Inequality
Another "immigration fiasco" was described on BBC Radio 4's Today programme. About 5,000 illegal immigrants are employed in the security sector. There was no mention that they are being deported. Nor any mention of forged passports or illegitimately-acquired National Insurance numbers which enable their holders to evade detection. In other words, the true figure is much higher.
The criminal justice system is bedevilled by "rights", which only come into play on behalf of putative criminals.
It is axiomatic to the notion of rights that people with power are acting out of selfish motives. It is seldom that people in power are both incompetent and indulge in gratuitous cruelty. Torture, for instance, is usually done to obtain information. (In 537 A.D, during the siege of Rome, it was used to send misinformation.) It is strange, therefore, that human rights come into the equation of good governance.
In a democracy the forum of debate should be paramount to law making. As it is, unelected judges determine the law. They jealousy guard their privilege.
Yet they only act on behalf of an individual (or individuals) who are subject to a decision by a government body. Thus the law-making process is unbalanced. Ironically, scales are the symbol of justice.
It is mostly Englishmen who pay UK taxes. They fund the various levels of government,
legal-aid-funded litigation, Immigration Tribunals and Appeals,etc., and contribute to the European Union and the Council of Europe.
Even so, no Englishman can benefit from the complex legal system to prevent the occupation of their country.
On 10 June 1977 I complained to the European Commission of Human Rights about foreign and Commonwealth men being allowed to live and work in the UK through marriage. They would not investigate my complaint on the grounds that I had not been a victim of a decison by a government body.
On 11 May 1982 (while the Falklands Conflict was at its height) the ECHR determined that the complaints of three women whose husbands were not allowed to live in the UK were Admissible.
The University of Exeter (like other British universities) has an Equality and Diversity unit. Enabling foreigners to occupy the UK certainly brings about diversity, but it equally certainly is the converse of equality. (Foreign students find someone to marry in order to live permanently in the UK, and having done that they are legally entitled to compete on "equal" terms with Englishmen, Scotsmen, etc. for work and promotion).
Labels: Marriage and Migration
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