Brown welcomes Thatcher to No 10

 



When Gordon Brown invited Margaret Thatcher to 10 Downing Street it was sure to cost him the support of many Labour voters, particularly in Scotland.  The canny Labour Party leader was certain that he had more to gain from a meeting with the Tory icon than he had to lose, so what was his motive?  Margaret Thatcher had successfully won an election for the Conservatives by pretending to be patriotic and pro- British.  She talked about people being rather afraid of being swamped by immigrants and implied that if the threat of losing sovereignty to the EU became too severe her party would withdraw completely.  This phoney pretence of patriotism only lasted during the election period, once she was elected the swamping continued, the "Single European Act" was signed and Britain was committed further to the Socialist Eurostate. It was this Act which Margaret Thatcher agreed to, that has enabled millions of East Europeans to recently flood into Britain.

 

With an election looming, the public, weary of numerous government-made problems, and the dour Gordon Brown in desperate need of a PR makeover, who better to seek advice from than Margaret Thatcher.  We wonder what she charged for the briefing, but she certainly achieved a remarkable result.  Gordon Brown, a man who is normally dull and uninspiring, shone at the Labour Party conference, as he promised, like Thatcher, to "curb immigration" and to bring patriotism back into politics, and did we hear " ensure that every child in the world to receive a proper education"?  So heart-rending was his "performance" that he had women in the hall moved to tears.

 

Here is a man who leads a party hell-bent on destroying the British nation, turning the UK into a backward third-world country, giving British jobs and houses to foreigners and placing everyone living in these islands under a nightmarish police-state, devoid of freedom, privacy, free thought and humanity. What an achievement to sell this package as "protecting the British way of life"!  If the Labour Party is elected, our nation will be condemned to death.

 

                                  LABOUR'S BEST FRIENDS ARE CONSERVATIVES

 

The Conservative Party, the supposed-opposition, is no opposition at all.  With both the reds and the blues selling the same Labour policies, the public probably feel why not go for the professional socialists rather than the awkward play-acting amateurs.  The public seem to forget that Socialism is responsible for all our nation's ills.  From inefficient policing, lenient court sentencing, underachievement in schools, closure and inefficiency in hospitals, waste of public funds, corruption in high places, mass immigration, abuse of the welfare state, the list is endless.  Our national decline has been caused by the absurd notion that only the Labour or Conservatives are fit to govern Britain.  In reality, both parties spell the destruction of our nation and should be rejected.  Fortunately, this long-established notion that the two main parties offer any kind of choice is coming to an end.  If the Conservative Party were to pack up and call it a day, leaving the real opponents of socialism to take up the challenge, then the British would see the emergence of a force that really would "protect the British and their way of life."  

 

 Margaret Thatcher and Gordon Brown, like most other international politicians, belong to the same club, so it is not surprising that they should collude over strategy. It is only that they have done so publicly which seems a bit odd. When Tony Blair first became Prime Minister he was unable to put his views over in a convincing manner.  Ordinary members of the public had been able to humiliate him in open debate time after time.  At a loss to know what to do he flew to America, where he enlisted the help of Bill Clinton.  Since his crash course in evasiveness and obstrusion Tony Blair managed to control the media. This he did by cutting out random media coverage, and allowing only carefully stage managed exposure.  The sickening sight of Gordon Brown flying out to Iraq, for a pre-election photo shoot with members of the much abused British army, shows nothing has changed since the ex-Chancellor became Prime Minister.