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  1. The British National Party (BNP) is a far-right political party in the United Kingdom formed as a splinter group from the National Front by John Tyndall in 1982 and was led by Nick Griffin from September 1999 to July 2014. Its current chairman is Adam Walker. The BNP platform is centred on the advocacy of "firm but voluntary incentives for ...

  2. British nationalism asserts that the British are a nation and promotes the cultural unity of Britons, [1] [2] in a definition of Britishness that may include people of English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish descent (those living in both Northern Ireland and Great Britain and historically the whole of Ireland when it was within the United Kingdom). [3]

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  4. The national motto of the United States is In God We Trust, as shown on the reverse of the United States one-dollar bill. Tuvalu: Tuvalu for the Almighty ( Tuvaluan: Tuvalu mo te Atua ). [132] Uganda: For God and My Country ( Swahili: kwa mungu na nchi yangu, also in English). [133] Ukraine: No official motto.

  5. member of Britain's main racist party.2 Another BNP member, the Rever-end Robert West, was similarly unrepentant and commented to the British media: "God has divided the nations for their own good. Every race needs their space."3 Some commentators expressed surprise that church acolytes could be

  6. The British National Party (or BNP for short) is a far-right and fascist political party in the United Kingdom. The party was led by Nick Griffin from 1999 until 2014 and the current leader of the BNP is Adam Walker .

  7. The British National Party (BNP), the main contemporary extreme right movement in the United Kingdom, faced acute embarrassment in November 2008, when a detailed membership list of 12,000 of its supporters was leaked onto the internet by some disgruntled former activists. 1 It was then rapidly withdrawn after the BNP took legal action.

  8. May 20, 2008 · BNP founder John Tyndall (left) in full Nazi regallia. The roots of the British National Party (BNP) lie in the splinters of the National Front (NF), the main fascist organisation of the late 1970s.

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