prime Minister who was not elected by his party (as has been the case since the early 1960s) but achieved his position on the back of a parliamentary coup, attacked the election of an MP. Why? Because neither Galloway, nor the second place candidate, were from either of the two establishment parties, which, together, make up the UniParty. Sunak then went further, saying that ‘our democracy’ faced a terrible threat from ‘extremists’. Those extremists are, apparently, from the ‘Far Right’ and another, unnamed, source (aka Islamists). Sunak waxed lyrical on the ‘success’ of multiculturalism and diversity brought to us by population-changing mass immigration. There was, of course, no indication that the same process has brought us Islamist terror and the colonisation of many of our cities and towns. Instead, Sunak announced that further measures will be taken to enforce consent for this multicultural society, and to eradicate the threat of ‘extremism’. We now know just what the likely first step will be in this new crackdown by the Regime. The key, enabling concept in the repression of dissenting voices and groups in Britain, is ‘values’. More than a decade ago, the ‘Conservative’ government created an arbitrary definition of what ‘Britain’ and being ‘British’ meant. As far as the Regime was concerned, it did not mean a sense of place, or history, or a particular group of peoples. Instead, a ‘set of values’ defined Britain and its peoples. These ‘values’ were built around a contemporary elite view of Britain. The ‘values’ often had no resonance with Britain’s past, no linkage to anything that was identifiably British, or Scots, Welsh, Northern Irish, or English. They did not need to because the purpose of this ‘values based’ definition was simply to create an ex post facto justification for mass immigration, colonisation and multiculturalism. Further, the ‘values’ created an extremely flexible, and suitably vague, definition that could be used to exclude and punish any person or group who opposed the Regime. Now the Regime, and the UniParty which cowers in Parliament is seeking to further widen the definition of ‘extremism’ in relation to ‘British values’. In the next few days, Michael Gove will announce that instead of the current definition of extremism – ‘vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values’ – there will be a new definition. The new definition is expected to include those individuals and groups who aim to ‘undermine British values or institutions’. This is an even-wider ‘catch-all’, which will be enhanced by further provision to make illegal ideologies which “undermine the rights or freedoms of others”. What might those ‘ideologies’ be? Well, on Monday 4th March, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, made a key-note speech. His target was ‘the Far Right’, specifically those who dare to talk about the Great Replacement. Türk said, ‘In many countries, including Europe and North America, I am concerned about the seemingly growing influence of so-called ‘great replacement’ conspiracy theories’. He then gave a definition of the Great Replacement that bears no comparison to that given by the term’s originator, Renaud Camus. In his conveniently timely speech, Türk provided an example of the ideas, thought and speech that the UK Regime’s forthcoming proposals will make illegal. Make no mistake, the Regime is coming for all patriotic dissidents. A Regime, a hollowed-out democratic system, a simulation of democracy, is about to turn the screw further on all those who believe in freedom, homeland and tradition. For those of you who are concerned about the state of England, of Britain, and Europe, it is increasingly necessary for you to #GetActive. You should think seriously about joining a group, a party, a movement that opposes the Regime, that has had enough of Simulation Democracy. Time is running out, you must make real life connections with like-minded people, build friendships, grow the patriotic resistance.
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