“Do not add the voice of this place to the war-mongers’ chorus”
Posted on 15. Jul, 2009 by Martin Wingfield in EU News
This is Nick Griffin’s maiden speech to the European Parliament:
Mr President
I served as a monitor at commemorations for the 1956 Revolution in Budapest last year, and I can confirm that Dr. Morvai is right to criticise those who fret about Iran while ignoring human rights abuses here in Europe.
I trust that no Members of the ECRG here will be hypocritical enough to condemn Iran for the use of violence in elections, when David Cameron is among the sponsors of UAF – an organisation of far-left criminals which routinely deploys intimidation and violence against nationalist dissidents in Britain.
The same is true of five current Labour, Lib-Dem and Tory MEPs, marked with the shame of supporting the use of British taxpayers’ money to fund their own militia, which breaks up opposition meetings and attacks their opponents with bricks, darts and claw-hammers.
But my main point is this: However well-meaning, and even justified, criticisms made here of Iran may be, they will be exploited as war propaganda by the powerful vested interests that stand to gain from military attack on that country, Neo-cons, oil companies, construction corporations and the Wahhabi Mullahs of Saudu Arabia all want to see the sovereign state of Iran destroyed by an aggressive war.
Not even European liberals are naive enough to fall for lies about “Weapons of Mass Destruction” again, so human rights are being drafted in as a new causus belli.
Do not add the voice of this place to the war-mongers’ chorus for a third illegal and counter-productive attack by the West on the Muslim world.
Or, if you must, do not leave the war – which hypocritical rhetoric will help to justify and unleash – to the usual brave British cannon-fodder – 18 year-old boys from the Mersey, the Thames and the Tyne.
Instead send out your own sons, to come home in boxes, or without their legs, their arms, their eyes or their sanity. Or mind your own business!
Listen to history in the making here . . . .





