I will be emigrating from it in due course
Bye Bye
(delete duplicate post)
No doubt, but obviously seats and elections are won by people that DO vote, not by people that stay at home. If you feel strongly enough to support a party like the BNP, it is highly unlikely that you would to decline to vote.
If i have not yet made my stance clear, i will do so now. I have no problem with immigrants who want to come here legally, abide by our laws, work & pay taxes.
Illegals, criminals and those whose only desire is to live off the State should be deported.
It is costing millions of pounds every year to keep foreign prisoners in our cushy jails whereas it would would cost much less if they were deported when convicted.
Similarly, deporting illegals immediately upon entry would save millions of pounds on hearings and appeals and trying to find them at a later date.
In case it has escaped your notice, the rest of Europe seems to be out of recession whilst jolly old England is still in. Soon, immigrants will stop wanting to come here when this Country becomes worse than the craphole they came from.
There is some light on the horizon though as it appears that Libya are assisting in closing down one of the routes into Europe and the Italians are stiffening their resolve against a flood of unwanteds, so hopefully, the numbers that arrive at Calais awaiting to infest our shores will decrease.
The first part of this is, of course, true in principle, but the fewer members of the electorate that do vote, the weaker the resulting government (if any) will inevitably be. As to the second, by "you" you obviously mean "one" (since I'm sure you don't intend to suggest my own support of this party) but if has to be said that those who do wish to vote for it will have to be in a constituency where it is fielding a condidate, which is not likely to be anywhere near as many as the main parties will do, so there will be a greater proportion of BNP supporters accordiongly disenfranchised than will be the case with supporters of the main parties.
Are you entirely sure about that? When you complain about immigrants coming to UK to take the jobs of British citizens already living here or to deny those citizens jobs by accepting them in their stead, you are talking of people who, in the main, will be working and paying taxes and no doubt living in as law-abiding a fashion as those that are already here!
But in many cases they can be;
Once again, when presenting your arguments, please do not forget those British citizens and immigrants in UK who are leaving of their own accord.
Furthermore, "the rest of Europe" includes Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Portugal and a host of other countries outside EC such as Moldova, Iceland, Albania and Turkey - so don't try to persuade us that Britain is lagging behind every other European country!
What will you think when Libya eventually gets EU membership and Libyans themselves will be able to come here?
Indeed it would, but that would require every suspected illegal immigrant to be identified - or at least reasonably suspected - as being one, arrested and placed in custody subject to the laws applicable to UK citizens while on British soil and then tried and convicted - which itself doesn't come cheap.
I don't know why you posted this twice and i do not know of any party that is fielding a condidate.
I don't blame them as this Country is not as nice to live in as it used to be.
Hopefully i will be long dead before that happens
but i thank the Libyans for their excellent work in closing down some of the people trafficking routes and stemming the flow of Africans trying to get into Italy.
Of course, the conditions that some of the immigrants are held in are not good, but if the message gets back to others that "it is not worth trying", that can only be positive for Countries that don't want these people.
OK - no doubt you do not (and I can accept that), but it remains important to include them in any arguments that you post about immigration into UK and its actual or potential consequences;
It will be poetic justice if he wins it
albeit if he does it will be thanks to anti Labour votes.
It is not always relevant, but i wonder how many are intending to destroy their papers and sneak as an illegal into Libya or Iran.
...despite the fact that, whatever the may seek to persuade people for appearances' sake, they've actually achieved no such thing in any case...
That will be impossible to prove beyond doubt;
But which countries do not want who?
Rubbish, much valuable work is being done by both the Libyans and Italians to stop illegal immigration. The two Countries are now cooperating.The pact between them allows Italy's coastguard to swiftly deport boatloads of illegal immigrants back to Libyan shores, skipping procedures for filing potential asylum applications. If only we had a similar agreement with the French.This is good news for Italy and good new for Europe. It is only bad news for the people traffickers and the illegals themselves.
Do you know any Countries that want boatloads of illegals??
Lots of illegals want to work like legals, their tag 'illegal' makes it very hard though, and risky.
I am not for one moment seeking to suggest that no work of the kind that you describe is being done; all that I am saying is that any international people trafficking network worth its salt that notes what you do here about this particular co-operation (and they surely all must do, having ears to the ground at least as effective as yours) will simply use other routes to continue to develop its often highly profitable business
That said, the activities of such organisations are one thing and the handling of the cases of individuals who may at any time be apprehended on suspicion of entering any country illegally are quite another and have to follow quite different sets of expensive due legal process than would be the case in trying to prosecute slippery organisations who trade on the basis of being exempt from the laws of any particular country including those in and from which they may operate - an investigative process that is infinitely more expensive than dealing with all the individuals' cases put together and will only continue to be more so.
Which is why the battle to close them down must continue. It is the message that is sent out that is even more important. "If you want to come here, do it through the proper procedures".
Once illegals are sent back home, they will tell others (hopefully) not to try, so the cooperation between the Italians and Libyans is vital.
The ones that are killed when they get back won't tell anyone anythingAlistairtair
Dear Alistairair,
I am aware the dead cannot talk, but when unfortunate deaths are reported by the media, it is sending a very powerful message to those that wish to enter Europe illegally.
Of course the traffickers will look for other routes, but they will have no trade if the immigrants themselves stop wishing to come. This is why what the Italians are doing is so important.
But the immigrants won't for the most part want to stop coming - especially those whose circumstances in their own coutries are particularly parlous compared to those in Britain.
However, what you still seem unwilling to address is the possible outcome of large numbers of people already entitled to live in UK coming to UK to do so, including British citizens living abroad. The very fact, for example, of the British pound's unfavourable situation via-à-vis the euro is forcing quite a few of those ex-pat Brits - especially those on fixed income payable in pounds sterling - to consider having to return to Britain purely for reasons of economic necessity; add those to the ever-increasing numbers of EU citizens entitled to live in UK and who choose to do so and you have then only to consider the balancing factor of existing immigrants and UK-based British citizens in order to try to arrive at sensible and sanguine conclusions about what level of population Britain might be capable of supporting at any given time, though it's far from a simple matter.
If i remember correctly, there has been a reduction on those attempting the "Italian" route. This shows us the way forward and what can be achieved with a bit of effort.
No doubt those that live in terrible conditions might still want to risk the journey, but when the word gets back of the terrible conditions in detention centres, people might think twice.
The problem is that in England we are and are seen to be a soft touch. I am not without compassion for people that wish to come here illegally to improve their lives, but as a Country we have to have control over our borders.
I do not blame illegal immigrants for wishing to come here and they should not blame us for trying to keep them out.
You have explained very well why we need to keep out illegals.Thanks
That demonstrates to me (if indeed it is to be believed) that other routes are already gaining ground.
That's OK; I never suggested that it was less than necessary to try to stem the flow of illegal immigrants but I'm just not convinced that you're satisfied with the situation about legal ones or about British nationals living abroad who decided that they'd like (or feel obliged or forced) to return, either and/or both of which could cause a massive increase in the UK population.
But that's just it; the word rarely if ever does get around.
Which is why the struggle must continue and amicable arrangement made with other Countries for the immediate return of illegals.
If British nationals are living abroad legally, i can see no reason why they would feel obliged to return or be forced to. If any have managed to smuggle themselves into Iraq illegally, i assume they might wish to come back.
If nobody gets sent back, i would agree, but this is no longer the case.
In addition, the British Government has actually sponsored a soap opera broadcast on African radio and television stations to try to convince people not to try to come here illegally.For once, the penny finally appears to have dropped.
What I'm talking about is the Brits who may feel that they are no longer left with any option other than to consider returning because of economic factors such as (but by no means necessarily limited to) the increasingly parlous relationship between the British pound and the euro that affects quite a few ex-pat Brits, especially those on (as I mentioend) fixed pound sterling incomes.
But how shall that be achieved and under whose agreed direction and with whose agreement
Fine - East Africa Enders, perhaps? What difference do you suppose that this might hope to make when a substantial majority of those who end up intending to enter UK illegally have no obvious option to try to enter that country other than illegally?
Just out of interest, is anyone else here encountering difficulties in sending posts here at present?
If this is likely to happen, it is even more reason to stem the flow of illegals. We have a limited amount of space in England.
Apart from ex pats who are wanted by the British Police, i cannot see why there would be any problem with a majority of them returning. They would not need to smuggle themselves in on the back of a lorry.
I am not a bloody politician. Ask the Italian government.
If it convinces just a few people not to try, it is worth it. If it convinces a hundred, the investment has been returned with interest.
Not me.Perhaps you might want to considering popping the corks a little later in the day.
all manner of immigrants already here would have to be deported to make room for them, as the UK population might otherwise risk being catapulted to hopelessly impractical levels...