I really do not care.

 

I really do not care about what the mainstream media says about the Reform Party. I don’t care about the Westminster Establishment politicians who cast aspersions and use ugly names about Reform and its members. I don’t care about Nigel Farage’s background in the city or his social class.

I also care not a jot about the views of some Reform candidates, even when these are views I do not share. I don’t give a toss whether one of them thought Adolf Hitler was an effective political organiser or if another wants to kinetically interdict, with lethal firepower, the waves of dinghy dross that are flooding into the UK from across the English Channel. I don’t even care that Reform candidates come out with criticisms of George Soros, or that minority of left wing Jewish organisations who have idiotically banged the ‘refugees welcome’ drum.

I don’t give a monkey’s chuff about the mainstream media’s fit of the vapours whenever a Reform candidate or party worker says something that goes against the Governmental narratives or refuses to speak the lie that ‘Islam is a religion of peace’. I ignore completely the whines of criticism from the Establishment political and media classes, when those associated with the Reform Party criticise the self inflicted wound that is net zero. I laugh at the hypocrisy and dishonesty of those middle class metroleft types who call Reform voters and party activists ‘racist’ whilst they themselves make sure that they live as far as possible from the ‘vibrant diversity’ that they wish to inflict on the rest of us.

I sit up in both astonishment and disgust at Conservative Party MP’s, Peers and members who tell me that voting Reform will change nothing and might even make things worse. I don’t care to listen to the screeching of those from a party that I once voted for and who have let me and my nation down, over everything from migration to freedom of speech. Tories beseeching me to vote for them again after they screwed up so terribly badly on stuff like the economy, border security, culture, women’s rights and much more, looks like the pleading of a dishonest man or petulant child who has been caught out multiple times breaking their word but still expects just one more chance to be trusted. The Tories have become like that man who borrows £5 off you until next week but when next week arrives there’s no repayment, only a litany of excuses why the £5 is not there.

Even when the criticism of Reform is, shall we say, close to home, I really don’t give a toss. I don’t care about the rantings of the Jewish Left or the minority of ideologically captured synagogue leaders who feel that a threat of a Herem (a form of excommunication) is required for supporting Reform, just as it was for me when I brought up to one synagogue’s leadership the issue many years ago of Islamic Jew hatred. The sort of people who would mischaracterise the often violent and dangerous Channel Invaders as the modern analogue of the Kindertransport, or who play the nicey nicey ‘interfaith’ game with some pretty nasty Islamic extremists, are not those who I would consider it sensible to listen to, when they use snarl words like ‘fascist’ towards the Reform Party.

I don’t care that the Tory Party, a party I’ve voted for in the past, is promising me this, that or the other. I am no longer listening to the Tories, who have played a major part in why we are in such a dire state as a nation, mouth their empty promises about border control or the economy or culture or whatever. These are often the same promises that the party made in 2019, 2017, 2015 and 2010, promises about controlling the by now obviously excessive migration influx, to control crime, to competently manage the economy and energy supply, to protect and advance British culture and to promote freedom of thought and word and the right to our property. The Tories have let us down on every one of those promises, no matter how they were worded in the manifestos.

I’ve always given the Tories the benefit of the doubt. To a certain extent, I’ve bought into the idea that external pressures have been the cause of the Tories not being conservative enough. It’s true what Harold Macmillan once said about how ‘events, dear boy events’ can be the greatest challenge for statesmen, but this is not the case for the Tories today. It is not external events, not even pandemic or war that has been the downfall of the Conservative Party, it’s their own actions, their own failed policies, their own choice to embrace ideologies such as transgenderism, net zero, open borders and a dislike and distaste for their own nation state and their own voters. It’s not votes for the Reform Party that will bring about a disastrous Labour Government, it’s the failure of the Tories to govern in the manner that the people wanted them to govern. The upcoming Labour government is the Tories fault. If the Tories had done what many of us expected them to do when we voted for them in 2019 and before, and had not cast aside the people’s desire for stronger borders, effective defence of the realm, economic competence, freedom of speech and sensible energy policies then they would not be as they are today, teetering on edge of the pit of a massive defeat.

There are, to be fair, a few things that I do not like about Reform. I don’t like their policy on an elected House of Lords, as I see nothing but political conflict coming that way. I dislike their failure to get a good ground game going early enough prior to this election, in order to properly capitalise on the seething discontent of many Britons. I dislike this party’s lack of organisational professionalism. However despite that I’m still going to vote for them.

I’m voting for them as I’m sick of being lied to by the Tories and there’s no way on earth that I would vote either Labour, which is still stuffed with Islamopanderers and Jew haters, or for the Lib Dems aka the ‘Puberty blocking enthusiasts party’. I also would certainly not vote Green as I’m not wealthy enough to survive the sort of economy and society-wrecking policies that Greens enact whenever they have gained any sort of power. Germany, not for the first time in the last century and a half, should be held up as a cautionary tale of what happens when you have in government ideological obsessives, as it was their Greens who were the driving force behind leaving Germany in its current energy depleted state.

I don’t care about the so-called ‘revelations’ about odd ball opinions from Reform candidates and party workers. In the great scheme of things, having a Reform candidate who points out correctly and in historical context that Hitler was an effective political organiser or who wants the Channel invaders to meet a hot lead wall is not as offensive as the policies and actions of other parties. After all, it’s not Reform that have tolerated and appeased large cadres of Islamic and far left Jew haters, that’s Labour. It’s not Reform that have failed to protect Britain’s borders or deal correctly and in a timely manner with the lunatic and science free ideology of gender identity, that’s the Tories. It’s not Reform who took money from puberty blocker manufacturers or whose leader did little to prevent innocent people being gaoled during the Post Office Horizon scandal, that’s the Lib Dems.

All in all, after having viewed both Reform and the Westminster party’s antics, I’d rather vote for the party with a few oddballs in it, even if those oddballs have some unpleasant opinions. The big three parties have done so much damage to the country that I prefer oddballs to those politicians that either lie about their intentions or who appear to actively hate the people that they want voting for them.

1 Comment on "I really do not care."

  1. I’m also voting Reform – not because I think they have all the answers but because they are asking many of the right questions. They also have the potential to force a realignment of centre – right thinking in this country along with breaking the Tory /Labour duopoly that has denied true democratic choice over the last two or three decades. For me, allowing the current state of politics in this country to continue without challenge is not an option.
    An unintended side effect of a large Reform vote might be the destruction of a major party because it became too obsessed with trying to occupy (what it mistakenly believes is) the centre ground while ignoring it’s natural position.

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