Patriotic Alternative Scotland
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Email: scotland@patrioticalternative.org.uk

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News of our hard work climbing Ben Nevis to raise awareness of Indigenous Peoples' Day and White Lives Matter has spread beyond our shores.

After publicity in The National, The Sun and The Guardian we have now been featured in the USA.

https://mcutimes.com/racists-told-stay-away-from-ben-nevis-after-banner-development-scotland/
Today marks a sad day, not only in the history of Scotland but in the history of Europe. On the 4th of August 1914 Britain declared war on Germany in support of France and Belgium.

The war saw over 9,900,000 military deaths and over 7,700,000 civilian deaths. A terrible toll of the waste of European blood and a whole generation of Europe's youth wiped out. Not many homes escaped the loss of a loved one during World War One.

The war had long-reaching consequences for Europe, many of them very negative and long lasting. We still feel them to this day.

It is a situation that we can never allow to happen again, where the nations of Europe are dragged into conflict with each other to suit the ends of a small elite.

The European population thought that WW1 would be the war to end all wars but the elites had other ideas and dragged Europe into another senseless war 25 years later. So we must always be aware that there are forces that would seek to drag us into more conflict to suit their ends.
£50,000 aid to move to the Scottish Islands. It's good to see ideas floated that may help to repopulate the Islands of Scotland, hopefully with the indigenous population that has been forced to leave them.

The SNP and previous governments have ignored the problems of not just the islands but much of rural Scotland for years, with nothing done to ease the housing crisis, the blight of second homes, the issues of transportation and jobs. If the SNP really care about the people of Scotland they will take action to ease these problems urgently instead of doing things like donating money to Malawi as they have in the past.

If this actually happens it would also be a great opportunity for some of our nationalists to escape the rat race and head to the Islands where we can set up more traditional ways of life.
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Ben Nevis 2021
Here it is folks, the video of our day out on Ben Nevis.
On this day in 1388 the Battle of Otterburn took place. The battle was a decisive victory for the Scottish forces against a larger English army.

James, second Earl of Douglas decided to lead a raid across the border into English territory, as part of an ongoing series of border skirmishes between English and Scots forces.

The Scots divided their forces, with the main force and their baggage train heading towards Carlisle, while a raiding party under the Earl of Douglas ravaged the countryside around Durham and Newcastle. Northumberland sent his two sons Harry Hotspur and Sir Ralph Percy to engage while he stayed at Alnwick to cut off the marauders' retreat.

After initial skirmishes, Douglas moved on, destroying Ponteland Castle and besieging Otterburn Castle. The main battle took place when Henry Percy attacked Douglas' encampment in a surprise raid but he was spotted and Douglas' troops were ready. Percy's forces had a three to one advantage but were defeated.
The start of this month marks Lughnasadh / Lammas. Lughnasadh or Lughnasa is a Gaelic festival marking the beginning of the harvest season.

Historically, it was widely observed throughout Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man. In Modern Irish it is called Lúnasa, in Scottish Gaelic, Lùnastal, and in Manx, Luanistyn. Traditionally it is held on 1 August, or about halfway between the summer solstice and autumn equinox. In recent centuries some of the celebrations have been shifted to the Sunday nearest this date.

Lughnasadh is one of the four Gaelic seasonal festivals, along with Samhain, Imbolc and Beltane. It corresponds to other European harvest festivals such as the Welsh Gŵyl Awst and the English Lammas.

Lughnasadh is mentioned in some of the earliest Irish literature and has pagan origins. The festival itself is named after the god Lugh.
While the rest of us are having to deal with the ridiculous quarantine requirements, such as having to self-isolate for ten days when returning from abroad, which is enforced by daily calls and police checks (if you can even get in and out of the country in a legal way, that is), if you are an illegal immigrant who has jumped on a dinghy across the Channel you'll be put up in a rather nice taxpayer-funded hotel and you don't have to bother with all that.

Up to 10,000 illegal immigrants are enjoying taxpayer-funded hotels and it appears they can wander off for a bit of shopping, sightseeing, a pint in the pub or whatever they fancy, while the indigenous population who entered legally have to remain at home or in a hotel that they have to fork out for.

The number of illegal immigrants testing positive for Covid on arrival ranges from 1% and 5%, which is 20 times higher than the UK average.

Yet another Government immigration fiasco.
Activists were busy leafletting in Wiltshire yesterday. The squirrel leaflets are proving very popular. Well done those involved.

Southwest@patrioticalternative.org.uk
It appears that the fuss over our banner rumbles on. Russia Today have reported on it as well.
Mood of the Nation is our Thursday evening show. You can find all the links you need here: https://www.patrioticalternative.org.uk/schedule
On this day in 1881 Sir Alexander Fleming was born in Darvel, Ayrshire. Fleming was renowned for discovering penicillin, a discovery that has saved and still saves millions of lives worldwide and won him a Nobel Prize.

Alexander Fleming (1881-1955) was a Scottish physician and microbiologist, best known for discovering the world's first broadly effective antibiotic substance, which he named penicillin. His discovery in 1928 of what was later named benzylpenicillin (or penicillin G) from the mould Penicillium rubens is described as the "single greatest victory ever achieved over disease." For this discovery, he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 with Howard Florey and Ernst Boris Chain.

He also discovered the enzyme lysozyme from his nasal discharge in 1922, and along with it a bacterium he named Micrococcus Lysodeikticus, later renamed Micrococcus luteus.

Fleming was knighted for his scientific achievements in 1944

Another example of how Scotland has led the way in many advances .
It appears that the SNP intend to keep the Scottish population muzzled for at least the rest of the year. The suggestion seems to be that the mask mandate in Scotland will last into 2022.

The rules, as with much of what the SNP government do, are quite ridiculous. In a nightclub you can apparently dance with your face within inches of someone else (or, if you're lucky, maybe even closer), but the minute that you leave the dance floor to head to the bar or go to the toilet you must put your mask back on. This all seems rather silly and it will be interesting to see how it can even be policed.
As Glasgow city council, an SNP-run council, lets the city slowly decline, another one of the city's political elite walks off with a large payoff and straight into a well paid job with the IT company behind a controversial contract with the council.

The city is looking at failing services, job cuts, increasing deprivation, increasing inequality especially in life expectancy, historic buildings that they are supposed to be caring for left to moulder and fall apart. But it appears that rather than wanting to deal with any of that, the elite are more interested in carrying on paying themselves large salaries and payoffs and walking into jobs with companies they have previously awarded contracts to.
On this day in 1548, Mary Queen of Scots, who was five years old at the time, was taken to live in France. A French naval vessel came for her at Dumbarton Castle and a week later she landed in France. She had been promised in marriage to the Dauphin Francis .

The agreement to marry him had been agreed a month earlier by the Scottish Parliament at Haddington under the Treaty of Haddington. While she was in France, regents ruled in her place.

She lived in France for 13 years, eventually marrying the Dauphin on the 24th April 1558. Twenty days earlier she had signed a secret agreement that, if she died without issue, Scotland and her claim to the English crown were bequeathed to France.
PA Wales leafletting in the Wrexham area (North Wales)
Today PA Yorkshire, ex-members of the BNP and other activists protested at Mill Green View Britannia Hotel in East Leeds. The hotel is housing migrants and has been booked up fully for this use until 2030! Our protest received a positive response from the public who cheered and beeped as they walked and drove by! Thank you to everybody who attended.