Re: Fancy a walk ? (Farage's Leave Means Leave March)
Originally Posted by
OldGreyFox
->
No he doesn't Pyxell, he's a comedian [supposedly] and trying to look clever dabling in something he knows nothing about. He doesn't give a sh$t about the British or the fact that this country is buckling under the weight of too many migrants coming [thanks to the last labour government] in such a short space of time that we haven't had time to properly prepare for them with Schools, Hospitals and Housing failing to meet the demand.
If he's got that much money why doesn't he donate his brass to the thousands of people sleeping rough on our streets instead of asylum seekers who will be holed up in some hotel somewhere paid for by you and me. Why not send him round to the 'no go' areas in Rotherham, Bradford or Birmingham and then see how he feels about immigration!
I will happily pay to walk, with or without Nigel Farage to express my disgust at the way the country has been run over the last forty years, culminating in this government selling us out to Brussels and sending Theresa May to humble this country into submission.
I would donate money to send that knob head back to Australia, instead of giving him air time to spout garbage and crapp to the hard working British people who, in Farage, have at least found somebody who is sympathetic to the needs of ordinary working class people.
What a strange country this is. In 1936 workers from Jarrow marched to London for jobs. Now they are marching to London to LOSE jobs.
The Jarrow March of 5 – 31 October 1936, also known as the Jarrow Crusade,[n 1] was an organised protest against the unemployment and poverty suffered in the English Tyneside town of Jarrow during the 1930s. Around 200 men (or "Crusaders" as they preferred to be referred to) marched from Jarrow to London, carrying a petition to the British government requesting the re-establishment of industry in the town following the closure in 1934 of its main employer, Palmer's shipyard. The petition was received by the House of Commons but not debated, and the march produced few immediate results. The Jarrovians went home believing that they had failed.