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August 11, 2019, 07:02 AM
#1
Why is it so important for a white country to stay white?
Ok, genuine question. Me and the wife where discussing this today, she is white from london she's proudly of saxon stock. I'm a bit of a manchester mongrel, my dad's family was from nordic heritage, my mum saxon and even some irish from my mum's mum (I do try to downplay that shameful celtic blood somewhat ).
We are white, British and can trace our heritage to this country to at least the 10th/11th centuries. Now in all this discussion, she asked me "what is wrong with British people who are not white."
Here is a list of non whites who have done something for our nation, just a small snapshot really.
Chinese:
- Jung Chang, writer, co-author of the biography Mao: The Unknown Story
- Leslie Charteris, writer and creator of antihero Simon Templar, alias The Saint
- Anhua Gao, writer[17]
- Jo Ho, screenwriter, director, and first Chinese person in the UK to create a television drama series, the 2010 BBC fantasy Spirit Warriors[18]
- Hsiung Shih-I, writer who became the first Chinese person to write and direct a West End play in 1935[19]
- Chee Soo, author and teacher on Taoism, traditional Chinese medicine and martial arts
- Xue Xinran, broadcaster, author and founder of the charity Mother's Bridge of Love[20]
- Benjamin Yeoh, playwright[21]
Now Black:
Michael Fuller, after a career in the Metropolitan Police, served as the Chief Constable of Kent 2004-2010. He is the son of Jamaican immigrants who came to the United Kingdom in the 1950s. Fuller was brought up in Sussex, where his interest in the police force was encouraged by an officer attached to his school. He is a graduate in social psychology.[
In 2005, soldier Johnson Beharry, born in Grenada, became the first man to win the Victoria Cross, the United Kingdom's foremost military award for bravery, since the Falklands War of 1982. He was awarded the medal for service in Iraq in 2004.
In business, Damon Buffini heads Permira, one of the world's largest private equity firms. He topped the 2007 "power list" as the most powerful Black male in the United Kingdom by New Nation magazine and was appointed to then Prime Minister Gordon Brown's business advisory panel.
René Carayol is a broadcaster, broadsheet columnist, business and leadership speaker and author, best known for presenting the BBC series Did They Pay Off Their Mortgage in Two Years? He has also served as an executive main board director for blue-chip companies as well as the public sector.
Wol Kolade is council member and Chairman of the BVCA (British Venture Capital Association) and a Governor and council member of the London School of Economics and Political Science, chairing its Audit Committee.
Adam Afriyie is a politician, and Conservative Member of Parliament for Windsor. He is also the founding director of Connect Support Services, an IT services company pioneering fixed-price support. He was also Chairman of DeHavilland Information Services plc, a news and information services company, and was a regional finalist in the 2003 Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the year awards.
Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones is a businessman, farmer and founder of the popular Black Farmer range of food products. He stood, unsuccessfully, as Conservative Party candidate for the Chippenham constituency in the 2010 general election.
Ok, now Asian:
- Jas Pal Singh Badyal, professor of chemistry, Durham University
- Sir Shankar Balasubramanian, chemist and Herchel Smith Professor of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Cambridge
- Baron Kumar Bhattacharyya, former engineer, professor of manufacturing systems at University of Warwick and founder and chairman of the Warwick Manufacturing Group
- Jagjit Chadha, economist, professor and Director of the National Institute for Economic and Social Research (NIESR)
- Krishna Chatterjee, professor of endocrinology, University of Cambridge
- Rangan Chatterjee, medical doctor, author, television presenter and podcaster
- Dame Pratibha Gai, microscopist, professor and Chair of Electron Microscopy, University of York
- Mukesh Kapila, diplomat, former civil servant and professor of Global Health and Humanitarian Affairs at the University of Manchester
- Dame Parveen Kumar, medical doctor, professor of medicine at Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, former President of the British Medical Association and the Royal Society of Medicine, and former vice-president of the Royal College of Physicians.
- Mayur Lakhani, medical doctor and President of the Royal College of General Practitioners
- Yadvinder Malhi, professor of ecosystem science, University of Oxford
- Kantilal Vardichand Mardia, statistician
- Anand Menon, professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs, King's College London
- Chaand Nagpaul, medical doctor and Chair of the Council of the British Medical Association
- Baron Narendra Patel, obstetrician and former President of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
- Rahul Potluri, medical doctor and epidemiologist
- Sir Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and President of the Royal Society
- Babulal Sethia, medical doctor, cardiac surgeon and former President of the Royal Society of Medicine
- Aditi Shankardass, clinical neuroscientist, Harvard Medical School
- Simon Singh, theoretical physicist and popular science author
- Sir Tejinder Virdee, professor of physics, Imperial College London.
- Vikrant Bhargava, co-founder of PartyGaming
- Amit Bhatia, businessman, owner of Swordfish Investments and Chairman of Queens Park Rangers
- Karan Bilimoria, founder of Cobra Beer
- Nina Bracewell-Smith, non-executive director of Arsenal F.C.
- Anurag Dikshit, co-founder of PartyGaming
- Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, billionaire and chairman of Hinduja Group
- Gopichand Hinduja, billionaire and co-chairman of Hinduja Group
- Dheeraj Hinduja, businessman and chairman of Ashok Leyland
- Anshu Jain, Head of Global Markets, Deutsche Bank AG
- Firoz Kassam, former owner of Oxford United F.C.
- Gulu Lalvani, founder of Binatone
- Avtar Lit, founder of Sunrise Radio
- Lakshmi Mittal, billionaire, founder of Mittal Steel[1]
- Tom Singh, founder of New Look
- Ashish Thakkar, businessman and entrepreneur, founder of Mara Group, and Chair of the Global Entrepreneurs Council of the United Nations Foundation
I could go on and on.
Now, serious question to people who see these individuals living in the UK as a bad thing: Why? Seriously, why should people be excluded from the UK, people who work hard and lead productive live who benefit our culture, society and economy just because they are not white? What maked white people more important than non-white?
If, these apocalypse theories are true, and these non-whites somehow become a majority, why would it be a negative or detrimental thing? I seriously want to understand why these adherents of replacement theory seem to think it's better to have more whites than non-whites.
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