Owain Glyndwr, Plaid Cymru and the BNP
By Asmodean — following the unveiling of a new line of Excalibur T-shirts featuring Welsh hero Owain Glyndwr — The Prince of Wales, the pseudo-nationalists of Plaid Cymru have been in a frenzy.
“Owain Glyndwr wasn’t a bigot,” they wailed. History suggests that he wasn’t, but Plaid are bigots. They have manipulated his legend to further their own anti-English immigration agenda, ignoring the fact that Glyndwr himself was half English.
Plaid don’t have the monopoly on the use of Owain Glyndwr’s imagery and legend, particularly as they support the European Union, which will ultimately place the rule of Wales into unelected commissioners on the Continent.
We can assume with some knowledge of Owain’s beliefs that he would never have supported this development, nor would he have supported Plaid Cymru Welsh Assembly Members leading a Muslim march through Newport.
The anti-English Plaid are a ragtag collection of old Welsh landed gentry, militant Welsh speakers and permanently disgruntled tourist town shopkeepers; the sort who will feign misunderstanding if you try to talk to them in English, not if you’re Muslim though. any ruler is better than the English, right?
I once listened to a drunken Plaid supporter babble on about “English racism towards the Welsh.” I asked him where he thought his name — Smith — came from. “I’m Welsh,” was all he could say.
Smith is derived from the Anglo-Saxon “smitan,” to smite or strike. Coupled with this man’s physical appearance, he was obviously not one of the ‘Britons’ or the ‘Native British’; he was of Anglo-Saxon stock. his English forbears probably came to Wales from the West Country at the beginning of the coal boom.
Luckily, the dissolution of the series of laws which constitute an Act of Union between England and Wales is not a high priority concern amongst the Welsh population. many recognise the bonds between the two nations: shared history, cultural values and religion, and in most cases, a shared ethnicity.
Plaid are supposed to be for the protection of Welsh culture. Why then, do they support the multicultural doctrine, which does everything other than preserve the host culture of a nation?
The encouragement of Islamisation is something Owain Glyndwr would never have allowed. If allowed to happen, the monuments to his heroism will be eradicated by Islam, just as destroyed Buddhist statues litter forgotten corners of Afghanistan, testament to the destructive power of unrestrained ‘cultural enrichment’ by Islam.
Plaid shouldn’t throw stones.
* This article is from the leading independent British nationalist blog, “The British Nationalist” which can be found here.