FREE AT LAST! After spending 4½ months incarcerated for distributing election leaflets critical of ZOG, I was met at the prison gates, taken for a celebratory breakfast and brought up to date with the latest gossip. I was rather nervous about the mountain of work that's accumulated in my absence, but of course am very pleased to have my liberty restored. What's it like? The first thing to remember is that compared to having a leg or head blown off in an unnecessary war, doing time in a contemporary British goal is a piece of cake. The worst aspects are the dubious characters one has to mix with and the mind-numbing boredom. It is very plain that if the government were serious about removing heroin from our streets the British prison population of 68,000 would fall by 80% almost overnight. Many inmates return to prison shortly after they are released, such is the influence of the drug. There is no determined assault on the heroin problem for the simple reason that the big heroin dealers and our politicians are both in the same game making personal fortunes out of running our country into the ground. Prison is a microcosm of society, indeed the staff sometimes remarked that they felt imprisoned too: inadequately paid in a system they had no particular respect for and trapped in a long-term mortgage. After being spat at and assaulted by blacks in Hull prison I was moved to Everthorpe near Brough where I spent the bulk of my sentence segregated from the main wings, washing the dishes and reading a novel a day. I learnt that many inmates had been banging away at a life of crime for years, with a sizeable nest egg saved, and then been caught out on some comparatively inconsequential matter. If a Nationalist gets a few words "wrong" on a leaflet however he is whisked to prison with barely a backward glance. The law is so worded that he is guilty until proven innocent and it seems practically impossible, unlike in a case of burglary or murder, to get an acquittal. This could become an essay, which is not my intention, so suffice it to say that I am proud to have been a focus of unity between the NF and BNP, deeply grateful to the very many people who wrote to me in prison, not to mention the generous gifts of cash, and as determined as ever to depose the crooks who think they can trample over our ancient liberties and prevent us from peaceably expressing our views. SIMON SHEPPARD |
Some notes, with the benefit of hindsight
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Act of Settlement (1700), from Halsbury's Laws of England, vol. 10, pp. 42-43, 1995 |
Act of Settlement (1700), from Halsbury's Laws of England, vol. 10, p. 43, 1995 |
Treason Act (1495), from Halsbury's Laws of England, vol. 12, p. 37, 1997 |
Halsbury's Laws of England, 'Offences against the Government and the Public', vol. 11(1), pp. 69-70, 1990 |