A paper written during the 2010 General Election campaign as the UKIP candidate for Suffolk Coastal.
To read the text please click on “Economic Effects of Immigration” which will take you to the paper on the Britain Watch website.
To read the text please click on “Economic Effects of Immigration” which will take you to the paper on the Britain Watch website.
Mr Charlton’s observation about the Maritime Museum is only too predictable following the announcement last year that under a new director the collection was to be “reorganised”.
Mr Charlton might also have mentioned the absence of any reference to the Royal Navy’s anti-slavery patrols, maintained for nigh on 100 years in the Indian and Atlantic oceans. History knows no comparable action by one country acting for so long on behalf of all to relieve suffering.
The new displays at the museum are all of a piece with other attempts to deprive the British people of any aspect of their history in which they can take justifiable pride. The suborning of the school history curriculums is a current example of the attempt to deprive our children of their national identity.
Now here is a subject for a doctoral thesis: why has Britain created in so many people educated in the arts since the Sixties a mind-set which by distortion, omission, wrenching out of context and disproportionate emphasis, seeks to belittle and disparage our forebears’ achievements?
What, incidentally, have the events at Amritsar in 1919 got specifically to do with maritime affairs? Like the mythology of Bloody Sunday, it only provides Britain’s enemies with another stick with which to beat us.
Your article yesterday quoting the words of the Chief Cashier of the Bank of England, Mr Graham Kentfield, about our banknotes: “We should keep away from anyone like Nelson, who might upset our European neighbours”, lifts a veil on the identities and attitudes of those in our political classes who take the key decisions in our lives.
Whether Nelson offends more than a handful of present day Continentals, I doubt if Mr Kenfield knows, but what is certain is that he did not at the time offend any but the French and possibly the Spanish by his great victories from 1798 to 1805. Indeed Haydn, an Austrian, dedicated his wonderful Nelson Mass as a tribute on hearing of Nelson’s victory at Aboukir Bay, while Wellington’s troops were welcomed by the French people in Toulouse in 1814 as a relief from the undisciplined depredations of Napoleon’s forces.
The real point though is that a tiny number of men have taken on themselves the task of jettisoning our nation’s heroes, preferring to consult the supposed feelings of rivals and competitors before those of the British people. This emasculates and diminishes us when every ounce of national spirit is needed to tackle and overcome our problems.
While the British have no shortage of heroes and achievers it is important however that we put on our banknotes those who are permanently of world historical class, judged by both the uniqueness of their achievements and the effects of those achievements. In the period from Elizabeth I to Victoria there are, I submit, seven front runners in this category: Shakespeare, Newton, Marlborough, Nelson, Wellington, Faraday and Darwin, the first three holding the first position in their fields. They should be placed on the £5, £10, £20 notes and left there, the other four being rotated round the £50 and (overdue) £100 notes every 20 years or so.