Designed by pseuds for the Internet generation
News article filed by BNP news team
As we strongly suspected, the 2012 Olympics are turning out to be less about sporting excellence and heroic endeavour and more to do with political correctness in a post-Blairite Britain.
The unveiling of today’s logo, reputed to have cost taxpayers a staggering £400,000 reinforces that view, and shows once again how those living in the ivory-towers are out of touch with the British public and how irrelevant these grandiose schemes are to everyday Britons who would prefer the billions that are due to be spent on this East London white elephant, to be diverted to basic functioning public services.
The logo has been described by its legion of critics as embarrassing and patronising and resembling a “broken window”, “hip-hip graffiti” or even a slightly “distorted swastika”, the latter hardly appropriate for the Labour’s diverse and inclusive showpiece!Supposedly designed for the Internet age it has been largely rejected by people of all ages. Over on a BBC poll, just over 84% of the viewers back the BNP’s view that the logo is a load of rubbish.
The broken window logo was unveiled in London at a “star-studded” ceremony earlier today. Former runner and now organising committee chairman, Seb Coe told reporters that “We [London doesn’t do bland” and that the logo has “got to live for the next 5 years.” Adding that it “..is the vision at the very heart of our brand”.
“Not a logo but a state of mind, it’s an attitude” said Denise Lewis , Gold medalist from the 2000 Sydney Olympics in a burst of pseudo-intellectualism.
Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell summed up what the Labour Olympics are all about by including the politically correct newspeak terms “diverse” and “inclusive” in her statement: “This is an iconic brand that sums up what London 2012 is all about – an inclusive, welcoming and diverse Games that involves the whole country.”
One thing we agree with is the comment by outgoing Labour leader, Tony Blair who championed the logo:
“When people see the new brand, we want them to be inspired to make a positive change in their life.”
Indeed many will, by emigrating to the US, Spain and Australia, in fact as far away from the politically correct mind-benders and the star-studded self-congratulatory ceremonies which will bore the country for the next five years.
http://www.bnp.org.uk/news_detail.php?newsId=1548