Sir Ian Blair – the real reason.
Posted on 03. Oct, 2008 by Richard Barnbrook in Latest News
Amongst the multitude of reasons cast before us this morning in an attempt to explain the sudden departure of London’s top policeman, there is one that until now you will not be familiar with. As the old saying concerning straws and the spines of camels goes, sometimes it doesn’t take much to tip the balance.
You see on December 12th, Sir Ian Blair had a looming date with destiny. On that day he would have been summoned before the GLA and forced to sit there as Assembly Members were free to fire questions at him like a fish in a barrel. How I would have enjoyed taking him to task on the sickeningly politically correct culture he has played such a major role of enforcing upon serving Metropolitan Police officers which has so devastated police morale. The continued banning of BNP members from the Met’, the anti-white recruitment policies, slap on the wrist policing not to mention the sub-Saharan levels of crime that now plague our great city, the list is considerable.
Sir Ian would have known about this forthcoming appointment, when for the first time in his career, he would have to explain the logic behind his multicultural extremism and in so doing expose the virulently anti-white nature of his great crusade against “racism”.
Many papers today are speculating that his decent upon his own sword was brought about by the unfortunate death of the Brazillian illegal immigrant, Jean Charles De Menedez. However, in this sense one has to look at the fact that under Sir Ian, all of those particular Islamic terrorists were eventually caught.
Naturally enough Mayor Boris is also coming in for some flak this morning, particularly from Labour and their friends in some of the anti-British newspapers like the Daily Mirror. You can’t blame Boris though, he has been elected via a clear “under new ownership” ticket and if Sir Ian Blair cannot understand that or be prepared to work with London’s Mayor, then he should not be in the position that he is. Having resigned, it reinforces my own belief that Sir Ian Blair was more of a politician than a policeman and unfortunately with Labour’s relentless programme of politicising the police force he is certainly not the only one.
Let’s hope that whoever takes the job has a clear understanding that his role is to be concerned with combatting the epidemic levels of crime in London and not to turn police officers into politically correct automatons. I hope Boris doesn’t over compensate by making the ultimate gesture of ethno-masochistic subservience, but even if he did so long as he got on with the job, I think we could all live with that.
What a shame I will never be able to ask one of the high priests of political correctness about the lack of diversity in the Metropolitan Police’s canine unit. After all how can the gross over representation of all of those Alsatians be reflective and acceptable in a modern and diverse Britain? What better signal of a progressive and cohesive police service could be sent out to the world than officers sent into action accompanied miniature poodles and sausage dogs?




