Public Sector ‘On the March’ – Preston

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Public Sector ‘On the March’ – Preston

Reporting for BNPtv Tony Bamber discusses the reasons behind today’s Public Sector strike. Includes some brief interviews with Union Members willing to express their views.

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5 Responses to “Public Sector ‘On the March’ – Preston”

  1. Edward Grant Says:

    Honest piece of proper journalism here , all the participants were open in their views and I found that most of them were saying how things really are without any fuss , you wont here the MSM asking these questions and allowing these answers on their news bulletins . Well done , excellent .

  2. Mike Whitby Says:

    This is a great report. Everyone expressed their views in a very honest and forthright way. If the Unions, the BBC, or any other element of the controlled media, had made this film, the views of these people would have been edited out. This proves beyond any doubt that EVERYONE, regardless of their political beliefs, is concerned about the state of our country.

    Tony Bamber, who is the Preston Organiser for the BNP, is a natural interviewer – he asked the questions and then let his interviewees do the talking. This is one of the most balanced reports the general public will ever see.

    BNPTV asks the questions that REALLY matter to the people of Britain, without the PC distortions of the BBC’s Question Time & Big Questions.

    Now that this has taken place, perhaps more trade union members will be brave enough to go against the subjective narrative of political correctness and of their own unions, which is gagging and strangling the British people.

    Well done Derek and Tony at BNPTV, you did great job, and a big ‘thank you’ goes to all those brave trade union members who gave their honest views. This will certainly help to wake-up the sleeping sheeple of Britain.

  3. Andrew Griffiths Says:

    It’s very interesting to me that the strikers were complaining about the preferment of foreign staff over the indigenous contingent – and yet not one report has been forthcoming through the media of any other reason than the pensions issue.

    This is, doubtless, a factor of the quasi-Marxist nature of the intellectual manipulation of the populace. We aren’t meant to be complaining about our un-willing and unbounded generosity towards our continental, or indeed global bretheren – we aren’t meant to complain when little Johnny isn’t learning anything at school because the teacher is spending all her time with little Jafaar who can’t speak a word of English, or because she speaks quietly through a veil and because as she looks like a condiment shker she is scaring him. No – sod that, because if we do complain, sure as eggs in the first instance little Jafaar’s parents will complain to the mosque and have a mob of angry, torch-waving Ummah come and burn the school down, and in the second, the teacher’s husband will pull the school screaming through the acquiescent court system, piling expense on expense and ultimately, because the Judge will likely have as much back-bone as a Liberal-Democrat with osteo-porosis, they will be landed with a huge bill for “hurt feelings” or “cultural discrimination”. And who pays? The mug taxpayer, that’s who!

  4. Simon Says:

    I dont see why i should have to pay for their pensions, i have worked in the private sector all my life on low wages i havnt got a pension could never afford it but yet im expected to pay theirs so while i starve in my old age they will enjoy their pentions which i paid for.

  5. Beowulf008 Says:

    Were these people really Unison members?

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