I *heart* Daniel Hannan

Also, via a Vox day interview (thanks liberal fascism blog on national review online):

VD:One thing that tends to confuse Americans is that the British National Party is not very popular despite holding what appear to be populist views on immigration and the European Union. Why do they enjoy so little support compared to the three major parties?

DH:Because they are, contrary to the way they are described in the BBC, a party of the far left. They're in favor of nationalization, they're in favor of protectionism, they want workers' councils to run industry, they want a massive state program of rebuilding manufacture. Like Hayek said about the socialist roots of Nazism, they are a national socialist party and the socialist bit is very important to them. Plus, there is a line, a very important line in politics, between being anti-immigration and anti-immigrant. And they've crossed that line.

VD: In a certain respect, they really are fascists, but in the Italian Fascist sense.

DH: Yeah. I think most of these so-called “far right” parties are on the left by any normal definition. It's a brilliant media trick in Europe to always refer to them as “the far right”. The target of that is the mainstream right. Every time you read about the BNP in the press, it's always prefaced with “the far right BNP”, as though they were like us, but more so, which is the opposite of the case. When somebody reads that, it doesn't make them think any worse of the BNP, it makes them think worse of the right. Which, of course, is why they do it.

It’s nice to hear that talk from a British MP bit it’s too little too late.

Posted under: Politics
Posted on: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 5:18 PM
Share this post: email it, bookmark It, digg It, kick It

Comments

  1. Posted by: Pankaj on 3/31/2009 7:11 PM
    Gravatar
    Dan Hernan is catching on. Hope he is not shot down with some political character assassination. He needs to watch his back. He has actually figured out that all socialism, fascism and communism is all on one side and against free people.

Post your comment




(this will save your form settings for the next time you comment)

Please add 8 and 8 and type the answer here:

The umbrella in particular is remembered as the symbol of the nineteenth century’s disturbing obsession with individualism. In Bellamy’s utopia, umbrellas have been replaced with retractable canopies so that everyone is protected from the rain equally.
“In the nineteenth century,” explains a character, “when it rained, the people of Boston put up three hundred thousand umbrellas over as many heads, and in the twentieth century they put up one umbrella over all the heads.”