31 December 2017

Forwards into 2018!


2017 was a mixed year for SWPE.  We had set-backs, but we also had positive developments.

The set-backs included the unfortunate need to postpone our proposed cross-party open meeting.  The planning for the proposed meeting took precedence over street events which we would like to have undertaken.  The result was that 2017 was a year of unprecedented inactivity for the party.

The positive points of 2017 included a deepening of ideology, with contradictions being ironed out.  The year was, in part, one of inward concentration.  Events which could have been problematic were turned into opportunities for dealing with divisive issues.  In the end, we leave 2017 a stronger and more forward-looking organisation than we entered the year.

So what for 2018?

We aim to build on links with other organisations and individuals who are not within the fold.  Organisations which we see as being of great mutual potential include the CPB-ML, PSFP, PSFMA.  We have begun the process of building a cross-party base for Patriotic Socialists, Left-Wing Nationalists and anti-Globalists.  We intend to push this process forward.

We have moved away from our focus of fighting for a Socialist Republic in England, to fighting for a United Socialist Britain.  This has led to the unusual circumstance of SWPE having people active across the UK.  We hope to build on the small presence we have in Scotland, and by so doing affirm our belief in the unity of the Working Class from Helston to Helmsdale.

We have a lot to do, but we have new members who have come into the party this year who have brought with them energy, enthusiasm and a willingness to work for the betterment of the People.  They have joined committed members who have been with us for longer, keeping our organisation alive and motivated.

So Happy New Year to you all.  2018 is nearly upon us.  We have firm foundations, and we will keep building. 

For Class and Nation

27 December 2017

Poverty in the UK - not new and not going away (Wilberg on Wednesday)

Editors introduction

The UK is allegedly a rich country.  If wealth is judged by the obscene profits extracted from underpaid workers, then yes it is.  If wealth is a measure of the disposable income of the Workers of the nation and of those who cannot find employment, the story is very different. 

Take these two items as examples of poverty in the UK.

Firstly from the newspaper, Independent:

NHS doctors are to begin prescribing food to patients as part of a drive to tackle the hunger and malnutrition suffered by people living in poverty.

Vouchers for fruit and vegetables will be offered by GPs in a number of practices as part of a drive to increase “social prescribing”.

Dr Michael Dixon, NHS England’s clinical champion for social prescribing, said he wants every GP to offer a more holistic approach to tackling issues like hunger and diet-related disease.

“Our role does extend beyond drugs and procedures,” he said. “We should be making sure people are properly fed, safe and have houses that aren’t damp.

“I hope it also has an engineering role in terms of creating a local community where people are more knowledgeable about good food and able to cook it.”

The move has emerged as The Independent is running a Christmas campaign aimed at providing children in poverty with healthy food and helping to slash food waste.

The Department of Health, with NHS England and Public Health England, has made £4m available to encourage third party and voluntary organisations to set up social prescribing programmes, in part, to reduce pressure on overstretched NHS services.

Three GP practices in Lambeth, south London, will launch a pilot scheme next year to offer food vouchers on prescription, while other schemes combatting issues like loneliness, obesity and stress already offer patients referrals to gardening clubs or cooking lessons.

Rosie Oglesby, national director of food poverty charity Feeding Britain, said social prescriptions had an important role to play in preventing malnutrition that could save the NHS millions each year.

“Malnutrition is a huge issue. Interventions like social prescribing can help to tackle the problem earlier on, and prevent people ending up in desperate situations,” she said.

“Tackling hunger and malnutrition is not just about making sure people have full stomachs, but about making sure they can eat well and get the nutrition they need.”

The scheme in Lambeth, which will be funded by the Alexandra Rose charity, will allow doctors to issue physical scripts to patients to the value of £1 that can be redeemed at market stalls in the local area.


Secondly from the website, OffGuardian:

Today we think of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol as a cosy piece of traditional seasonal fare, replete with steaming puds and roasted goose and comfortably easy lessons about not being stingy at Crimbo. But when Dickens wrote his novella in 1843 he was delivering a far more serious – and possibly freshly relevant – warning about the moral bankruptcy of a society that destroys human lives in pursuit of profit

It’s a fact not much considered, but Das Kapital and A Christmas Carol were both written in the same city, in the same decade – just five years apart.

To those familiar only with the numerous adaptations of Dickens’ tale it might seem absurd to look for any point of connection between these two books. What can a feel-good tale of middle class redemption have to do with a study of the class struggle? But this question only begs to be asked because a lot of the real meaning behind the writing of A Christmas Carol has always been missing from the general perception of this work.

As conceived in 1843, Dickens’ short novel was not simply a personal morality tale. It was a raw and impassioned warning to his fellow bourgeois Victorians of the collective responsibility human beings have for one another and the potential danger existing in exactly the social forces Marx would soon be dissecting. Dickens was worried about the rampant injustices in his society, not simply out of a sense of empathy and outrage, but out of fear. He was convinced the grotesque imbalances of wealth and power that endured at the time of his writing might end up tearing the fabric of society apart.

The 1840s, known as the “hungry forties” were years of financial confusion, recession, poverty and unrest throughout much of the developed world. In the USA the boom of 1836 was followed by the “panic of 1837”. The United Kingdom adopted free trade, abolishing most duties & tariffs. There was a railway boom and bust, the Bank Charter Act of 1844, and then a panic in 1847. There was the Irish “potato famine” or “Great Hunger”, when people died of starvation while Anglo-Irish landowners exported the food that would have saved them. In 1846, after heavy lobbying, the Corn Laws were repealed, signalling the end of any protection for domestic producers.

Social injustice was becoming unhinged and self-defeating in its extremity. In 1834 the Malthusian New Poor Law had dehumanised and institutionalised poverty. The law forced anyone needing welfare to enter a workhouse and refusal to do so meant starvation. The new wave of workhouses produced as a result of the Act were places of nightmare, more closely resembling concentration camps than refuges for the needy. Families were forcibly separated, parents assumed to have relinquished all rights over and responsibilities for their children. Segregation by age and gender was enforced. Personal belongings and clothing was confiscated until discharge.



Editors comment

We live in dark times. Child poverty is rife.  When we look back to Victorian times we view those days as a period of misery which we have thankfully escaped.  We have not escaped it, the propaganda of the State has become slicker and the distractions more efficient.

Capitalism hasn't become more human, it has become a better actor, and its crimes have become so commonplace that they have become experienced as somehow 'normal'.  Now that is a post Christmas sobering thought...

24 December 2017

Eat, Drink and Be Merry - Embrace Tradition, Reject Consumerism


SWPE doesn't have a specific religious policy, other than that we reject the manipulation of spiritualism by the Ruling Class.  We view how people experience the spiritual as a purely individual and personal matter.  It is true that we have moved away from a strict atheism which rejected all religion as a form of social control.  We still reject any attempt to distort a yearning for understanding into a form of servitude and obedience.  We have not watered down our opposition to the power of organised religion as a branch of the State, or as an extension of the Ruling Class.  What we have come to accept is that people experience the world subjectively, and the non-material even more so.  Therefore it is only right and proper to leave spiritual matters to the individual, with the exception being when the individual becomes a part of a mass which seeks to impose the will of its leaders on others.

At this time of the year there is a lot of pressure for people to get into debt to buy consumer junk for loved ones.  This spiritually-devoid version of Christianity with its 'Santa Claus' nonsense, has become the very essence of social control which we stand in opposition to.  The poorest of our people are preyed upon by the Capitalist vultures with adverts aimed at children, with endless films portraying the disappointment of not receiving the perfect gift, and with all manner of psychological manipulation designed to make people feel guilty if they do not spend vast amounts of money of material goods.  This has become an annual ritual in the pseudo-religious deification of shopping.  We reject this absolutely.  It is an absolute outrage that people are judged on how much money they spend on others.  Love does not have a Pound sign attached to it.  We express our love and friendship through spending time together, enjoying each others company, keeping in touch, and many other ways.

Our motto for this time of the year is:
Eat, Drink and Be Merry.  Do not go into debt to even One Penny

This motto encapsulate our belief in people and the relationships between us, as being of paramount importance.  Those who have no problem with pouring guilt onto the poor, forcing our people deeper into debt to buy the plastic crap that they sell at a vast profit - those people are the enemy. 

So whether you are celebrating Yule, Saturnalia, Mothers' Night, Sol Invictus, Christmas or another festival, or just having time off from the grind of work, we wish you all the very best. 

20 December 2017

Books by Peter Wilberg (Wilberg on Wednesday)

Our very own Peter Wilberg is a Philosopher with a great many ideas which are of interest to Socialists and non-Socialists alike. His work is not solely or even mainly political, but takes focus on health, psychology, mysticism and other areas. This Wilberg on Wednesday is different to the usual. This Wednesday we take the opportunity to thank Peter for his work over the year, and to take a moment to highlight his books which can be found on Amazon at:

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=la_B0034NUHQM_B0034NUHQM_sr?rh=i%3Abooks&field-author=Peter+Wilberg&sort=relevance&ie=UTF8&qid=1513806477

We would advise everyone to take a look. A lot of this work is available on Kindle for free, but if anyone would like to buy a more traditional book, that is possible too!





















19 December 2017

Global Capitalists are Killing Europe with Genocidal Mass Migration


The European Union is a lie.  It is neither a Union nor in any way an institution which serves the interests of Europeans.

When we voted to leave the EU on the 23rd June 2016, we did so not out of any animosity to Europe, but out of fear of the despotism of the EU.  The EU is not Europe.  The EU is anti-Europe.  As Europeans, we British understand that by voting to leave the EU, we were voting to get away from a dangerous institution headed by corporate criminals and genocidal globalisers.  Policies emanating from the EU prove that we were right to leave and that it is in the interests of all Europeans that all parties and people across the EU who seek to leave that body, are helped to do so.  Europe will not live until the EU is dead.

On International Migrants Day (18.12.17) Dimitris Avramopoulos (the unelected European Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship) wrote:

'The EU has granted protection to more than 700,000 people last year. They have found safety in Europe, but we also need to make sure they find a home. This is not only a moral imperative. It is also an economic and social imperative for our ageing continent'


The nonsense written here is that the EU needs immigration because the population is ageing due to decades of liberal extremism leaving millions of Europeans dead before birth as the women who should have been their mothers have pursued careers in place of the most rewarding of all jobs - raising the next generation.  The EU continues to push the neo-liberal lunacy of abortion on demand and of the right of all to be wage-slaves, whilst simultaneously demanding we accept millions of immigrants to fill the population gap.  This is genocide.  It doesn't matter if it is Chinese people taking over Tibet, Israelis wiping out Palestine, or 'refugees' populating the void left by millions of murdered European infants, Genocide is Genocide.

As for the claim that the EU has granted protection to 700,000 people in the last year, the policies of 2010 Coudenhove-Kalergi Prize winner Angela Merkel, have created fear across the EU, directly contributing to the UK voting to leave.  The mass immigration of over a million 'refugees' in a single year (2016), including a large number of terrorist sleeper cells, has led to the calm and happiness of Europe being shattered.

The petty dictator continues:

'We must also enhance legal channels for economic migration with a more ambitious Blue Card for highly skilled workers and kick-start targeted labour migration pilot projects in key third countries.'

We were told that the EU would be a better place for Europeans.  If there are skills shortages, the solution is to train the people of Europe to do jobs which are necessary.  The EU Commissioner conveniently forgets the mass unemployment of his own country, Greece.  If the EU worked for Europeans, there would be a programme of assisted internal migration from countries of high unemployment to areas of labour shortage.  There are 38 Million unemployed Europeans in the EU - to claim that we need immigration is a disgusting and brazen lie.  In any case, those entering the EU are not highly skilled, but mostly workshy illiterates.  There is no mass influx of Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, or any other highly educated people, only people obsessed with a primitive ideology which is wholly at variance with the European mindset (and is rejected by decent Muslims worldwide who nonetheless are associated with it by the lying media), or otherwise people of no value who have come to live the easy life at our expense.  The lie that the refugees are from Syria is an insult to that beleaguered land of proud and courageous people - the only 'Syrians' coming are terrorist filth from the US/UK/EU/Saudi/Israeli created 'Islamic State'

The enemy of the European people speaks of border defences being no solution (even though Hungary has proven the exact opposite) and makes the sickening anti-democratic statement that:

'Migration is our new reality. The time has come to start thinking, talking and acting about migration in a more comprehensive and long-term way, putting in place policies aimed at promoting integration and inclusion.'

Migration destroys Working Class areas. The Ruling Class do not put refugees in areas where they live. The 'positive DISCRIMINATION' policies do not take jobs, housing, money from the Ruling Class, but rather from the Working Class who see themselves pushed out by newcomers who are given preferential treatment at our expense.

The EU is marching in lockstep with the George Soros Open Society Foundations and is implementing the Kalergi Plan for the annihilation of Europe.  They want a cultureless country of wage slaves with no allegiance to any country in the EU.  This will be followed by attacks on other parts of the world, with the end goal for a fully rootless planet in which there are no borders, so there is nothing to stop economic servitude, exploitation and the total domination of the Global Ruling Class.  If they succeed in Europe, nowhere in the world will be safe. We have to stop the rot here and now.

Smash the EU.  For Global Freedom, For the Working Class of Every Nation.

13 December 2017

Meditating Ordinary Things – on ‘the question of Being’ (Wilberg on Wednesday)

Preface: what I call The Awareness Principle does not only question, as Heidegger did, the nature of Being and its relation to beings. Instead it also and above all speaks of a primordial ‘Awareness of Being’. Its principle concern and question is therefore the nature of Awareness itself.  But this does not mean that ‘The Awareness Principle’ simply transcends or supersedes ‘the question of Being’ as Heidegger asked it. On the contrary, by speaking also of an ‘Awareness of Being’, The Awareness Principle - whatever new fruits it bears from it - is a tree that will always remain grounded and rooted in the ‘question of Being’ – and therefore also in the thinking of Martin Heidegger himself. The following essay is a new reminder and expression of this truth.” 

We take our stand as beings within a world of beings. ‘A being’ or ‘beings’ means here - anything and everything that ‘is’. But what, asks Heidegger, does it mean for any being at all to ‘be’? What is the ‘Being’ of any being? We may see a tree, rock, paving stone or a wall of brick, a car or house, a chair or desk, and say of it that it ‘is there’ – that ‘there is’, for example a paving stone, the brickwork of a building or the bark of a tree. We may look further and say that there ‘is’ a patch of lichen on it, that this lichen ‘is’ ‘yellow’ etc.  But where, how or in what way do we or even CAN we perceive the Being or ‘is-ness’ of anything which we perceive – and so also think or say of it: ‘there is…’? Where and how, for example, on a paving stone or wall of brick - or in the yellowness of the patch of lichen we see on it - do or even can we perceive in this being anything like its ‘Being’ or being-ness - its ‘is-ness’? Is this ‘is-ness’ perhaps not something so concealed or hidden, so lacking in any perceptible qualities or faces, that we could just as much say that precisely there, where we say of something that it ‘is’, we find precisely nothing – an ‘is not’. If so, then could we not just as well say of anything that ‘it is not’ and ‘there is not…’? Could it not be that in perceiving, thinking and saying ‘there is…’,  for example ‘there ‘is’ a tree or brick, with its bark and patch of yellow lichen’ we are at the same time saying ‘No’ to this ‘is’ - which is nothing ‘there’ to be seen or perceived at all – nothing at all that ‘is’, and therefore, in the deepest sense also no ‘being at all’? Such questions offer a crude summary of some of the many deep directions in which Heidegger’s meditative questioning on the nature of ‘Being’ and of ‘beings’ led. Through them, it began to seem to him that there was a great Nothingness at the heart of Being itself - not just because Being is no ‘thing’ but because the Being of any being is nothing that ‘there is’, nothing that can be seen or heard, felt or touched in any tangible way. But is this actually true? Could it not be, however, that precisely in and through the perceptible face or look of any being, the way it comes to light or ‘appears’ to us as a ‘phenomenon’ (a word derived from the Greek phaos/phos (light) and phainesthein – to ‘come to light’ or ‘bring to appearance through light’) that its true ‘Being’ can be found?

The particular ‘look’ of a being, the way it both appears and in this way also ‘stands out’ or ‘ex-ists’  for us, was what the Greeks called its eidos. This is a word that later became reduced to a mere ‘idea’ of something. But it also gives us a clue to a new way of looking at things, one through which their Being, ‘is-ness’ or ‘being-ness’ is nothing concealed at all but stares us in the face as their very ‘look’ – not in the form of any mental concept or ‘idea’ of what they are, but as their eidos in the original sense. It does of course remain true that as a long as we perceive in the way that most people are so accustomed to doing - according to a preconceived idea of what it is they are perceiving – that then there is no way that the Being or ‘is-ness’ of anything, any ‘being’, is evident to us. 

As long as we only perceive something as a ‘car’, ‘chair’, ‘desk’, ‘house’, ‘tree’ etc., then whatever its particular, distinguishing features, we see no more than a particular instance or example of what is not more than a general or generic idea of what it is, and not its ‘is-ness at all. The entire realm of our sensory experiencing and perception takes the form, not of immediate ‘sensory perceptions’, but of what I call ‘sensory’ conceptions’ – perceiving phenomena as ‘this’ or ‘that’. Our lives do not begin in this way. An infant for example - meaning someone who has not learned to speak (in-fans) and to name things in language - can hear just as well as an adult. Yet, lacking any idea or concept of ‘a car’, ‘a train’ - or ‘a Mozart symphony’ - cannot possibly hear such a thing as a ‘Mozart symphony’ or even simply ‘a car’ or ‘a train’ passing by. Instead the infant ‘simply’, but in some ways more deeply, and inwardly and tangibly than an adult – is touched by the felt tone and timbre of the sounds they hear. But what would happen if, like infants, we were able to not or to stop perceiving things in a pre-conceived way - ‘as’ this or that and according to a learned word for and idea of what they are? Then for example, a paving stone with its patch of yellow lichen would no longer be seen simply as ‘a paving stone’, the ‘lichen’ would no longer be seen as ‘lichen’. In fact, even its colour would no longer be perceived merely as some shade of what we have long learned to call ‘yellow. Instead, our experience of perceiving any phenomenon would be transformed into what, in my Memoirs and other essays, I have called ‘Sensuous Awareness Bliss’. By this I mean a concept-free and purely sensual and aesthetic experiencing of sights, sounds, shapes, tones, textures and colours etc. Yet this is a type of experience  that most people only have - if they are not on drugs like LSD - when, for example, they come to appreciate and enjoy a supposedly ‘abstract’ painting or sculpture, one in which they cannot identify anything in the artwork as some nameable ‘thing’. It is also an experience that some – but not all – people have when they listen to a piece of music. That is because music, by its nature, offers us a direct feeling and sensual experience which is innately free of ideas or concepts - which does not ‘represent’ anything, and is not even reducible to any ‘emotion’ we can  label in words. If it were, it would be enough to present a description of the music and the things or ideas it represents - and there would no need to actually listen to it and feel it at all! In this sense, all music – and not just modern music of a sort that is seemingly abstract or ‘atonal’ music – is essentially abstract, and is so however deeply and intensely it touches and moves our souls. Of course there are pieces of great classical and romantic music which also seek to ‘tell a story’, ‘paint a picture’ or convey the atmosphere of a particular country or landscape. Yet does this imply that the music could just as well be replaced by a story, painting or walk in that landscape? Certainly not. The question is - why? My answer, as the reader will come to see, is that the composer works with and from the very same tones and colours of feeling that find expression in the story, painting or landscape itself. These tones of feeling are nothing visible or audible in the story, painting or landscape itself – and yet  they constitute its very soul – made up of feeling tones that, if the composer is in resonance with them, can then wordlessly ‘resound’ as audible vocal, instrumental or orchestral tones.

In contrast, a great piece of clearly non-abstract or ‘figurative’ painting, may, of course, seem to clearly portray or ‘represent’, for example, ‘a tree’.  But the greatness of the painting lies first of all in the way in which it reveals or ‘discloses’ the unique shape, form and colouration of the tree something as a phenomenon that is - in itself - something entirely ‘abstract’ - no more ‘concrete’ or ‘figurative’ than an ‘abstract’ work of sculpture. For a tree itself, with all its many unique features  does not ‘re-present’ any ‘thing’ – and certainly not a mere ‘idea’ or ‘concept’ of what it is. As a result, no matter how naturalistically painted, the painting cannot merely ‘re-present’ a tree. For how can something that does not itself ‘represent’ anything be represented?  Both the ‘actual’ or ‘concrete’ and artistically ‘represented’ tree therefore essentially represent ‘nothing’ – ‘no-thing’.Yet perhaps we can rephrase this understanding and say instead that a tree, whether it stands before us in nature or in a painting, even though it ‘represents’ nothing, does indeed present something to us. It presents ‘nothing’ but what it itself is – its ‘Being’ - but only and precisely by not representing itself to us simply ‘as’ what we call ‘a tree’.

How then does the tree present itself? Not as a ‘figure’ representing anything but rather a unique ‘gestalt’ or configuration (‘con-figuration’) of purely sensory or ‘phenomenal’ qualities - qualities of the sort we can but need not represent in language as the sculptural form of its ‘branches’, the shape, density and colour tone of its leaves or ‘foliage’, the height, thickness and sensed weightiness of its ‘trunk’ and the particular texture, more or less smooth or rough, of its ‘bark’ etc. Yet to use what we call ‘a tree’ as our example here is all too easily misleading. True, we have shown that a phenomenon of the most supposedly ‘concrete’ or ‘natural’ sort – like a tree - is, in itself something that is as abstract as any supposedly ‘abstract’ work of art of the sort - which also only presents us with a un-nameable ‘configuration’ of sensory shapes and qualities. But great art or music is also and above all felt as meaningful - even if we cannot reduce this felt meaning or ‘sense’1 to an ‘idea’ or represent it in words, even if, to use the English phrase we cannot ‘make sense’ of it?

So what sort of felt meaning or ‘sense’1 is it that presents itself through the sensory qualities manifested in the look, face or eidos of any sensory phenomenon at all - whether natural or man-made, artistically crafted or purely utilitarian, that we do not reduce to some ‘idea’ of what it is? Is it not the same sort of pre-conceptual and wordlessly felt meaning that we experience in listening to music? But perhaps it is also something else – similar to the sort of ‘felt meaning’ we experience  whenever we perceive the ‘look’ or eidos of another human being - both the look of their bodies and, in particular, the look  in their  face and eyes. For such looks are no mere ‘object’ of our own visual perception, but reveal to us something very different – their own way of looking out on, seeing and feeling the world around them. This, in turn, is  something tinted or toned by  a particular way of feeling themselves – which also lends the look in their face and eyes a particular ‘mood’ or tone of feeling. 

The body of a human being then, including and in particular, their face and eyes, have a ‘look’ that is not something we simply perceive as a thing or ‘object’.Neither is all that presents itself to us as the bodily shape, look and face of a particular human being something simply ‘there’ or ‘present’ for us to be or become aware of. Instead, and as a ‘phenomenon’ in the root sense, it brings to light and brings forth - it presences - the unique qualities, tones, shapes, colours and textures of that particular human being’s awareness, in particular their wordless feeling awareness of themselves and the world. Are not such qualities of awareness that which most of all tell us what, who and also ‘how’ that human being ‘is’? For surely, what a particular human being ‘is’ cannot be separated from how and who they feel themselves ‘to be’? And is not this feeling awareness of themselves something which itself tones and tints, shapes and colours, the entire way they feel, sense and perceive other people and the world around them – that world in which they first come to ‘stand out’ or ‘ex-ist’? It seems, then, that there is an intrinsic relation between ‘being’ itself and feeling. Here we find ourselves ‘at one’ with Martin Heidegger:

“Feeling is the very state, open to itself, in which we stand related to things, to ourselves and to the people around us … Feeling is the very state, open to itself, in which human being hovers.”

“Every feeling is an embodiment attuned in this or that way, a mood that embodies in this or that way.”

“A mood makes manifest ‘how one is’ and ‘how one is faring’. In this ‘how one is’; having a mood brings Being (Sein) to its ‘there’ (Da).”

Heidegger also remarks:

“The bodying of life is not encapsulated in the ‘physical mass’ in which the body can appear to us …”
But is ‘life’ and its ‘bodying’ restricted to the human being? Not at all. The light of awareness that is visible in the look of another human being’s eyes – whether it be a darkly inward-looking or brightly outward-shining light – can reveal countless possible shades of both light and darkness, as well as countless possible tones and colourations of awareness. In the light of this understanding, we can return to the ‘yellow’ of the abstract patch of ‘lichen’ - whether on a rock or  the bark of a tree, on the paving stones of a stree or brickwork of a man-made building. We have suggested that this yellow patch of lichen is not something that ‘is’ - in the sense of being simply there or present. Instead, we must concur with Heidegger in understanding that in everything ‘there is…’ - from a human being to a machine or motor car, from a rock, plant or animal to an armchair, table, desk – is something that is not merely ‘present’ but ‘presences’. But what exactly presences in and as the Being of any being or phenomenon?

That ‘something’ is, of course ‘no-thing’. Yet this does not mean it is ‘nothing’. In my books and writings (in particular The Qualia Revolution) I argue that in every sensory quality or feature of every experienced phenomenon, what is constantly presencing - coming to light or coming to presence – are innately sensual and feeling qualities, not of ‘physical matter’, but of awareness itself. The particular yellowness of the yellow patch of lichen lets a particular colouration of feeling awareness shine through – come to presence before our eyes. The lichen is alive with the light and colouration of awareness that its ‘yellowness’ allows to shine through and come to light  – even though the light and colouration of awareness cannot, in itself be seen – but only felt through its visible manifestation  and embodiment in the colour of the ‘lichen’.

Science recognises the lichen to be ‘alive’ in some way, just as it recognises life in a tree. But the rocks, bricks, roof tiles, paving stones or any surfaces on which the lichen may appear are not something ‘dead’, ‘inert’ or ‘insentient’. To believe this is to restrict not just awareness but also the meaning of ‘life’ – and with it the entire ‘meaning of life’ - to the realm of ‘biological’ entities or beings. This is a restriction imposed by the ideas and preconceptions of a ‘science’ which studies beings of every possible type – but, as Heidegger pointed out, without for a single moment questioning what it means for any being to be – for this is a type of question which ‘physical science’ - in the way it defines itself today - can perform no possible experiments to answer. The question itself transcends the bounds of this ‘physical science’. The question is by nature, and as already Aristotle recognised, not a ‘physical’ but a ‘meta-physical’ question. This is a type of question which modern scientific thinking in general not only does not even ask – but also has no possible way of answering in its own terms and through its own methods.Science also reduces the ‘presencing’ or ‘coming to presence’ of phenomena to mere chains of cause and effect. It has nothing at all to say of the Being or ‘is-ness’ of those phenomena: ‘the Being of beings’.

In the language of everyday life, however, we may say of a particular individual that he or she has a strong or powerful ‘presence’. What is meant by this? That through this individual being something comes to presence - something ‘presences’. The distinction between what is merely there or ‘present’ and what ‘presences’ or comes to presence through it goes back to Heidegger – as a fundamental clue to the relation of Being and beings. ‘Being’ is thought, not merely as what is present, but as what presences in all beings. It is also thought  by Heidegger as a clear and light-filled open space or ‘clearing’ (Lichtung) which first allows beings to be – to appear or come to presence. This open space and light are thought, in the terms of The Awareness Principle, as an open space and light of awareness. Hence what presences in all beings – and not just a human being with a particularly ‘strong’ presence – is awareness.

The solid mahogany desk at which I write also has a strong, weighty and powerful presence. But to be open to feeling this presence means being open to sensing what is presencing through its presence. The sensory qualities of the desk are clear for all to see and therefore also to sense – for example the symmetry and curvatures of its shape, its heavy solidity,  the deep brown colour, graining and sheen of its surface etc. But to be open to feel, sense and resonate with what presences through these qualities – the ‘Being’ of the desk - is another thing entirely – and no thing at all. It means feeling the ‘body’ of the desk not merely as some material body separate from my ‘own’ fleshly body but in a similar way to how I experience that body from within – which is not as a watery conglomeration of tissue and organs but rather as a configuration of actual and potential densities, weights, shapes, textures and colourations of feeling awareness itself. All of these qualities are sensual qualities – which is why through them I can come to strongly sense and resonate with the qualities of awareness that come to presence through the visible sensory qualities of the desk. The same thing applies to the body of any other thing around me - no matter how small, insignificant or lacking in presence or prominence it may be to those who enter my room. Even if they take time to survey the room as a whole, and all that is contained in its space - all they would probably think is ‘Oh, there is ‘a desk’, there is ‘a sofa’, there is a ‘picture on the wall’, there is ‘a curtain’, there is a ‘laptop’, there is ‘a bookshelf’, there is ‘a statue of Shiva’.

Whether they ‘like’ the room and things in it or not, all there is in their awareness of these things  is some mundane ‘there is…’. They see things that all have a clear function and use – even if that use appears as just ‘decoration’ or ‘symbolic’ in some way. In other words, they see nothing, because their mode of seeing is entirely and purely to see what is there ‘as’ this or that – ‘as’ a desk, curtain, laptop, chair, sofa etc. So however much they may ‘like’ some particular thing – for example my desk or fireplace, the matching colours of a lampshade and curtains, what they actually see is still just ‘a desk’ or ‘a fireplace’, ‘the colour’ of ‘curtains’ or of ‘a lampshade’ etc.  Their senses are in this way dulled if not blind to all that presences through the features, shapes and qualities of things, which is also all that – in this way -  constitutes their very ‘Being’ as beings. That is why most people (except perhaps at rare times when they might be entranced by a river or mountain while on holiday, or a work on display in an art gallery) live in a world which - though ever fuller of colourful, nicely designed and useful ‘things’ - is in fact a world of sensory deprivation and impoverishment. So let us be perfectly clear.

It is not the ‘domination’ of awareness by  sensory awareness that is a ‘spiritual’ obstacle to ‘enlightenment’ for anyone, but the very opposite - the dull superficiality of that sensory awareness of the world.  This dulling of sensory awareness is a ‘spiritual’ one only because it closes off awareness to a deep and even bliss-filled sensory appreciation of the very Being of the things around them, no matter how seemingly ordinary or mundane. To be sure, there are many who can still take great pleasure or even experience a moment of bliss in not only seeing but feeling – with and within their whole body – the beauty of a single small flower in a garden or meadow. If only they had the awareness to feel the same type of sensory pleasure or even bliss from fully feeling other things too, including man-made things that they take as so ordinary that they do not even pause to look at or really see them at all – like a patch of yellow lichen on a paving stone beneath their very feet. If they did ‘see’ in this way however, then all the world and everything in it would become like an ‘art gallery’ or a vivid and life-filled ‘lucid dream’ for them – and not merely a collection of ‘things’ pretty or ugly, mundane or extraordinary, practical or decorative, ‘liked’, ‘not liked’ or ‘unliked’.  They would also experience no need to have their senses artificially hyperstimulated by simulated sensory images of things and places on electronic devices such as computers, smartphones and televisions - or by addiction to the overwhelming variety of commodities, offered in countless gaudy shapes and colours, in supermarkets, shopping malls and other temples of consumerism.

My suggestion for such people – all people:

·         Take time to be more aware of anything around you in a sensory, feeling way.
·         Take time to frequently pause for a while and stop seeing some thing, however ordinary, merely ‘as’ this or that well-known type of ‘object’.

Instead, and in this way, begin to use your own sensory and feeling awareness to truly meditate ‘ordinary things’. This means seeing, sensing and resonating with those unique and blissfully sensual qualities of inner feeling awareness that they bring to presence - in and through their outer, sensory form. How? Perhaps, to begin with, by taking time intending to ‘see’ any seemingly ‘material’ thing as a type of solidified music – not just seeing but sensing, feeling or even inwardly ‘hearing’ it as an ‘inner sound’ - one that gives perfect sensory form to those uniquely shaped tones, colours, textures, densities and intensities of feeling awareness that are what it most essentially is. Remember above all  what ‘The Awareness Principle’ teaches us - that awareness itself can be sensed as having a rough, jagged or smooth, angular, rectilinear or rounded nature, a vertical and horizontal nature, and as having a weight, density and intensity, brightness or darkness,  lightness or heaviness, texture and tone - all of its own. How do we know? Because it is constantly presencing and made manifest in the sensory features of all the most ordinary things around us. Because it is the constant presencing or be-ing that is the very essence of their ‘Being’.

Have we then completely solved ‘The Question of Being’ in the way in which Heidegger – and Heidegger alone, was the first to pose it? Are there no further questions to be asked or yet to be found? By no means. We say for example that we ‘recognise’ a person by their ‘look’ or eidos, or else by the sound of their voice - or, in the case of the blind, by the felt shape of their face. And yet the look in a person’s face and eyes, like the tone of their voice can not only change over time but vary at any time – even to the point that we no longer ‘recognise’ them at all. Perhaps to simply ‘recognise’ someone for who they ‘are’ is by no means the same thing as fully and deeply cognising them through their (changing) features, figure, expression and tone of voice. If so, what is it that still somehow remains ‘the same’ amidst this changeability? Wherein lies the oneness in ‘the many faces’ of the soul?  The same question can be asked of the many symphonies or works of a composer or artist. Here the question of what is ‘the same’ is a clue to its own answer. For the words ‘same’ (selbe) and ‘self’ (Selbst) are, in German at least, cognate – sharing a common root. That is why Heidegger spoke less of any fixed ‘self’ than of ‘the Same’ (das Selbe). By this he did not mean the pure ‘identity’ of any thing or ‘self’ with itself, as expressed in the logical formula ‘A=A’. Instead he understood ‘identity’ as a belonging together of the self with itself - to which we could add also, the belonging together of its many aspects or looks, features or faces - these being many different faces and personifications of what we can call the ‘soul’. One need only think here of the many and varied life forms to be found in a sea or ocean, which are but manifold expressions of the life of the ‘self-same’ sea or ocean itself and as a whole.

Perhaps it is no accident then, that the German word Seele derives from ‘sea’ (See). In which case however, to speak of ‘soul’ in the terms of any other language would not be to speak of ‘soul’ in this specific meaning at all. Thus the Greek and Latin words for ‘soul’ hint of the element of air rather than water – of breath or wind (Greek psyche/pneuma) and Latin spiritus – from spirare, to breathe or ‘respire’. The same applies to the Sanskrit  word normally translated as ‘self’ - atman. This word is echoed in the German words for both breath (Atem) and breathing (atmen). Is there a basic ‘elemental’ difference or contradiction here to the word ‘soul’? By no means. For do not all beings, whether of land, air or sea, breathe? Indeed is there not even a way in which seemingly insentient things breathe. Lichen for example – lives on nothing but the very light and air around it. And both land and soil too – even porous rock - can be said to breathe, absorbing and emanating gases or vapours. 

To breathe a combination of gases such as ‘air’ is one thing. But why is it that we may feel a particularly strong urge to take a deep breath just at times when, for example, a wonderful vista open up before us or we see, hear or read something extraordinary.  Is this not in order to help us to fully feel and inhale – breathe in – our awareness of an extraordinary phenomenon. Is not ‘in-spiration’, particularly of a ‘spiritual’ sort - first of all an exhilarating in-breath of awareness itself – as when we open ourselves to fully take in or ‘absorb’ the bodily presence of another being – whether in the form of a human being, an extraordinary landscape, a great tree or mountain, or a man-made being such as an extraordinary house, car or work of art?

But then we must also ask what first makes the difference between something ‘ordinary’ and ‘extraordinary’? Does this difference even lie in the thing or being itself, or does it lie in the fact that anything can become ‘extraordinary’ if we are fully taking in or breathing in our awareness of it – and in particular our direct sensory awareness? Art is clearly the expression of what might be called the ‘aesthetic inspiration’ or ‘aesthetic experiencing’ of the artist. Yet no work of art is a work of art unless or in so far as it can also be aesthetically experienced by others. In other words, behind all art and all modes of active aesthetic expression lies something more fundamental - a capacity for aesthetic experiencing.  But even to speak of ‘aesthetic experiencing’  is to forget the Greek meaning of the word ‘aesthetic’ – which means simply and purely a  contemplative or meditative awareness of sensory experiencing in general.  All talk of ‘aesthetics’ as “a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of art, beauty, and taste” or as "critical reflection on art, culture and nature." (Wikipedia) forgets this - and replaces meditative or aware sensory experiencing itself with mere ideas about it or criteria for making judgements on it.

Further reading:

Touch, Aesthetics and the Language of the Tantras

On the Centrality of Sensuous Experiencing in Tantra

6 December 2017

Against Globalist multiculturalism, For Real Cultures which can exist side-by-side (Wilberg on Wednesday)



[Editors note: The Party's objection to Multiculturalism is firmly rooted in the reality that what is called multicultural, is in truth a bland mono-culture, nay anti-culture. We affirm our desire to develop and enhance our culture, drawing on the historical roots which formed it.  The British nation has blended Roman, Celtic, Germanic, French, Greek and all manner of ancient cultures including ones which date back to the mists of time.  To Focus on music: While we have no problem with Folk Music, we see great developments coming through Neo-Folk; While we have respect for Classical Music, there is a great and under-explored growth in Neo-Classical Music. Authentic Culture pays respect to its roots, but it does not stagnate, it thrives and grows. Multiculturalism of the coca cola sex-obsessed degenerate and artistically moribund variety is what we are against, but a genuine collection of coexisting and mutually-enhancing cultures, is something we applaud. But enough of this note, over to Peter!]


Globalist multiculturalism destroys authentic culture.


Correct.

But do we want to see an ‘authentic culture’ that is tantamount to little more than dancing round rural maypoles in traditional folk costumes - or one that merely replaces commercial pop culture with folk music? What about a massive program of re-educating our own and other European peoples - starting from childhood - in the great musical, poetic, architectural, poetic, dramatic and philosophical cultural traditions of Europe - not least Britain? Do we really want to see the total eradication of that great European culture - one that spans an era stretching from Heraclitus to Hegel, from Aeschylus and Aristotle to Goethe, Shakespeare to Schiller, Bach and Beethoven to Benjamin Britten??? Do we really need to depend on the Chinese to produce new generations of great classical and romantic pianists? Do we really just want to dress up as Druids, replace crucifixes with statues of Odin - and pretend this superficial New Age mimicry of pagan rites is authentic ‘Tradition’ - a word which, as the chief philosopher of 'Traditionalism' - Rene Guenon - pointed out, means an authentic initiatory and experiential passing on (tradere) of both craft skills and profound experiences of spiritual and philosophical truths.

I think there is also another serious question to be asked in this context. The question is, were we to be able to wave a magic wand and instantly remove every single trace of ‘multiculturalism’ from England, what exactly would we be left with in terms of ‘culture’ except for the monoculture of endlessly streamed TV ads and crap American TV series? [Editors note: We want to eradicate Hollywood US Imperialist anti-culture, so there would be NO US sitcoms etc!] The ‘authentic culture’ of English Beer and Scotch Whisky? Pub chains serving up crap, microwaved imitations of traditional English food? Football, rugby and cricket? (...not that there is anything wrong with any of them at all). Brass bands and Welsh singers (albeit the best of whom, like Bryn Terfel become great and world-renowned singers)? What would happen to our great but underfunded and ridiculously overpriced theatres, opera houses, concert halls and symphony orchestras? Under National Socialism, as in the Soviet Union, truly great musicians were trained and cultivated in the classical tradition - initiated would be a better word. Great music was brought to the people and not just an elite - with even the Berlin Philharmonic playing in factories. More importantly, in both NS Germany and the Soviet Union great works of classical ‘traditional’ music were still being composed. And even the Soviet Union recognised how deeply interwoven Russian culture and music was with European culture - including both French, Austrian German and English culture and music (as shown by the great friendship of Shostakich with Benjamin Britten). Finally, why was Wagner’s ‘The Mastersingers of Nuremburg’ performed after each and every Nuremberg rally? Because the whole theme of this particular music drama (Wagner hated bourgeois 'opera') is how cherished traditions of apprenticeship and spiritual initiation in great artistic traditions such as poetry and song are not frozen in time but can be patiently and wisely handed passed on (tradere) to a new generations who will learn from, respect and conserve them even if they introduce creative innovations.

In my personal view, the great UNITY of European traditions and culture is revealed nowhere better and more deeply than in great music - to talk of ‘classical’ music here is to consign it to the past, when it is precisely that music which more than any other endures. And it is in the realm of great music that the unique and absolutely distinct flavour and feeling of, say, Russian, Czech, English or French music has never been lost came but first into its own - not despite but because of the fact that it was inseparable from Germanic music - and would not have even existed without the native pre-national Germanic homeland of European culture - the land of culture as Goethe called it, and the nation of culture he would have wished for. And to me, music education should become basis of all education - starting in pre-school. In Poland during the Soviet era they produced wonderfully mesmerising animations of classical music which put Disney's Fantasia to shame, and which I am sure even very young children would be drawn into watching - and in this way receive their first exposure to classical music.

Here are some of many:

great Polish animations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sB661A4vpEs&index=10&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dITlv3qcN80&index=5&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJnmQNpC_04&index=4&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2Ld65ZKaQ0&index=2&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3hD-O0j9C8&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U77nX1RzOw0&index=23&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k93MbPRS8po&list=PLC94B9EE33E0BDC18&index=3


music with sand drawing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=go7wlUOC5dg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Me9eAb9SYOU


from the classical music animation film Fantasia

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMnlxYkZKaU&index=5&list=PL3WK__yMF5c6fF5aQNDxY_wEKERIeEnGY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjmI0D-uoLo&list=PL3WK__yMF5c6fF5aQNDxY_wEKERIeEnGY&index=6


abstract animations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--ykTqoQnqI&list=PL3B39D4DC6881CF28

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idJHl9rB7Cc&list=PLCE93CB28C5827D74

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRgXUFnfKIY&index=2&list=RDljGMhDSSGFU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2y90hH4H7Q

5 December 2017

For Class And Nation, Not Regions, Not EU


The loathsome faux patriotic Theresa May has proven to the whole world just exactly who she takes her orders from - and it isn't the British Working Class.  In the ridiculous Brexit Negotiations, she has not only declared her willingness to give Tens of Billions of Pounds of YOUR money to the EU (money which we need for our own people), she has gone even further down the path of treachery, declaring that she is willing to shatter the very fabric of the nation in order to appease the tyrants in the European Commission, and those who stand behind them, such as George Soros, the Rothschilds and other even more odious nameless masters of the capitalist economy.

There is no need whatsoever for the UK to be involved in 'negotiations' to leave the EU. On the 23rd June 2016, we voted for independence. By rights that should mean that as of the following morning when the votes had been counted, the UK should already be a free and sovereign nation, with all EU regulations, laws, jurisdiction, authority having ended at that point.  Our economic relationship with the EU should have defaulted to the World Trade Organisation rules, and all people from EU states living in the UK should have become considered as visitors, with the option to apply for residency or otherwise depart our shores.

The arch buffoon, David Cameron, stormed out of office like a baby throwing a tantrum when the People did not cave in to the pressure of the media and government lies about how being in the EU was in any way good for them.  He was replaced by the sly and manipulative Theresa May, who refused to accept the will of the Nation, and instead (after nearly a year of stalling tactics) finally began the ludicrous Article 50 process, treating the UK population's Declaration of Independence as nothing of the sort, rather as the beginning of 'divorce proceedings' with all the need to pay financially as if we had somehow acted dishonourably by not wanting to be ruled by Brussels!

When the UK joined the EEC, the People were told that the EEC was a trading bloc, not a country, and that we would benefit from free movement of goods making it easier for products from the UK to be sold across Europe.  In the time the UK has been inside what has now become the EU, successive governments acting under the direction of the rulers of the EU (Bankers, Head of Multinationals, the Global Ruling Class) have overseen the end of our manufacturing base.  Our Coal Industry is gone, so is the production of Steel, Cars, Aeroplanes, our Fishing and Agriculture have been crushed under EU legislation, our Oil/Gas production now generates profits which the People no longer benefit from.  The mania for privatisation has seen the NHS undermined, the Post Office given away to private companies with ties to corrupt politicians, our Motorways, Railways, Airports/Airlines, Canals and infrastructure such as Electricity, Telecommunications, Water, handed over to multinational corporate pirates.

Membership of the EU has made the Working Class poorer and more economically insecure.  The UK voted to leave the EU, because the Working Class are sick of the economy being run for the benefit of the rich, and want the country to be returned to the People, with Bankers, Multinationals and Corporate Whores stripped of any power they have over us.  The UK government is owned and staffed by people who are willing servants of the Ruling Class, and so they are doing all they can to negate the will of the Working Class and to keep the UK enslaved by the powers behind the EU. The so-called 'opposition' parties are equally owned by the globalists, giving the Working Class no voice in Parliament aside from a few rogue politicians who are kept out of any position of influence.

The latest wave of 'negotiations' saw the hated Theresa May offer the EU control over Northern Ireland, arguing that the existence of a stretch of sea between that area and the British mainland somehow makes it less British!  The politicians argue that it would be impossible to enforce a border between the North and Republic of Ireland - even though this is blatantly absurd considering such a border existed for decades.  Surrendering Northern Ireland to the EU is not a serious option. The UK government treats the North of Ireland as an area which is British when it suits them, and Irish when it doesn't.  If the People voted to secede and join the Irish Republic, then that would make the Irish Sea the EU's border with the UK. They have not done so, and until such a time as they do, that area must not be treated as in any way different to the rest of the UK.

The pathetic and disrespectful way in which Northern Ireland has been treated as a gambling chip, has led other anti-Brexit politicians to argue that if one part of the country can stay in the EU, so should any part which voted to remain.

The Mayor of London has pointed to the fact that the once British and now international capital of the UK voted to stay inside the EU. The people there did so because they have no allegiance to the UK.  London is an international city, made up of competing ethnicities and cultures, with the British population there being overwhelmingly liberal and decadent.  London does need special attention post-Brexit, but not in the way that Sadiq Khan would have it.  London is under occupation, and that occupation has to be reversed.  London was not long ago home to the Cockneys and to people from all over the British Isles - that situation has to be restored and the London Assembly ended.  The idea that London should be allowed to remain in the EU because the native population has been crushed under the liberal Capitalist/Trotskyite globalist nightmare of multiculturalism, is an outrage which no Socialists should give any time to.

The SNP has chimed in with demands for Scotland to be treated as different to the rest of the UK, with EU laws, the Customs Union, Freedom of Movement etc staying in place - hell why not just add in adoption of the Euro?!  In the Scottish Independence Referendum, the Working Class voted to stay inside the UK.  The Middle Class scum of the SNP are seeking to overturn that referendum by keeping Scotland in the EU and by default apart from the rest of the country. Such treachery demands the immediate dissolution of the Scottish Parliament and the proscription of the SNP as enemies of the British (including Scottish) People.

In Wales, the dismal Plaid Cymru have also called for continued membership of the EU, failing to appreciate that except for a small number of selfish kulak-type people confined to the northwest who voted to remain in order to keep getting EU subsidies, like England, Wales voted for freedom.  Plaid Cymru have recently called for Wales to be made a Sanctuary Country where all the world's refugees will be welcome.  Clearly Plaid is not the 'Party of Wales' but the Party of Globalism, not fighting for the Welsh People, but against them, with the only defining policy being a bizarre hatred of the English people, which is the most pathetic of all forms of racism considering that the British people as a whole are one people and that language aside there is no difference between the Welsh and English (and even that difference is a contrived one with everyone in Wales speaking English as the first language and the minority of Welsh speakers speaking a bastardised tongue which has little resemblance to the genuine historic Welsh language).  Alike to the situation in Scotland, The Welsh Assembly needs to be shut down, and groups like Plaid banned.

Theresa May's position has been stalled by the DUP standing up and refusing to allow Northern Ireland to be treated as a region of the Irish Republic and not really part of the UK.  Should the People vote to change that, fair enough, but as of now Northern Ireland is a part of the UK and should not be considered part of the EU.  Belfast is just as British as Bodmin, Beaumaris or  Buckie. The most ideal situation would be for the people of the Republic to wake up from their trance and leave the EU, and to come home to the welcoming embrace of the Working Class peoples of the entire British Isles - an embrace they should never have been forced to leave had it not been for the divisive tactics of the Ruling Class which Marx wrote of in the nineteenth century and are now being repeated across the UK.

Clearly the regionalisation of the UK has helped the EU mafia, and has weakened the UK as a whole.  We call for the end of all the regional Parliaments and Assemblies, the end of Directly-elected Mayors and all of the divisive regionalism.  We call for the end of London as the capital of the UK, with the centre of authority relocated to York, to reflect the geographical heart of Britain, and an end to rule by an international city located close the the frontier with France for the benefit of the Bankers who have misruled England since the Norman invasion of 1066 and continue to misrule the entire UK for the benefit of associated people.

We envision a Britain in which our various cultures are interwoven, with the ancient languages taught in schools across the nation, so that texts such as the Mabinogion can be enjoyed in the original tongue by everyone. The false divisions of region against region are unacceptable.  As is becoming ever more evident, if we allow the Ruling Class and their proxies to pit us one against the other, they will retain power and we will become further enslaved, with a rump of England (not including London) easily being overpowered by treacherous politicians/media and globalist corporations, which would make any form of Sovereignty a fleeting and superficial one.  We need to stand together as one. For Class And Nation, against the false regionalism of the globalist infiltrators.