Monday, May 18, 2015

Kevin MacDonald - TOO: Interview with Jack Sen, Part 4 of 4 - "My desire to see political recognition of the genocide of all Western people was one of the primary reasons I became involved in UKIP in the first place"


Interview with Jack Sen, Part 4 of 4

Nadine Gordimer with Nelson Mandela

You are quite familiar with the situation in South Africa. How would you describe it now, and how do you see it in 10–20 years? Given the conditions in South Africa, should White South Africans be allowed to immigrate to countries like the UK and the Netherlands where their ancestors originated? If so, how can this be facilitated?
I’ve been exposing the injustices facing minority South Africans for several years now.
My commentary on the ongoing genocide perpetrated against South Africa’s minority communities, of which my Afrikaner grandmother and Anglo-Indian grandfather were part of, and work as Director and Spokesman for the NGO,Stop the Killing, has been shared in literally dozens of English and Afrikaans South African publications, including Dan Roodt’s Praag.
Dan in fact wrote an open letter to Nigel Farage after my suspension, informing him that UKIP’s actions would result in the loss of tens of thousands of South African expat votes.
My desire to see political recognition of the genocide of all Western people was one of the primary reasons I became involved in UKIP in the first place — the one party I was hopeful would show concern for this very important humanitarian cause. UKIP also knew this early on. ...

     The irony. The overwhelming reality is that Europeans, or Whites, are becoming an ever diminishing percentage each day in the West, but what is the one subject every political party must not mention or decent people and their dogs and cats are going to roll in the streets and have convulsions and speak in tongues? That Europeans, or Whites, are becoming an ever diminishing percentage each day in the West.