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Basic information for organisers/potential organisers So you've joined the National Front! And there is no local unit in your area? Not to worry. The answer lies in YOUR hands. Each and every member can help to get a local unit started and it's a lot easier than you think. The first step is to sound out close friends and family. It is often from these people you will find your first recruits to the NF. You know them, probably for much of your life and its 90% certain that they'll agree with most of what the National Front stand for. Your workmates and neighbours may also be very patriotic and relate to the climate of fear of the White British people. Leafleting is easy to organise. Order a supply from NFHQ and/or produce or download your own on a National Front or local issue you want to highlight. Many people now own PC's and printers, and with cheap and good quality photocopying within easy reach, a local leaflet can quickly be produced. Remember, the opposition to the National Front are a bunch of cowardly anti-democratic scumbags in various guises and you shouldn't have any problems. Do remember to let NFHQ know your contact details so we can put them on the main website at www.natfront.com and also in our regular paper "Flame". A mobile hotline phone number is useful too. This way you will soon find local people getting in contact with you to find out about the local NF. Remember, the National Front is Britain's longest existing White Nationalist organisation and is already a household name all over Britain. You will probably also find that there are former NF members already in your area, contact them and send some current literature. Send a press release to your local paper, telling them that the National Front is active in their area. Make the press release punchy: "Equal Rights for Whites says newly formed NF unit" or "No Bogus Asylum Here", usually grabs the media's attention! Monitor the letters column of your local paper and have a member delegated to regularly write in on issues of interest - always make sure the NF's name is mentioned, along with your unit and regional HQ. When you have four or five members or supporters, organise a regular meeting monthly, fortnightly, weekly, whatever suits the local units needs. Invite along new enquiries and friends of new members and supporters who might be interested. GET PEOPLE INVOLVED! Don't try and hog all the work yourself - there is a lot of it in a busy unit, and giving somebody a bit of responsibility will get them more committed to the NF and also raise the morale of the Unit. Place regular orders for the Flame and National Front News. Establish a sales round and make a note of the address of anybody who buys a copy. Go back with the next issue and get them into the habit of becoming Flame readers. They will soon become members too! Pass around some of our wide range of "correspondence only" stickers or information slips. These are meant for attaching to local mail, putting in your home or car window, but also have a wide range of uses. They can be handed out for instance as "calling cards". Their short sharp slogans carry the message of the NF quickly into the minds and hearts of the local White people. Contact other nearby NF units and the District Organiser or Regional Organiser, keep in regular contact with them for details of bigger joint actions which bring together a number of units for greater impact. As your unit gets bigger and you are feeling more confident, organise a monthly local meeting in a pub or meeting room. You need to be able to muster at least fifteen to twenty guaranteed people to make such a meeting worth holding. Book the meeting under name other than the National Front (unless your local landlord is already a member!). Remember that although most people agree with us, they are frightened of being labeled 'racists' by local councils dominated by Old System parties who are hysterically opposed to the challenge of a radical force like the National Front. Use a sensible cover name. Make your local meeting interesting. Background music is good for atmosphere as supporters arrive. Have some flags or banners on display and organise a literature table where new people can buy leaflets, stickers, badges, posters and papers. Try and book a guest speaker from another area or from H.Q. from time to time and ALWAYS have a theme for your meeting. Don't let people just gather round aimlessly for you'll quickly find what could have been a powerful recruiting tool turning into a monthly boozing and moaning club - guaranteed to PUT OFF new folk. There is a lot, lot more to organising a Unit, these are just some basic tips to get you started. The main message however to the new Unit Organiser has nothing to do with organisation. It has to do with courage. Be brave! You are representing a Movement which aims nothing less than the overthrow of the old decadent Westminster System that has betrayed our White race and the British |
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