Video: Kakistocracy (Government by the Worst)
‘You may think my language a little strong, but the Irish people need to ramp up their outrage, to trust their repugnance of these people, and speak the language that describes them.’
My recent conversation with Peter McIlvenna on Hearts of Oak, about the continuing invasion and re-plantation of Ireland under the supervision of its treasonous Government.
‘Essentially, what we’re talking about here is totalitarianism, as defined by Václav Havel, where the future is prepared for you and you are told you must live in it, and there are no options, there is no menu. This is it! You move in! You are no longer a sovereign person in your country, you are simply a passenger. And you’re the same, you have the same rights — if you have! — as anybody who comes in. In fact, in practice what we’re finding is that the indigenous population no longer have rights in this context at all. And the reason for that is very interesting: It relates to the United Nations and its taking up of the 1964 Civil Rights Act in the United States, which gave legal oomph to a lot of the ideologies that were beginning to float around at that point. And in effect what it means is that, when a migrant comes to Ireland, or any other country in Europe, they are in effect a floating piece of UN jurisdiction. They bring with them all those entitlements and rights which the UN will provide them with. But it is the Irish people who must pay for them — with their homes, with their communities, with their safety, with their security, with whatever is necessary in order to fulfill the contract which the UN has extended to this individual migrant. And the Irish people have no right to speak back to this. The Irish people are being bullied, by so-called entertainers, so-called celebrities, and by NGOs, by government, civil servants, all paid out of the Irish taxpayers pocket — abusing the Irish taxpayer for asking simple questions about the future direction of their country, and the chances or means of their children having a home to live in. And now the Irish people are saying No! in increasing numbers, thank God, because it has taken a long time for them to overcome their fear of being demonised by these people. But now they realise that the price of silence is too great: the complete destruction of their metaphysical home, and the loss of the birthright of their children.’
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