britain is one of the most inclusive and race-unconcerned places in europe. france are obsessed with a national monoculture and official 'high' identity. germany, well, let's not go there. scandinavia are all pure and very family/community oriented, and very intolerant of outsiders. italy hates immigrants. spain is barely ever not under some sort of right-wing totalitarian sway. britain, especially considering it is an island people, and hence always historically suspicious of people coming from without, is hugely diverse and tolerant. multiculturalism is far from a perfect project, and 'integration' is sometimes a bit of a fabled-utopian dream, but on the whole, the race you are in britain determines very little.
the existence of the BNP says nothing. the tea party are basically just the BNP's social beliefs in a different ideological banner. the BNP represent a current that you find in every mass democracy: disenfranchised working-class people who no longer have jobs/economic sustenance/a social place. xenophobia is rife across all societies in these groups of former-industrial workers. it's a form of social conservatism in the face of globalised powers that are the cause of their poverty. this is not 'british'. the BNP are not a political power here. the party has crumbled and collapsed, after a once-in-a-century rise to prominence in all of about 3 seats. lol. a hilarious misrepresentation by macbeth there.
frankly i'm glad we have parties like the BNP and UKIP. not because i sympathize with them, but because it shows our democracy is more than a 2-party same-flavor bullshit system. if disenfranchised workers and angry xenophobes want to get together and try to form a political credo, more power to them. that's democracy. they'll never win shit, but it's a more healthier stake in society than moving to montana and stockpiling M16's. you fucktard.
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-03-27 08:49:25)