Archive for December 12th, 2007
Parasites take over host organism?
The first in the “Shock, horror, probe!” series….
The indigenous population of Britain sleep fitfully in their beds tonight after hearing that the record numbers of immigrants welcomed into their country (by the Labour government) are busy breeding like rabbits. No doubt in an attempt to take over the country, a kind of invasion by birth rate. The British only manage to squeeze out 1.7 kids per family while your average Pakistani mother is dropping 4.7. Do the maths!
Whilst the Pakistani, Indian or Bangladeshi-born mothers remain the most active, accounting for five percent of British births, a further four percent now come from all those Johnny Foreigners allowed in the back door from Eastern Europe, mainly Poland!
Are the steps taken to prevent the further dilution of British livestock, by restricting entry for the Romanians and Bulgarians to only those able to forge documents proving they can do more than make a sandwich (which, lets face it, is all of them!), too little too late?
Are the Brits going the same way as the once native Sciurus vulgaris, accelerating decline in the face of competition from the immigrant Sciurus carolinensis?
Can it really be true that before my daughter’s 50th birthday she will be able to use her British passport to visit a country inhabited entirely by immigrants, many of them her fellow Poles, while the few remaining true Brits wallow in self-pity inside their guarded retirement homes?
How long, I wonder, before we see the formation of “The Committee for the Preservation of the British Gene Pool” and other such organisations?
Compare these two publications:
1/ English history book, circa 1989
The Battle of Marston Moor was fought on July 2, 1644, during the First English Civil War of 1642–1646. The combined forces of the Scottish Covenanters under the Earl of Leven and the Parliamentarians under Lord Fairfax and the Earl of Manchester defeated the Royalists commanded by Prince Rupert of the Rhine and the Marquess of Newcastle.
2/ Polish history book, circa 2100
The Battle of Leicester Forest East was fought on 3rd May, 2068, during the Fourth English Civil War of 2059-2075. The combined forces of the Polish “Golonkas” under Jan Polak and the Romanian “Dead Dogs” under Alexandru Ciorba defeated the Pakistani “Kormas” commanded by Prince Chaudhry Abdul Hameed of Watford Gap. After securing this stretch of the vital M1 supply route, the Polish/Romanian forces went on to win further decisive victories at Trowell and Donington Park before finally taking control of the former Pakistani king’s palace in Leicester and thereby regaining control of most of central England.
(PS – it’s worth reading the comments)

