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Post by iketurner on Apr 30, 2024 3:02:21 GMT
Hello everyone, i am so sorry if i was absence from this forum because of my personal circumstances. Now this is a new thread which is completely different from my first thread on this forum. I've done my white paper late on Sunday evening at 4:55am before converting it to my PDF at just after 5am the following day on Monday. It is exactly the same think as before but major changes to the details and reducing the number of pages to 50. It is called Reimagining Southern England, a version of the recent Restore the Magic white paper outlined by Nelson Peltz back in March. It is set to include the continuous plan to pull the sub-nation out of the UK and England as well as creating a new government for the people not politics. As from this Tuesday evening, i will bring you a white paper on this forum to have a more clarification (although again i have some grammar issues) and more understanding is to why Southern England should need its independence. But in the meantime, i want to you the clip from the 1996 sci-fi blockbuster film Independence Day (uploaded via my X account), which the US President Thomas F Whitmore (played by Bill Pullman) declaring war on alien intelligence following the invasion of Earth, had made my strong influences in bringing Southern England's independence to its knees. Here's the famous line from the movie (apologies if no video appearing in this thread but here's the link in the meantime) so you can hear it carefully and you can see what i mean about my inspiration for the future independence of Southern England: twitter.com/i/status/1785139074027638939
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Post by iketurner on Apr 30, 2024 18:53:45 GMT
So the white paper has now been released and please bear in mind that i still have grammar issues at the time of the creation of this presentation. I have to again split them up into separate pages.
All you have to do, with all due respect, is that read this and tell me if there's any questions but then i will tell you the answer. As i advising you not to engage in arguments nor disagreements with each other. NOTE: If the pages are too large, let me know!!
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Post by wapentake on Apr 30, 2024 19:16:00 GMT
You asked for questions You stated Happiest what with Ulez,knife crime,murders,drugs I think that’s wide of the mark
Then this
🙄🤔
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Post by iketurner on May 1, 2024 3:32:44 GMT
You asked for questions You stated Happiest what with Ulez,knife crime,murders,drugs I think that’s wide of the mark Then this 🙄🤔 Well, in order to be the happiest city in the world, a change in London would require new laws post-independence to tackle drugs, murder, Ulez, and knife crime. Simple!
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Post by iketurner on May 1, 2024 20:04:17 GMT
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Post by iketurner on May 2, 2024 14:51:47 GMT
Cheers for that (but give me a credit as well if that's okay with you)
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Post by seniorcitizen007 on May 3, 2024 4:55:27 GMT
The indigenous people's of Britain can only be truly understood if one has knowledge of the tribes that were here before the Romans came. The two main tribes of Yorkshire, for instance, were the Brigantes and the Parisi. Their physical appearance and their "way of thinking" is still very much apparent.
The Cotswolds are still noticeably inhabited by people descended from the Dobunni ... who have their own peculiarities of thought, behaviour, and appearance.
There are three distinct "peoples" in Cornwall ... one being the Phoenicians who settled there around 2,000 BC.
In some parts of the West Country people from towns just a few miles apart are noticeably different. The Forest of Dean people are in no way like the peoples indigenous to the rest of Gloucestershire. Large chunks of England are inhabited by indigenous peoples who are not English.
In East Anglia there are villages (along tributaries of the River Stour) where the people have their origins from obscure Germanic peoples who came over with the Danes. Some of them are Goths.
The people of the Essex marshes were settled here by William the Conqueror. In Lincolnshire there are villages where most of the inhabitants can be traced back to the people who lived there 10,000 years ago. They also have their indigenous peculiarities of thought, behaviour, and appearance.
Shakespeare and Newton's minds had "ancient roots".
The Chilterns have Celtic peoples who avoided being taken over by the Saxons. In two towns ten miles apart in the Lake District the males are in one 95% of Viking descent, in the other 5%.
A West Indian guy I met in London had an English country accent. I asked him where he was from ... and he "took offence". He changed his attitude when I identified his accent as being from Thame, a small town in Oxfordshire ... which was where he was born, and bred (I'd only ever been there once for a couple of hours). A Swedish-born woman I knew, whose father was born in Cheshire. had a Hoxton (North London) accent. Her father's great grandfather was from a Hoxton family that had been there for several generations (I researched her ancestry after noticing her accent).
The accent found in Blagdon in the Mendips is totally weird, completely different from any other I've ever come across. The people there "look different", and "act different" as well.
In Wales I met an elderly woman who had been a herbalist... so had her father, grandfather, and great grandfather. She had a stall in a market ... with just a few very small bottles of ointment that were ridiculously expensive ...but guaranteed to remove the wringles of age. She herself looked "young". Then there was the woman who trained cats ... her cat was sitting on a seat on its own on a crowded train calmly waiting for her owner to return from the platform shop. She was from a village background where her family had been training cats for generations.
"Kevin the Witch" was a guy from the wilds of Scotland. Upset him and he was likely to wipe an ointment behind your ears .. that would give you sexual nightmares for days at a time.
Many people of Britain still have "ancient minds" ... that have been here for thousands of years. Foreigners ... take heed ... don't mess with us ... take your alien beliefs (if that's where your mind is) back to where they came from.
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Post by piglet on May 3, 2024 9:12:40 GMT
The movement of people is fascinating. I spent over 30 years in brum and stoke, i only met one person, in Stoke, from my home town Cambridge. In brum i was only aware of one other southerner, with a southern accent, and he had a polish name. People in brum and stoke are overwhelmingly from those places, indeed, living in Stoke, and having a southern twang made me a complete outsider, Stoke is seriously inbred. Southerners are very rare.
It was evident that Stokies who moved away from Stoke most, quickly came back, because elsewhere was so different, and in saying that, i left Stoke because i had absolutely no intention of staying. Its no surprise it is as it is.
I lived in Sheffield for 18 months, a completely different place, open, friendly, social, the two are not far from each other. Moving is a big deal, that you dont do it often. As for the white paper, the writer has talent, and in its entirety rages against the unfairness of all. That all can declare aggresively their roots, but the english cannot, especially the sarf.
Good on yer mate, great stuff.
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Post by iketurner on May 3, 2024 20:45:11 GMT
The movement of people is fascinating. I spent over 30 years in Brum and stoke, i only met one person, in Stoke, from my home town Cambridge. In Brum i was only aware of one other southerner, with a southern accent, and he had a polish name. People in Brum and stoke are overwhelmingly from those places, indeed, living in Stoke, and having a southern twang made me a complete outsider, Stoke is seriously inbred. Southerners are very rare. It was evident that Stookies who moved away from Stoke most, quickly came back, because elsewhere was so different, and in saying that, i left Stoke because i had absolutely no intention of staying. Its no surprise it is as it is. I lived in Sheffield for 18 months, a completely different place, open, friendly, social, the two are not far from each other. Moving is a big deal, that you don't do it often. As for the white paper, the writer has talent, and in its entirety rages against the unfairness of all. That all can declare aggressively their roots, but the English cannot, especially the scarf. Good on yer mate, great stuff. Thanks. Also my announcement for a movement video is coming with details to be expected at some stage tomorrow.
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Post by iketurner on May 4, 2024 18:44:01 GMT
The indigenous people's of Britain can only be truly understood if one has knowledge of the tribes that were here before the Romans came. The two main tribes of Yorkshire, for instance, were the Brigantes and the Parisi. Their physical appearance and their "way of thinking" is still very much apparent. The Cotswolds are still noticeably inhabited by people descended from the Dobunni ... who have their own peculiarities of thought, behaviour, and appearance. There are three distinct "peoples" in Cornwall ... one being the Phoenicians who settled there around 2,000 BC. In some parts of the West Country people from towns just a few miles apart are noticeably different. The Forest of Dean people are in no way like the peoples indigenous to the rest of Gloucestershire. Large chunks of England are inhabited by indigenous peoples who are not English. In East Anglia there are villages (along tributaries of the River Stour) where the people have their origins from obscure Germanic peoples who came over with the Danes. Some of them are Goths. The people of the Essex marshes were settled here by William the Conqueror. In Lincolnshire there are villages where most of the inhabitants can be traced back to the people who lived there 10,000 years ago. They also have their indigenous peculiarities of thought, behaviour, and appearance. Shakespeare and Newton's minds had "ancient roots". The Chilterns have Celtic peoples who avoided being taken over by the Saxons. In two towns ten miles apart in the Lake District the males are in one 95% of Viking descent, in the other 5%. A West Indian guy I met in London had an English country accent. I asked him where he was from ... and he "took offence". He changed his attitude when I identified his accent as being from Thame, a small town in Oxfordshire ... which was where he was born, and bred (I'd only ever been there once for a couple of hours). A Swedish-born woman I knew, whose father was born in Cheshire. had a Hoxton (North London) accent. Her father's great grandfather was from a Hoxton family that had been there for several generations (I researched her ancestry after noticing her accent). The accent found in Blagdon in the Mendips is totally weird, completely different from any other I've ever come across. The people there "look different", and "act different" as well. In Wales I met an elderly woman who had been a herbalist... so had her father, grandfather, and great grandfather. She had a stall in a market ... with just a few very small bottles of ointment that were ridiculously expensive ...but guaranteed to remove the wringles of age. She herself looked "young". Then there was the woman who trained cats ... her cat was sitting on a seat on its own on a crowded train calmly waiting for her owner to return from the platform shop. She was from a village background where her family had been training cats for generations. "Kevin the Witch" was a guy from the wilds of Scotland. Upset him and he was likely to wipe an ointment behind your ears .. that would give you sexual nightmares for days at a time. Many people of Britain still have "ancient minds" ... that have been here for thousands of years. Foreigners ... take heed ... don't mess with us ... take your alien beliefs (if that's where your mind is) back to where they came from. Hmm, really now?
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Post by iketurner on May 4, 2024 19:10:32 GMT
Details about my upcoming movement video:
It will feature news footage from the years that gone by as well as some historical portraits of historical figures. I will be featured as i will explain to the people about the reason why Southern England should become an independent nation from both Britain and England.
I will also showing you the example of a future Chart Map transformation which involved Southern England being part of both England and the United Kingdom before showing us a future transformation (spoiler alert) containing both Southern England (post-independence) and the rest of the United Kingdom.
And at the end of the video, I will say the famous line from the movie Independence Day after calling for union between Southern England and the Midlands to plan a Declaration of Independence for Southern England.
The date of the movement video is confirmed as: Sunday 5th May. It's going to be on YouTube though so keep an eye on it. Thanks
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Post by iketurner on May 5, 2024 16:57:29 GMT
UPDATE: Unfortunately due to my personal reasons, i have to delay my movement video now to tomorrow. Sorry about that.
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Post by seniorcitizen007 on May 5, 2024 19:36:02 GMT
The Scots call Inverness "Little England" ... having lived there and perceived them to be "More English than Scottish" I think they'd be OK with being an enclave. There's also an area in Pembrokeshire/Carmarthenshire that is known as "Little England beyond Wales".
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Post by iketurner on May 6, 2024 1:12:54 GMT
The Scots call Inverness "Little England" ... having lived there and perceived them to be "More English than Scottish" I think they'd be OK with being an enclave. There's also an area in Pembrokeshire/Carmarthenshire that is known as "Little England beyond Wales". Hmm? Is that so?
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Post by iketurner on May 6, 2024 3:23:53 GMT
UPDATE (05.05.2024) Good evening and just to update you that my movement video is going to enter its production tomorrow but the video itself won't be ready until Tuesday. So again, apologies for a long wait.
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