Race riots like those in America could start here, says a report by the Youth Service Development Council, if young coloured immigrants are not “integrated swiftly into society”. This may be right or wrong, but since such integration (what precisely does it mean, anyhow?) is no more than a remote possibility, we had better prepare ourselves.
In a few years’ time, as we sit smoking our legalised hashish and watching our colour television sets, vaguely hearing the howling of the mob and the crackling of flames approaching from the distance, we must not forget to say a heartfelt “thank you” to all those who will have made it possible.
To the politicians of all parties and the civil Servants who quite unnecessarily allowed vast numbers of unassimilable immigrants to pour into this country and pretend nothing untoward was happening; to the conspirators who did not mind what was happening so long as it helped to mess up England; to the progressive thinkers who assured everybody that all would be well if we would only be nice to each other – and that if we were not nice to each other, then we could be made to be nice to each other by law.
To the professional ‘integrationists’ who hold that anyone who believes there is any difference between one race and another is a Nazi; to the journalists who even now, write solemn articles about psychopathic racial agitators as if they were responsible statesmen.
We must say thank you in fact, to all those who knowingly or unknowingly arranged this interesting little sociological experiment on the English people.
Peter Simple, 1967 – The Stretchford Chronicles, page 117.
Thank you so much.
Race riots like those in America could start here, says a report by the Youth Service Development Council, if young coloured immigrants are not “integrated swiftly into society”. This may be right or wrong, but since such integration (what precisely does it mean, anyhow?) is no more than a remote possibility, we had better prepare ourselves.
In a few years’ time, as we sit smoking our legalised hashish and watching our colour television sets, vaguely hearing the howling of the mob and the crackling of flames approaching from the distance, we must not forget to say a heartfelt “thank you” to all those who will have made it possible.
To the politicians of all parties and the civil Servants who quite unnecessarily allowed vast numbers of unassimilable immigrants to pour into this country and pretend nothing untoward was happening; to the conspirators who did not mind what was happening so long as it helped to mess up England; to the progressive thinkers who assured everybody that all would be well if we would only be nice to each other – and that if we were not nice to each other, then we could be made to be nice to each other by law.
To the professional ‘integrationists’ who hold that anyone who believes there is any difference between one race and another is a Nazi; to the journalists who even now, write solemn articles about psychopathic racial agitators as if they were responsible statesmen.
We must say thank you in fact, to all those who knowingly or unknowingly arranged this interesting little sociological experiment on the English people.
Peter Simple, 1967 – The Stretchford Chronicles, page 117.