Award Winning Artist Creates Vile Bronze Sculpture Attacking Multiple Laws of Nature

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 31, 2014

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The vile statue depicts a pair of female mongrels proudly showing off their two abominations. It is no wonder the father did not wish to show his face.

A repulsive statute supposedly showing a typical family in Britain has been unveiled in Birmingham, causing outrage that there is no father present.

Instead, there are two pregnant mixed-race women proudly showing off the abominations that they have already produced in defiance of nature.

This celebration of the death of the White race and of all that is pure and good in nature has cost the White man £100,000 of his tax money.

Even the Liberal Democrats are questioning it, but only on the father aspect, not on the fact that it represents and encourages the wilful destruction of aeons of genetic inheritance.

Daily Mail:

The mixed race sisters, who live separately, have not revealed details of their family set-up, leaving many to ask why the fathers aren’t included in the piece.Birmingham Yardley MP John Hemming said: ‘There’s absolutely nothing wrong with single parent families but I always find it sad when fathers are not involved in the lives of their children.’

The Lib Dem also questioned why public money was spent on such a controversial sculpture. ‘When the council can’t afford to clear up the rubbish on the streets, £100,000 is not peanuts,’ he said.

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This is being promoted as a typical ‘British family’. It is not British and it is not a family.

Craig Pickering, of the charity Families Need Fathers, said: ‘Everybody knows that families can come in all sorts of shapes and sizes but this interpretation of a family seems most bizarre. It is factually inaccurate and totally out of step.

‘Children do better when they have both their mother and their father playing an active role in their lives.’

Dr Patricia Morgan, a leading researcher on family policy, said the artist’s decision to portray a fatherless family was ‘a disgrace’. ‘We should know whether or not there’s a man involved here,’ she said. ‘Is he taking responsibility, living with them, or not? These are things the viewer needs to know.

‘They are putting this up as some kind of ideal which people have to be like or have to evolve in this direction, but it represents under 1 per cent of the population.’

The sisters say the sculpture will help other families with unusual set-ups feel welcome in Birmingham.

Roma, 29, mother of four-year-old Kyan, and Emma, 27, mother of Shaye, five, and Isaac, said they have experienced difficult times together and have ‘always been there for each other’.

Roma, an outreach worker for a charity, said: ‘We were interested in representing women, representing single parents and also mixed race people, which are such a part of Birmingham. Because there isn’t an adult male… we thought that would be an issue and that’s why possibly we wouldn’t be chosen.’

She added: ‘There’s always the expectation that in future we might be a complete family because perhaps there will be a male there. But I don’t see it like that. We’re women, we support each other and obviously we’ve got the males there – our sons. Potentially they are going to be fathers in the future.’

Great fathers they will be, juveniles with no fathers of their own in this life and no ancestors in their blood from all the lives before.

You cannot fix something that was created broken and to then put that forward as the ideal modern family is treason against nature itself.

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It had been hoped that the artist would produce a sculpture like this, which she made for Italy.