Nigel Farage was once, a businessman, in the Brexit Party.
The truth is rather more complicated. Yes, he did set up the Revolutionary Communist Party does not sound accidental. Who are their candidates for tomorrow's vote on 23 May 2019. All is explained by Tobias Langdon of the Occidental Observer in How an Open-Borders Cult Will Ride Brexit into the European Parliament.
Can there really be that many Marxists
in the most popular party? Yes! Look at Meet Our Candidates to
find:-
Claire Fox
James Heartfield
Alka Seghal Cuthbert
This is Entryism in operation, the technique used by the Hard Left to infiltrate the Establishment. The ideas were worked out by Antonio Gramsci, the leading intellectual of the communist party in Italy. They are the Long March Through The Institutions and deadly effective.
Are the Mainstream Media telling us about it? No, they are not. Deliberate or accidental. Try the first. The same media enthusiastically pretended that Obama was born in Hawaii not Kenya; that he was not an illegal candidate for the Presidency and the White House. They pretend that that Illegal Immigrants are women and children, victims not perpetrators. Their photos show that nine out ten are men of fighting age.
Revolutionary Communist Party ex Powerbase
The Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) was the forerunner of the libertarian LM network. Led by University of Kent sociologist Frank Furedi, it was created in 1977 after a sizeable minority were expelled from the Revolutionary Communist Group in 1976 and formed a grouping called the Revolutionary Communist Tendency. The RCG itself was formed after a split from the International Socialists (the forerunner of the Socialist Workers' Party). The RCT was renamed the RCP in 1981 and disbanded in 1996. Its activities were continued through its main publication Living Marxism, which in early 1997 changed its name to LM. When it was shut down by a libel action in 2000 many of those associated with the RCP/LM created a range of new organisations centred around Spiked and the #Institute Of Ideas, which form a continuing network described here as the LM network. Though the class politics have gone, much of the position taking, tone and tactics of the deeply sectarian RCP remain.
Claire Fox ex Powerbase
Claire Regina Fox, was a member of the Revolutionary Communist Party until its dissolution in 1996 and remains a leading associate of its successor, the libertarian anti-environmental LM network. In particular, she founded and leads its largest entity, the Institute of Ideas. [1] She lives in north London, is unmarried and childless, [2] and has two sisters, Gemma Fox, adopted and three years younger, who is a project manager for a women’s centre in Rhyl, north Wales, and Fiona Fox, four years younger, who was also a leading member of the RCP, is also associated with the LM network, and leads the Science Media Centre. [3]
PS The Wikipedia's write up is similar - see Claire Fox ex Wiki
James Heartfield ex Powerbase
James Heartfield (originally born James Hughes), was born on 31 May 1961 and is an author and academic and an associate of the libertarian and anti-environmental LM network. He worked for the RCP as an 'organiser' in Islington and Manchester,[1] has written for Living Marxism, Culture Wars, Pro-Choice Forum and Spiked, speaks at the Battle of Ideas and the Birmingham Salon and is a director of building promoters Audacity. He is married to Eve Kay-Kreizman. He has been linked to longtime LM associate Will Deighton. [2] There has been at least one instance where they claim to be distinct and collaborators. [3]
PS The Wikipedia admits a bit of the truth.
Eve Kay-Kreizman ex Powerbase
Eve Kay-Kreizman (also known as Eve Kay and as Eve Anderson and often called Eve Kaye, perhaps in error) is a television producer. Between 2009 and 2011 she was Executive Producer with Films of Record, a production company owned by Bob Geldof's Ten Alps PLC.[1]Kay-Kreizman has had an association with the LM network, through involvement with the Revolutionary Communist Party and the Irish Freedom Movement as well as in producing the 1997 series Against Nature which showcased LM network criticisms of the environmental movement.
According to a biographical note she 'has more than 15 years experience in factual entertainment. She began her career as a researcher and assistant producer for the BBC and Channel 4.'[1]
- Eve was at RDF Media for eight years, and in this time she developed the format for hit series Scrapheap Challenge, produced three series of desert island reality show Shipwrecked on location in Fiji, and edited property-reality series The Block. Eve then series produced a number of shows for Shine and Diverse Productions, as well as Jamie’s Ministry of Food for Fresh One Productions. She joined Films of Record in 2009 as Executive Producer, where she is responsible for developing the company’s popular factual entertainment output.[1]
Will Deighton ex Powerbase
Will Deighton is associated with the libertarian and anti-environmental LM network. He has written for the LM associated Living Marxism and Forth. He has been linked to longtime LM associate James Heartfield. [1] There has been at least one instance where they claim to be distinct and collaborators. [2]He is not the Will Deighton who is a past director at UBS Investment Bank and who as of April 2010 works for the Newedge Group.[3]
Alka Seghal Cuthbert ex Powerbase
Alka Sehgal Cuthbert is a school teacher associated with the libertarian anti-environmental LM network, having written for Spiked[1], been a committee member of the Parents Forum of the Institute of Ideas[2], been involved in Debating Matters [3] and spoken at the Battle of Ideas.[4]
- Profile "Alka Sehgal Cuthbert ", East London Science School website accessed 29 Dec 2010
- Contact Phone: 0784 6232 140
- Email: alkasehgalcuthbert AT googlemail.com
- Facebook "Alka.sehgalcuthbert
Living Marxism ex Powerbase
Living Marxism was a magazine published by the Revolutionary Communist Party via its publication company Junius Publications (latterly by Informinc which was incorporated at Companies House on 29 January 1997 immediately before the change of name[1]). It was launched in November 1988, renamed LM in early 1997 and eventually closed down following a libel case bought by ITN in the year 2000. It was replaced in the year 2000 by the Institute of Ideas and a little later by Spiked. It was a key element of what can be called the LM network.'The GM debate is the terrain upon which society's relationship to science and human endeavour is currently being worked out.' So wrote Tony Gilland in an article called Seeds of the Future in the UK magazine LM, formerly Living Marxism - the monthly review of the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP).[2]
The RCP has spawned a network, here called the LM network, of political extremists who eulogise technologies like genetic engineering and reproductive cloning and are extremely hostile to their critics, whom they brand as Nazis. What is particularly disturbing is that it is a network which engages in infiltration of media organisations and science-related lobby groups in order to promote its agenda as well as establishing a string of their own organisations.
LM network resources
- Core elements: Institute of Ideas | Spiked | List of all pages on the network
- Key People: Frank Furedi, Michael Fitzpatrick, Claire Fox, Helene Guldberg, James Heartfield, Mick Hume, Phil Mullan, Brendan O'Neill, Keith Teare, James Woudhuysen,
- Publications: Living Marxism | LM Contents | LM Commentaries | Frank Furedi: List of Publications | Confrontation | The next step
- Precursors: Revolutionary Communist Tendency | Revolutionary Communist Party
- Companies: Junius Publications | Informinc (LM) Limited | Cyberia | Easynet | CScape | Academy of Ideas
- Background: Bibliography | Chronology | Images and logos | Scribd document archive
It is represented, often in very senior positions, in a series of organisations which lobby on issues related to biotechnology, e.g. the Science Media Centre (director: Fiona Fox), Sense About Science (director: Tracey Brown; deputy director: Ellen Raphael), Genetic Interest Group (former policy director: John Gillott), Progress Educational Trust (former director: Juliet Tizzard, later director Sandy Starr), and the Scientific Alliance (advisor: Bill Durodie). Both Tracey Brown and Bill Durodie were also brought in in an advisory capacity in relation to the strands of the UK government's official GM Public Debate.
How an Open-Borders Cult Will Ride Brexit into the European Parliament
All good-thinking leftists in Britain simultaneously love non-White immigration and hate Nigel Farage. This is entirely logical, because Farage is the hate-filled bigot who exploited White racism and xenophobia to win the Brexit Referendum back in 2016.Brazen realism
As part of his successful campaign, Farage unveiled a “vile anti-immigration poster” called “Breaking Point,” which showed a caravan of dark-skinned refugees pouring into Europe. The poster was truly horrific: rather than portray refugees as weeping women and traumatized children, it resorted to brazen and unblushing realism. The refugees were portrayed as overwhelmingly young and healthy men of prime crime-committing and rape-gang-forming age. Appalled leftists promptly reported the poster to the police, claiming that “it incite[d] racial hatred and breache[d] UK race laws.”
More follows at https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2019/05/21/the-ministry-of-liberty-how-an-open-borders-cult-will-ride-brexit-into-the-european-parliament/
- Louis Stedman-Bryce
- Karina Walker
- Jim Ferguson
- Stuart Waiton
- Paul Aitken
- Calum Walker
- Rupert Lowe
- Martin Daubney
- Andrew England Kerr
- Vishal Khatri
- Nikki Page
- Laura Kevehazi
- Katharine Harborne
- Claire Fox - ex Revolutionary Communist Party - confirmed by the Wikipedia
- Henrik Overgaard-Nielsen
- David Bull
- Gary Harvey
- Ajay Jagota
- Elizabeth Babade
- John Kelly
- Brian Monteith
- John Tennant
- Richard Monaghan
- Nathan Gill
- James Wells
- Gethin James
- Julie Price
- John Longworth
- Lucy Harris
- Jake Pugh
- James Heartfield - ex Revolutionary Communist Party confirmed by the Wikipedia
- Andrew Allison
- Christopher Barker
- Annunziata Rees-Mogg - ex Tory
- Jonathan Bullock
- Matthew Patten
- Tracy Knowles
- Anna Bailey
- Ben Habib
- Lance Forman
- Graham Shore
- Alka Sehgal Cuthbert - Revolutionary Communist Party
- Adefolajimi Ogunnusi
- Simon Marcus
- Mehrtash A’zami
- Aileen Quinton
- Richard Tice
- Michael Heaver
- June Mummery
- Paul Hearn
- Priscilla Huby
- Sean Lever
- Edmund Fordham
- Nigel Farage
- Alexandra Phillips
- Robert Rowland
- Belinda de Lucy
- James Bartholomew
- Chris Ellis
- John Kennedy has an interesting background [ allegedly ]
- Matt Taylor - money man
- George Farmer - a fan of Donald Trump it seems
- Peter Wiltshire
Living Marxism ex Wiki
Their article reads as fact with lots of omissions. The Living Marxism ex Powerbase article is far better.
Institute Of Ideas ex Powerbase
The Institute of Ideas is a London-based think-tank established in March 2000. It forms part of the libertarian anti-environmental LM network which is dominated by figures affiliated with the defunct LM Magazine (formerly known as Living Marxism, the publication of the defunct Revolutionary Communist Party).[2]Only an organisation which is carrying out research at the highest level or a professional body of the highest standing may legally register as an incorporated institute. [3] The Institute of Ideas is a trading name of the Academy of Ideas and is thus not subject to this restriction.
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Updated on Tuesday, 28 May 2019 22:35:04