The BNP’s Crime and Justice Policy
The BNP are hot on law and order. BNP crime and justice* policy will:
- Free the police and courts from the politically correct straitjacket which is stopping them from doing their jobs properly;
- End the liberal fixation with the “rights” of criminals and replace it with concern for the rights of victims – and the right of innocent people not to become victims;
- Re-introduce corporal punishment for petty criminals and vandals
If the BNP were to come to power, it wouldn’t be good news for some of their own. End the liberal fixation with the “rights” of criminals and replace it with concern for the rights of victims and Re-introduce corporal punishment for petty criminals?
Will that mean a beating and the withdrawal of the rights of the BNP’s Robert Bailey, ‘the most senior of the London candidates for the European parliament’ who was arrested and charged last week ‘for failing to provide a sample to the police and using a vehicle without benefit of insurance or an MoT certificate’?
It’s probably just as well that the BNP weren’t in power when their Group Development Officer Tony Lecomber was jailed for three years for offences under the Explosives Act, including possession of homemade hand-grenades and electronic timing devices. His conviction for unlawfully wounding a Jewish schoolteacher whom he caught trying to peel off a BNP sticker at an underground station will presumably overturned in the event of a BNP victory.
How about South East London organiser Colin Smith who has 17 convictions for burglary, theft, stealing cars, possession of drugs and assaulting a police officer? A petty criminal if ever there was one. Then there’s the party’s very own football hooligans, violent assaulters, and rapists. The gruesome details are here.
In the 1960s the BNP’s founder John Tyndall was sent to prison for a crime his own party describes as ‘non-indigenous crime’, namely possession of a loaded gun. The rest of us love our curries and our Music Of Black Origin. The BNP? Their ‘non-indigenous’ influences don’t seem to extend much further than importing violent crime.
One thing’s for sure, ‘the politically correct straitjacket’ which is ’stopping’ the police and courts from doing their jobs properly was no impediment to bringing these thugs to book. The system seems to have worked just fine in their cases.
Get out and vote today. Stop the BNP.
* I’m not linking to it. Google can help you.
- Bookdrunk takes a look at the BNP’s education policy.
- 5cc – BNP Immigration policy – something tells me it’s not just about immigrants
- NCCLols looks at Housing and Welfare
- Sim-O on Defence
- Irritability Incarnate on Foreign Policy
- 5cc and The Pickards on the BNP’s claim to be Britain’s Most Democratic Party
Posted on June 4th, 2009 at 11:48am under Fascists
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• 5 Comments |

Re-introduce corporal punishment for petty criminals and vandals
Isn’t that the sort of thing that happens in extremist Islamic countries that the BNP want so desperately to have nothing to do with?
The BNP don’t care what the Muslims are up to, just so long as they’re doing it in their own back yard. It’s one of their more bizarre policies.
a crime his own party describes as ‘non-indigenous crime’, namely possession of a loaded gun
“Non-indigenous”? What a strange description. Was it a foreign gun?
I’m trying to think of other offences that might come into this category.
Assault with broken bottle, chair or billiards cue: indigenous
Assault with kukri, katana, lacrosse stick, shillelagh, baseball bat or framed portrait of Simon Bolivar: non-indigenous
Taking and driving away without owner’s consent a Land Rover : I
TWOCing a 2CV: non-I
Drunk and disorderly (real ale, cider, whisky): I
Drunk and disorderly (Stella Artois): non-I
Possession of magic mushrooms: I
Possession of heroin: non-I
Possession of cannabis: depends on whether imported or hydroponic
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