Nordwave Great Britian

May 27

Today marks the second anniversary of the passing of David Lane, an Order member, P.O.W and one of the finest thinkers our race has ever produced. David died as a result of an epileptic seizure having survived over 25 years incarceration in various super-max prisons through out the United States. Sentenced to a staggering 190 years, at show trial in which the prosecutions evidence was largely the blatant perjury of traitors, David never lost hope or showed any regret, nor did he betray other members of the Order. Instead he continued his struggle from inside prison by writing widely for the cause and coining the 14 words;

We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.

On May 28, 2007 the White race lost one of its most loyal sons,
however his words are still with us and a constant inspiration to us all.

R.I.P David Lane
See you in Valhalla

May 27

Job losses in Britain continue to mount, with more large companies announcing in the coming months that thousands of people will be laid off.

On May 12, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) announced official unemployment in the UK had increased by 244,000 for the last quarter and had reached 2.2 million.

The quarterly increase in the jobless rate was the biggest since 1981. The total number of jobless is now at the highest rate since 1996, the year before the Labour government came to power.

With the new figures, the official rate now stands at 7.1 percent, up from 6.7 percent on the previous quarter. The numbers claiming unemployment benefits in April rose by 57,100 to 1.51 million.

Those being made redundant have also markedly increased. Redundancies rose by 27,000 in the first quarter of 2009, bringing the total number for the last year to 286,000.

Britain’s economy is hemorrhaging workers in a recession predicted by Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government to be the worst since World War II.

On May 12, Tata Steel Ltd., said that earnings at its Corus steelmaking business might be hurt by the global slump after warnings last week that 2,000 UK jobs were under threat.

The UK economy contracted 1.5 percent in the quarter through April from the previous three months, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said in a separate report. Gross domestic product fell 1.9 percent in the first quarter.

On May 22, the retiring Monetary Policy Committee member Professor David Blanchflower, told BBC’s Newsnight program that he believed that unemployment was increasing amidst a “financial crisis that we really haven’t seen for a century.”

According to the ONS, the 6.5 percent drop in manufacturing output between the three months to February and the previous quarter was the steepest since records began in 1968.
http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?i…tionid=3510213

May 26

Nine people have been arrested after hundreds of anti-Islamist protesters clashed with police yesterday.

The streets of Luton descended into violence after demonstrators, many hiding their faces behind balaclavas, brandished England flags and chanted at officers.

Demonstrators gathered in George Square in Luton town centre yesterday

Riot: Demonstrators gathered in George Square in Luton town centre yesterday over the anti-war protest held against the Royal Anglian Regiment in March

A group called March for England was said to have organised the rally as a peaceful protest against Muslim extremists. They were joined by a local group United People of Luton.

The mob, which included teenagers and women, held banners with slogans such as ‘No Sharia Law in the UK’ and ‘Respect our Troops’.

Man being arrested during Luton riot

Arrests: A man is detained by police officers during the riot yesterday

Some protesters wore masks with the horned face of Sayful Islam, a hardline Muslim activist in Luton who took part in an anti-war rally in March, which disrupted a homecoming parade for troops.

But chaos broke out when a crowd of around 500 ran away from police who had been escorting the protest along its route, and ran down side streets towards the town centre.

Officers on horseback and police dogs were deployed, and policemen drew batons to defend themselves.

Masked: A depiction of Sayful Islam

Masked: A depiction of Sayful Islam

Groups of young men in balaclavas and England shirts chanted outside the city centre and one balacava-clad protester held a Rottweiler on a chain, while others clashed with police in riot gear.

One Asian man was hit across the face with a banner and left with a bloody nose.

Islamic extremist

Focus of hate: Sayful Islam used to be a moderate, middle class Muslim from Luton but is now a hardline, political agitator

The nine suspects were in custody today for offences of criminal damage, assault and public order offences, Bedfordshire Police said.

Police said during the disturbance three car windscreens were smashed and a window at a take away restaurant in Chapel Street had been broken.

Last night Luton town centre was calm as police maintained a presence on the streets.

A spokesman for United People of Luton, Wayne King, said many people in Luton were concerned and annoyed that the Muslim community in the town had not taken steps to deal with Sayful Islam’s ‘hate-filled preachings’.

The 24-year-old, who wore a T-shirt with the words ‘No surrender to Al-Qaeda’ on it, said: ‘We decided enough was enough after the soldiers got heckled as they marched through the town centre by the Muslim extremists.

‘Our community has been racially attacked for the last 10 years.

‘A mosque in the town got set on fire a few weeks ago and it made national news but churches in Luton are regularly being set fire to.

‘We want laws brought in to stop preachers of hate operating here.’

Looking for trouble: Protesters in Luton's city centre yesterday stormed the streets wearing balaclavas and clashed with police

Looking for trouble: Protesters in Luton’s city centre yesterday stormed the streets wearing balaclavas

Luton town centre was busy at the time of the riot with shoppers enjoying the sunshine.

Many of those who joined in the march had been drinking in town centre pubs.

Later on, overhead, a police helicopter monitored the movement of the mob which at one point appeared to be making in the direction of Bury Park, an area of Luton where many of the town’s Asian population live.

White Riot

May 26

For most of us, the late May Bank Holiday is a chance to sit back, relax and enjoy the early summer sun.

But this weekend, in the picturesque Gloucestershire village of Newent, one group has been spectacularly hard at work.

The 50-strong work gang arrived at 5pm on Friday  -  the exact moment that the local council offices shut for the long weekend.

Many believe that travellers are targeting Bank Holiday weekends as prime opportunities to occupy and build on land.

This is because local council offices are closed for three days, making it nearly impossible for neighbours to object until the Tuesday.

In upmarket Newent, villagers described ‘a military operation’ in which the travellers used hired lorries and diggers to construct a permanent encampment.

Working well into the night, they cleared the field, installed septic tanks and toilets, and fenced off and gravelled pitches for 12 caravans.

One witness said: ‘They used the earthmoving equipment to knock a hole through the hedge, then it all happened extremely quickly.

‘Big lorries arrived carrying the hardcore and they set to work. It was like a military operation. I don’t think the British Army could do better.’

Travellers have turned a beautiful meadow into a vast encampment, complete with sewerage, toilets and electricity.

The travellers’ new home is just outside Newent, in farmland opposite three large houses, the biggest of which is worth around £1million.

Neighbours said a syndicate of four travellers had bought the farmland for £65,000.

Last week they persuaded energy firm E-ON to supply electricity to the site on the pretext that they needed it to light planned stables.

They then diverted the site’s existing water supply  -  which had fed a horse trough  -  to a standpipe.

Locals, who said a stream of lorries had been going to and from the camp for 15 hours a day, added that the travellers do not have planning permission for the site.

Despite locals’ repeated pleas for help from both the police and the Forest of Dean District Council, yesterday the travellers continued to work unhindered.

Their leader, who gave his name as Richard, said: ‘There’s 50 men here working so we don’t have time to talk to you. You’ll have to come back on Tuesday when we are done.’

Farm worker Matthew Davies, who lives near the site, said: ‘They changed what was a pretty meadow into a building site overnight. Who knows what it will look like a few days down the line.’

Another local said: ‘Nobody wants them here because it’s an illegal operation but our main gripe is with the council because we warned them almost half a year ago.

‘It’s because of their ineptitude that these people can do what they have done.

‘They will never get moved away now  -  it’s too late.’

Local councillor Len Lawton said: ‘Villagers were told the field’s owners only wanted to build temporary accommodation for horses.

‘When the owners started making small engineering changes earlier this year, such as laying pipes, the council reminded them that major building work required planning permission.

‘The owners were asked to respond but never did.

‘I have nothing against the travellers’ lifestyle. My concern is that the legal system seems unfairly weighted against local people.’

No one from Forest of Dean council was available for comment.

At Easter travellers who had bought a three-acre field in the village of Blackmore, Essex, moved on to the site on Good Friday with 60 men and started laying 1,000 tons of hardcore.

Villagers were helpless until council planners went back to work on Tuesday and started the lengthy legal process of eviction.

Another bank holiday, another traveller invasion as meadow becomes a campsite

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1187158/Another-bank-holiday-traveller-invasion-meadow-campsite.html

May 25

Chancellor Alistair Darling and Foreign Minister David Miliband are among nine top cabinet members involved in outrageous expense claims.

The Daily Telegraph published names of Alistair Darling, Jacqui Smith, Hazel Blears, David Miliband, James Purnell, Douglas Alexander, Geoff Hoon and Hilary Benn as claiming for getting help filling in their tax returns form.

The ministers have used up to GBP 11,000 of taxpayers money to pay for personal accountants to fill their tax claims forms. Darling has allegedly claimed GBP 1,400 for his accountant.

The Labor party has said such claims are within the House of Commons rules.

Darling said he had claimed help to make sure he was paying the right amount of tax and not wasting taxpayers’ money.

He said: “Like many MPs, I employed an accountant to prepare tax returns to ensure that the correct amount of tax was paid.”

Under HM Revenue and Customs rules most people in the UK cannot claim for getting an accountant fill in their self-assessment tax return forms.

Sports Secretary Andy Burnham has also escaped a GBP 6,665 tax over the sale of a lease on his London flat. Burnham said he had checked with the tax office and his actions were within Common’s rules.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith went as far as claiming GBP 240 for her husband’s iPhone.

Meanwhile British Prime Minister Gordon Brown ordered his European MPs to abide by stricter rules and hand in receipts and claims bills every 6 months.

As public anger is fuming over taxpayer money spent over luxuries by MPs, Brown is calling for the reform of the claim systems in place.

Brown has also rejected calls for early elections, despite mounting pressure.

http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=95954&sectionid=351020601

May 25

Alexander Cockburn

There’s a myth now about the British hanging together in those dark days [of 1939-1941]. “London can take it,” Ed Murrow told America in his CBS broadcasts. Actually, morale was appalling. Most people correctly had little confidence in the competence of their government and thought Germany was going to win. In the Channel Islands, which the Nazis did take over, the people greeted them hospitably and turned in Jews with zest. The British Ministry of Information employed 10,000 people to read people’s mail surreptitiously, intercepting about 200,000 letters a week, and discovered that people were deeply pessimistic and thought Churchill was “played out.”

A secret government report spelled out the popular lack of nerve: “Portsmouth — on all sides, we hear that looting and wanton destruction had reached alarming proportions. The police seem unable to exercise control … The effect on morale is bad and there is a general feeling of desperation … their nerve had gone.”

Churchill’s famous speeches about their “finest hour” and so forth didn’t have much effect either. He delivered them in the House of Commons, and when the BBC asked him to rebroadcast them on the radio, he refused. So the BBC secretly used an actor named Norman Shelley to read them, pretending to be Churchill. Shelley’s usual role was to play Larry the Lamb on “Children’s Hour.” Most people didn’t actually know what Churchill’s voice sounded like, and those who did thought it sounded funny. Letters poured into No. 10 Downing St. asking what was wrong with the PM.

Many people tried to shut out the war as much as they could. By the end of 1940, nearly a third of the population admitted to not following news of the war. When asked what depressed them most, people put the weather first, then war news, then the air raids. Life was rotten anyway for a huge slab of the population, which was malnourished, poorly housed, barely educated and deeply discontented. When they visited the [London] East End, the king and queen were soundly booed. In the summer of 1941, a woman got five years in prison for saying “Hitler is a good man, a better man than Mr. Churchill.”

May 23

May 20

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May 19

Children as young as seven are being recruited by councils to act as ‘citizen snoopers’, the Daily Mail can reveal.

The ‘environment volunteers’ will report on litter louts, noisy neighbours – and even families putting their rubbish out on the wrong day.

There are currently almost 9,000 people signed up to the schemes. More are likely to be recruited in the coming months.

Controversially, some councils are running ‘junior’ schemes which are recruiting children.

After basic training, volunteers are expected to be the ‘eyes and the ears’ of the town hall.

They are given information packs about how to collect evidence, including tips about writing down numberplates, which could later be used in criminal prosecutions.

Luton Borough Council’s Street Seen scheme encourages its 650 volunteers to report ‘environmental concerns’. It is also recruiting ‘Junior Street Champions’, aged between seven and 11.

Primary schools could also be involved within two years.

Similarly, Islington Council in north London has recruited 1,200 ‘Islington Eyes’ to report crime hotspots, fly-tipping and excess noise from DIY.

Volunteers are given a list of things to do when confronted with fly-tippers, including taking photos ‘without being seen’.

Last year the council undertook a recruitment drive for youngsters aged nine and above, called Junior Eyes.

Children are given special books to write down reports on littering or graffiti in their schools, which they then send to the council.

A spokesman for Islington town hall said: ‘It’s not possible for the council to see what’s going on in the borough at all times, so our Eyes for Islington are a great help, reporting issues such as dangerous footpaths, fly-tipping and graffiti.’

Welwyn Hatfield Council in Hertfordshire has given its 13 volunteers handheld computers to take photographs of problem areas.

The information is then uploaded to a map of trouble spots.

Overall, a total of 8,442 volunteers have signed up at 17 councils in England. Other councils are set to follow their example and set up their own networks of volunteers.

They say the scheme helps them find out about problems which they might not know about otherwise. But critics are worried the schemes could easily be abused and encourage a ‘Big Brother society’.

The move comes as local authorities dish out £100 fines to householders who leave out too much rubbish or fail to follow recycling rules.

Matthew Elliott, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘Community spirit is one thing, spying on your neighbours is quite another.

‘It is the job of the police to maintain law and order, and there is no reason taxpayers should have to pay twice for the same service.

‘People are sick and tired of being spied on by their councils and in a recession we simply cannot afford luxuries like handheld computers at a time when the most basic public services are being scaled back.’

The Welwyn and Hatfield scheme is run by waste collection and environmental contractor Serco, which hopes to recruit more volunteers this summer.

A spokesman for the council said: ‘Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council and its project partner Serco do not conduct any surveillance of residents in enforcement of environmental crimes, and neither do the community champions that have volunteered.’

Serco said other councils were keen to introduce its handheld computers, although many areas are conducting similar schemes using more low-tech methods.

For example, Hillingdon Borough Council in north London, which has recruited 4,800 volunteers from the age of 16 in the past 18 months, simply gives its ‘Street Champions’ pens and a folder of contact details.

A spokesman said: ‘Street Champions themselves have confirmed that it is not a scheme where people are asked to spy on neighbours. Street Champions are asked to act just as any other resident might to report issues in their local area.’

The spokesman added that two brothels had been closed down this year as a result of reports.

In North Devon, where trial schemes are currently under way, some of the volunteers have helped the police close down a drug den by giving witness statements.

However, the controversial pilot schemes have been dropped in a number of areas including Stoke -on-Trent in Staffordshire and Tower Hamlets in east London.

A spokesman for the Local Government Association said: ‘Environment volunteers are people who care passionately about their local area and want to protect it from vandals, graffitists and fly-tippers.

‘These community-spirited residents are not snoopers.

‘They help councils cut crime and make places cleaner, greener and safer.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1183796/Town-halls-hire-citizen-snoopers-young-SEVEN-spy-neighbours-report-wrongs.html

May 19

David Miliband today described China as the 21st century’s “indispensable power” with a decisive say on the future of the global economy, climate change and world trade.

The foreign secretary predicted that over the next few decades China would become one of the two “powers that count”, along with the US, and Europe could emerge as a third only if it learned to speak with one voice.

The remarks, in a Guardian interview, represented the most direct acknowledgement to date from a senior minister, or arguably from any western leader, of China’s ascendant position in the global pecking order.

Miliband said a pivotal moment in China’s rise came at the G20 summit last month in London. Hu Jintao, China’s president, arrived as the head of the only major power still enjoying strong growth (expected to be 8% this year), backed by substantial financial reserves.

“The G20 was a very significant coming of economic age in an international forum for China. If you looked around the 20 ­people sitting at the table … what was striking was that when China spoke everybody listened,” Miliband said.

“China’s indispensability in part comes from size, but a second part is that it wants to play a role.”

Hu helped bolster Gordon Brown’s ­position against protectionism, and ­China’s economic stimulus package (equivalent to 16% of its GDP over two years) is widely seen as among the world’s best hopes for a recovery.

“Historians will look back at 2009 and see that China played an incredibly important role in stabilising global capitalism. That is very significant and sort of ironic,” Miliband said. “There’s a joke that goes: ‘After 1989, capitalism saved China. After 2009, China saved capitalism.’”

Signals from Beijing since the ­London summit that it is considering tough ­concerted action to reduce CO2 emissions, have raised hopes of reaching a ­workable international pact to contain climate change.

Miliband compared China’s potential role in the coming years to the role the US claimed for itself in the 20th century, recalling a 1998 boast by Madeleine Albright, then US secretary of state.

“China is becoming an indispensable power in the 21st century in the way Madeleine Albright said the US was an indispensable power at the end of the last century,” Miliband said. “It has become an indispensable power economically, and China will become an indispensable power across a wider range of issues.”

But in contrast to America’s 20th-century ascent, which eclipsed Britain, Miliband said China would not displace the US but rather join it at “the new top table”, and because of its low per capita income, it would not rival the US as the world’s leading superpower for at least a generation.

At the G20 summit, some commentators argued that the most important axis was a “G2″ of the US and China. Whether that could be expanded to a “G3″, Milband argued, would be up to Europe.

“I think that there is a scenario where America and China are the powers that count,” the foreign secretary said. “It is massively in our interests to make sure that we have a stake in that debate, and the most effective way of doing so is … to ensure we do it with a European voice.”

A report by the European Council on Foreign Relations argued that China was exploiting the EU’s divisions and treating it with “diplomatic contempt”. The report, published in advance of Wednesday’s EU-China summit in Prague, said that European states, dealing with China individually, lacked leverage on issues such as trade, human rights and Tibet.

“Europe has not been sufficiently strategic in its relationship with China,” Miliband said. “I think a significant part of that is institutional. The EU-China relationship is a good case for the Lisbon treaty. At the moment, at every EU-China summit, the EU side is led by a different presidency and every year there’s a different set of priorities.

“Miliband denied Britain had allowed human rights to slide down the agenda with China, saying there was a constant dialogue between the two countries on the issue. “It’s a mature relationship that does take these issues seriously,” he said.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/may/17/david-miliband-china-world-power