Monday, July 07, 2008

Pretty in Pink: The Clown Prince of London at the End of a Very Bad Week

To show my willingness to write about bad politics across the board, I introduce another of my new websites: theconservativeparty.org.uk which asks, "Are the Tories suitable candidates to take over from Labour in this 'left-right' charade that is British politics?"

I will be concentrating on thelabourparty.org as long as the global banking cartel, transnational corporations, eugenicists, unelected think tanks, Eurocrats and UN bodies are using the Labour Party to control the British people.

This article's headline refers to London Mayor, Boris Johnson's appearance in yesterday's "Gay Pride" parade in the capital. Picture: Daily Mail.

Mr Johnson supported Section 28, which barred local councils, including schools, from promoting homosexuality. Despite being assured, just a few years ago, that ditching this piece of allegedly unnecessary legislation would not lead to homosexuality being promoted in schools, the opposite is happening.

Johnson once remarked that, "If gay marriage was OK - and I was uncertain on the issue - then I saw no reason in principle why a union should not be consecrated between three men, as well as two men; or indeed three men and a dog."

You cannot say he doesn't recognise a slippery slope when he sees one.

Also making an appearance in the parade were members of the British Army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy.

The Times reports that, "The new orders allowed servicemen to wear full military uniform, but decorum was strictly enforced yesterday. Whistles, banners and decorations were not allowed. The units marched in neat formation amongst revellers, avoiding eye contact with the public."

I expect we will have to wait until next year to watch our servicemen and women dress as transvestites. That will make the enemy quiver in their boots, won't it?

I suppose all this helped the Mayor forget about the resignation of his deputy, Ray Lewis.

While newspaper reports mull over alleged sexual and financial misdemeanours, a press release has Mr Lewis saying that these are completely unfounded.

Mr Johnson believes that his "deputy Mayor Ray Lewis is being made to suffer now because he has had the guts to serve in this administration and because he has had the courage to speak out against a stifling orthodoxy that has failed too many of our children."

I certainly will not argue that much of what has become orthodox today is counter-productive, shambolic and downright wicked. How are youngsters supposed to know how to behave when they are bombarded with different messages about right and wrong?

One example being sex. In times past, the issue of whether or not to engage in sexual activity involved issues such as morality, self-worth, purity and concern about pregnancy and the resulting need to do the right thing should it happen, but now all this has been reduced by government and the media to the 'importance of taking precautions,' which rules out personal responsibility in all areas of normal human relationships, thus attempting to reduce youngsters to less than animals, devoid of instincts like fidelity, trust and honour and depriving them of the benefit of building a strong family.

Boris Johnson made a major error earlier in the week, in my opinion, when he advised youngsters not to intervene if they saw a fight.

The message is a U-turn of his utterance last year that people should take a risk and tackle thugs.

The police have been engineered to be more concerned with trivialities than serious crime and the Mayor now expects the public to be neutered as well: everyone powerless and pathetic against the darker elements in our society.

Doesn't it all make you proud to be British?

As Deborah Orr writes in The Independent, "Be afraid. Be very afraid. But try not to forget that fear is the enemy."

One of my favourite pieces of scripture is this:

"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love." 1 John 4:18

Finally and politics aside, my condolences go to Boris Johnson, his wife and family on the death Sir Charles Wheeler, foreign correspondent for the BBC and father of the Mayor's wife.