10 Replies to “In The Pub With Nigel Farage”

  1. I liked the candor Nigil displayed the first time I heard him several years ago. Not politically correct and not afraid to pee into the wind of controversy. Refreshing to see a politician take a stand in what he believes without worrying that someone may be offended. Should be a interesting election.

  2. Nigel sounds a lot like a 1993 Canadian Reformer and the media is trying to paint him as a hick. Like the Canadian media painted 1993 Reformers.

  3. I do get to vote and I will.
    However I would caution those that might think otherwise, UKIP isn’t exactly putting forward a truly conservative agenda, and there are some rather socialist leaning policies, BUT its about as good as it going to get for the UK in this election and honestly though I’d love to believe different, it really is rather too late for anything to change, it maybe however be the last hurrah of a once great country and people.
    Lets be positive though and take from Europe and those whose heritage that is and continue the glorious traditions of that once great people, lets learn from the mistakes, ours included and make sure the old dominions carve out and maintain our culture and shared history that once promised and delivered so much to so many, others included.

  4. England desperately needs more people in politics like Nigel, that’s what it’s going to take to save once Great Britain.

  5. Nigel Areformer @ 3:27 AM
    – yes Farage is a reformer, he’s certainly anti- establishment given UK establishment is anti sovereignty, anti- patriot, into the global socialist movement and becoming increasingly authoritarian, and definitely depends on waves of MSM disinformation to control a dumbed down electorate.
    Like the Canadian reform movement, the establishment/oligarchy formula for removing this populist threat to their control-freak sinecure will be the same – first slander and stigmatization (racist/homophobic/misogynist etc.) when that fails they set the MSM against them, when that fails and populism expands their base, they put agents in the party to fragment it, if that fails they buy off the executive – Unlike the Canadian reform the UKIP and Farrage have weathered all the globalist oligarchs can throw at it/him and the party popularity is still exponentially expanding- I believe they even attempted to kill him or scare him in a staged plane accident – but Farage emerged even more determined to wrestle the UK away from EU oligarchy.
    Farage is a genuine and ritious patriot who genuinely feels political reform is needed to save his nation and nothing short of an assassin will stop him. I hope he succeeds but I wish he took his security a little more seriously, he is not playing with boyscouts with the EU oligarchy.

  6. Yeah the EU oligarchy is not happy with anybody who slows their stated goal of global governance.
    If you recall, Van Rompey in his maiden speech to the EU parliament, remarked that his appointment marked any important milestone towards global government.
    It is like the lefties in the US, do not expect them to go quietly into the dark…electoral defeat anticipated or accomplished.
    Revolts and assassination always bubbles beneath their surface.

  7. Holy mackerel! I haven’t seen that type of conservative candour since Hudak…or was it Tory…maybe Redford?

Navigation