Skip to main content

Our borders are not under control: COVID19 and Migration: BBC Silent.

The UK is failing to control illegal migration.  The French are attempting to get rid of their migrant problem by using the French Navy to escort migrants to the middle of the Channel where they phone the UK coastguard to pick them up.

This video actually shows the system at work:


The French are shipping the migrants to the UK because they are unwelcome in France, as they are in the rest of the EU (See EU Racism is far worse than UK).  Being Remain is being racist.

The BBC has not covered the French naval assistance for illegal migrants.

Failing to control borders has also killed thousands of us. 20,000 cases of Covid 19 were brought to the UK during February and March before the lockdown on 23rd March.  These infected about 50,000 other people and created a massive epidemic in the UK.  The UK borders were wide open until mid-May.

The Eurotunnel is still wide open, this is the current guidance: "There are no current restrictions by the authorities on travel from France to the UK, but the UK Government have advised that travel within the UK should only take place if it's essential".

About 1 million passengers enter the UK by sea each month (Eurostat) and around 1 m a month enter the UK using the Channel Tunnel shuttles and Eurostar (Wikipedia). About 8 m people arrive monthly by air.  This is a total of ten million people arriving per month. If there were only one infected passenger in 1,000 this would have created 20,000 cases in two months.  This figure is now widely accepted (it is a minimum figure).

The BBC has attempted to characterise the COVID epidemic due to open borders as a failure of the government to lockdown sufficiently early.  The BBC is deliberately muddying the water because had we controlled our borders a short lockdown and ordinary contact tracing would have controlled the epidemic as it did in many other countries (S.Korea, Australia etc).  The open borders with the EU are part of the EU Withdrawal Agreement and most infections came from the EU.  The UK failed to close borders with the EU even after half the 27 EU member countries had shut their borders.

The BBC is suppressing all news that contradicts its Internationalist agenda.  Who is the BBC working for?  We can add suppression of news about migration to the ever growing list of major news stories that the BBC has suppressed in recent weeks:


27/5/2020

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Falklands have always been Argentine - Las Malvinas son Argentinas

"The Falklands have always been Argentine" is taught to every Argentine child as a matter of faith.  What was Argentina during the time when it "always" possessed Las Malvinas?  In this article I will trace the history of Argentina in the context of its physical and political relationship with "Las Malvinas", the Falkland Islands.  The Argentine claim to the Falkland Islands dates from a brief episode in 1831-32 so it is like Canada claiming the USA despite two centuries of separate development. This might sound like ancient history but Argentina has gone to war for this ancient claim so the following article is well worth reading. For a summary of the legal case see: Las Malvinas: The Legal Case Argentina traces its origins to Spanish South America when it was part of the Viceroyalty of the Rio del Plata.  The Falklands lay off the Viceroyalty of Peru, controlled by the Captain General of Chile.  In 1810 the Falklands were far from the geographical b...

Practical Idealism by Richard Nicolaus Coudenhove-Kalergi

Coudenhove-Kalergi was a pioneer of European integration. He was the founder and President for 49 years of the Paneuropean Union. His parents were Heinrich von Coudenhove-Kalergi, an Austro-Hungarian diplomat, and Mitsuko Aoyama, the daughter of an oil merchant, antiques-dealer, and huge landowner family in Tokyo. His "Pan-Europa" was published in 1923 and contained a membership form for the Pan-Europa movement. Coudenhove-Kalergi's movement held its first Congress in Vienna in 1926. In 1927 the French Prime Minister, Aristide Briand was elected honorary president.  Personalities attending included: Albert Einstein, Thomas Mann and Sigmund Freud. Figures who later became central to founding the EU, such as Konrad Adenauer became members . His basic idea was that democracy was a transitional stage that leads to rule by a new aristocracy that is largely taken from the Jewish "master race" (Kalergi's terminology). His movement was reviled by Hitler and H...

Membership of the EU: pros and cons

5th December 2013, update May 2016 Nigel Lawson, ex-Chancellor of the Exchequer,  recently criticised the UK membership of the EU , the media has covered his mainstream view as if he is a bad boy starting a fight in the school playground, but is he right about the EU? What has changed that makes EU membership a burning issue?  What has changed is that the 19 countries of the Eurozone are now seeking political union to escape their financial problems.   Seven further EU countries have signed up to join the Euro but the British and Danish have opted out.  The EU is rapidly becoming two blocks - the 26 and Britain and Denmark.   Lawson's fear was that if Britain stays in the EU it will be isolated and dominated by a Eurozone bloc that uses "unified representation of the euro area" , so acting like a single country which controls 90% of the vote in the EU with no vetoes available to the UK in most decisions.  The full plans for Eurozone po...